
Robert John Burke
Biography
A born-and-bred New Yorker, Robert John Burke made his film debut while in his early 20s with a small part in the drama "The Chosen" (1981), based on the Chaim Potok story. He went on to study acting at SUNY Purchase where he met aspiring filmmaker Hal Hartley, who cast him as one of the leads in his debut feature "The Unbelievable Truth," an offbeat indie tale where he played a man trying to escape his troubled past. Working with Hartley again on the charming brother-centric dark comedy "Simple Men," Burke caught a major break when Hollywood producers decided that his chiseled jawline was the right one to replace Peter Weller's in the sci-fi/action sequel "RoboCop 3." Despite Burke's efforts, the movie tanked, and he went on to smaller roles in major films, including the lauded Western "Tombstone" (1993) and the prison-break movie "Fled" (1996). Burke landed his second chance in a Hollywood starring role with the Stephen King adaptation "Thinner" (1996), but the macabre tale, which featured him under heavy makeup to depict a callous man who magically loses weight, was deemed almost universally unlikable.Though Burke's leading-man days were mostly behind him, his beastly role in Hartley's "No Such Thing" (2001) aside, he soldiered on, and began increasingly working on television with recurring roles on the grim prison drama "Oz" and the police procedural "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" (NBC, 1999- ). Appearing in George Clooney's first two movies as director, "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind" (2002) and "Good Night, and Good Luck." (2005), Burke nonetheless became more familiar to TV audiences, particularly when he signed on to play Mickey Gavin, the ex-priest cousin of Denis Leary's lead character on the firefighter series "Rescue Me," a part that dovetailed with Burke's real-life second job as a New York State fireman.Often cast as a tough guy, the ruggedly handsome and tall actor continued to play imposing figures such as Major General James "Chaos" Mattis in the Iraq War miniseries "Generation Kill" (HBO, 2008) and Bart Bass, the controlling billionaire father of Chuck Bass (Ed Westwick) on the soapy drama "Gossip Girl." Before long, he was juggling his ongoing "Law & Order: SVU" part with regular spots on the military drama "Army Wives" (Lifetime, 2007- ) and the tense crime show "Person of Interest" (CBS, 2011- ), while still finding time for supporting turns in films, including the Denzel Washington/Mark Wahlberg action movie "2 Guns" (2013).
Filmography

Boston Strangler

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

The Retaliators

Triggered

Intrusion

Being

Boarding School

BlacKkKlansman

We Only Know So Much

Future '38

Where There's Smoke

Bait

True Story

Ned Rifle

2 Guns

Safe

Limitless

Years Later: The Unbelievable Truth and Its Consequences

Brooklyn's Finest

Miracle at St. Anna

The Ex

Jack's Law

The Oh in Ohio

Munich

Good Night, and Good Luck.

Hide and Seek

Connie and Carla

Speak

Piggie

Confessions of a Dangerous Mind

No Such Thing

State Property

First Love, Last Rites

Somewhere in the City

Midnight Flight

A Bright Shining Lie

Cop Land

Mayday - Flug in den Tod

Thinner

Killer: A Journal of Murder

Fled

If Lucy Fell

Flirt

Crazy for a Kiss

Heaven & Earth

Tombstone

Flirt

A Far Off Place

RoboCop 3

Simple Men

Dust Devil

Rambling Rose

The Unbelievable Truth

Nightmare Weekend

The Chosen

Gangster Wars
