Enjoy the opportunity to virtually meet Bradley Whitford!
Bradley Whitford, a classically trained stage actor, who quickly gained overnight fame as the sarcastic yet vulnerable, Josh Lyman, on NBC's The West Wing. One of the few actors working successfully and simultaneously in theater, film and television, Whitford is one of Hollywood's most sought-after talents. In 2019, he was awarded the Primetime Emmy Award for his work as Commander Lawrence, the architect of Gilead's economy, in the third season of Hulu's Emmy-winning series, The Handmaids Tale, in which he has since been nominated for two additional Primetime Emmy awards for the same role.
Bradley will next be seen in the upcoming movie, tick, tick...BOOM! directed by Lin-Manuel Miranda. The movie is based on the autobiographical musical by playwright Jonathan Larson. This past year, Bradley starred in multiple films including Greg Barkers Netflix drama Sergio; IFC's drama, Three Christs with Richard Gere, Peter Dinklage and Juliana Margulies; Todd Robinson's political drama, The Last Full Measure, alongside Samuel L. Jackson, Sebastian Stan, Christopher Plummer and William Hurt; and the live-action CGI-animated adventure film based on the novel of the same name, Call of the Wild. Additionally, Bradley was also seen in Songbird alongside Demi Moore, Craig Robinson, Paul Walter Hauser and Peter Stormare. The film, directed by Adam Mason, follows a courier (immune to the COVID-23 virus) as he races against time to same the woman he loves from a quarantine camp. Bradly also serves as an executive producer on the documentary, Not Going Quietly, which follows the story of Ady Barkan, who was diagnosed with ALS at the age of 32 and, fearing rising health care costs in light of the proposed 20218 tax reform, hears for Washington as part of a group voicing its concerns. He will also soon begin production for the upcoming film, Rosaline, which will be directed by Karen Maine.
Recent film credits include Brie Larson's The Unicorn Store, which stars Larson along with Samuel L. Jackson and Joan Cusack; Godzilla: King of the Monsters, alongside Vera Farmiga, Kyle Chandler, Sally Hawkins and Millie Bobby Brown; Phil, which was directed by Greg Kinnear; the crime drama Destroyer, alongside Sebastian Stan and Nicole Kidman; the sci-fi thriller The Darkest Minds, which is based on Alexandra Bracken's popular young adult novel of the same name; Judy Greer's directorial debut, A Happening of Monumental Proportions, which featured an all-star ensemble including Jennifer Garner, Allison Janney, Common, an Anders Holm; Steven Spielberg's Academy Award-nominated drama, The Post with Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks; the critically-acclaimed Blumhouse horror-thriller, Get Out; Megan Leavey opposite Kate Mara and Edie Falco; the independent film, Other People, written and directed by SNL writer, Chris Kelly which won the Grand Jury prize at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival; HBO's Lyndon B. Johnson biopic, Ally The Way, opposite Bryan Cranston, which received multiple Emmy nominations; Sony Pictures Classics' Hank Williams biopic, I Saw The Light, Disney's Saving Mr. Banks, The Cabin in The Woods, the gritty true-crime drama An American Crime, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, Little Manhattan, Kate & Leopold, The Muse, Bicentennial Man, Scent of a Woman, A Perfect World, Philadelphia, The Client, My Life, Red Corner, Presumed Innocent and My Fellow Americans.
Please note that the ACLU of Southern California is a 501(c)4 organization and not all purchases are tax deductible. Please check with your accountant.