Cliff Gorman was an American stage and screen actor. He won an Obie award in 1968 for the stage presentation of The Boys in the Band, and went on to reprise his role in the 1970 film version. Gorman and his wife cared for his fellow The Boys in the Band cast member Robert La Tourneaux in the last few months of his battle against AIDS, until La Tourneaux's death on June 3, 1986 Gorman died of leukemia in 2002, aged 65, although his final film, Kill the Poor, was not released until 2003. He was survived by his wife, Gayle Gorman.
Angel
(Lt. Andrews)
Rosebud
(Yafet Hemlekh)
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai
(Sonny Valerio)
Kill the Poor
(Yakov)
The Boys in the Band
(Emory)
The Bunker
(Joseph Goebbels)
Night and the City
(Phil Nasseros)
Justine
(Toto)
Night of the Juggler
(Gus Soltic)
An Unmarried Woman
(Charlie)
All That Jazz
(Davis Newman)
Cops and Robbers
(Tom)
Down Came a Blackbird
(Nick the Greek)
King of the Jungle
(Jack)
Strike Force
(Det. Joey Gentry)
The Chicago Conspiracy Trial
Class of '63
(Mickey Swerner)
Vestige of Honor
(Sanderson)
Paradise Lost
(Kewpie)
The Forget-Me-Not Murders
(Aaron)
The 60s
(Father Daniel Berrigan)
Hoffa
(Solly Stein)
Cocaine and Blue Eyes
(Riki Anatole)
Murder Times Seven
(Aaron Greenberg)
Internal Affairs
(Aaron Greenberg)
Doubletake
(Aaron Greenberg)
Having Babies II
(Arthur Magee)
Terror on Track 9
(Sgt. Aaron Greenberg)
Janek: The Silent Betrayal
(Greenburg)
The Silence
(Stanley Greenberg)
Brinks: The Great Robbery
(Danny Conforti)
Murder in Black and White
(Aaron Greenberg)
Murder, She Wrote
(Police Chief Cooper)
Hawaii Five-O
(Robert Huston)
The Streets of San Francisco
Cagney & Lacey
Police Story
New York News
Medical Story
Law & Order
(Gary Feldman)
Tony Awards
(Self - Nominee)
The Dick Cavett Show
(Self - Guest)
Murder, She Wrote
(NYPD Lt. Parnell)
Great Performances
(Kewpie)
The '60s
(Father Daniel Berrigan)