Bruce McGill Net Worth
How much is Bruce McGill worth?
Bruce McGill net worth: Bruce McGill is an American actor who has a net worth of $4 million dollars. Bruce McGill was born in San Antonio, Texas and graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a degree in Drama. He began his professional acting career in the late 70s, and almost immediately became a household name due to his memorable performance as D-Day in the film, “National Lampoon’s Animal House”. Since then, he has gone back and forth between film and television work steadily. He has appeared in such projects as “Silkwood”, “Wild Cats”, “Miami Vice”, “Three Fugitives”, “My Cousin Vinny”, “Timecop”, “Walker, Texas Ranger”, Star Trek: Voyager”, “Home Improvement”, “Rosewood”, “The Insider”, “The Legend of Bagger Vance”, “Shallow Hal”, “Ali”, “Matchstick Men”, “Collateral”, “Cinderella Man”, “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit”, “Rizzoli and Isles”, and “Lincoln”, among many, many other projects. He is next slated to appear in the feature comedy, “Ride Along”.
More about the earnings of Bruce McGill
Actor Bruce McGill has a networth that has to be considered more than decent.
Inspirational Quotes by Bruce McGill
One of the defense mechanisms I have for the difficulties in the business, one of which is rejection, is that if I do the work, I go in, and I'm prepared and I audition and they don't hire me, I'm always just amazed, thinking, 'Wow! For that money, they could've had Bruce McGill, and they didn't take me? I just think that's amazing.'
Bruce McGill
When I got the offer to do 'Weird Ernie' in the pilot, I was living in New York, and somebody had made a mistake, and they made an offer that was supposed to be $2,500 for the job, but they offered $25,000. I couldn't turn that down. I'd never heard of anything like that!
Bruce McGill
I really loved working with Michael Caine. He's a really skilled and experienced actor. I learn something from everybody, but when you work with somebody like that, you actually learn things you can put in your toolbox, things about craft. Not necessarily life lessons, but actual things he knows that you can pick up.
Bruce McGill
There's a cumulative effect to getting good parts as a freelance actor, because you're only as good as your last job, and you have to keep going out and getting them. Unless you're part of the finance structure, by which I mean a bankable star, which I never was and never will be.
Bruce McGill
I don't work all day, every day on 'Rizzoli & Isles,' but I work every day. It may be a scene or two, or it may be an enormous workload, but there's really not a lot of room for anything else, and that's the choice I made. And that's why I stayed away from TV before: Because I know that that's what it is.
Bruce McGill