Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Biff is the main antagonist of the first and second films, while his great-grandfather, Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen (also played by Wilson), is the main antagonist of the third. Biff is portrayed as a hulking, belligerent, dim-witted bully who obtains what he wants by intimidating others into doing his work for him, or by cheating.
Thomas Francis Wilson Jr. was born in Philadelphia on April 15, 1959, and grew up in nearby Wayne.While attending Radnor High School, he was involved in dramatic arts, [2] served as president of the debate team (where his partner was future New York Times columnist David Brooks), played the tuba in the high school band, and was the drum major of the school marching band.
Deluise, Zane, Tim Robbins, and J. J. Cohen were considered to play Biff Tannen. [7] [47] [48] Cohen was not considered intimidating enough against Stoltz, and the role went to Thomas F. Wilson, his first feature starring role. [49] [50] Zane and Cohen were cast as Biff's minions Match and Skinhead instead.
Wilson, 65, who played Biff Tannen, additionally opened up about the impact his antagonist character had on real-life bullies he has encountered. "I've been contacted by bullies, by people who ...
Meanwhile, Biff and his gang learn of Marty's attendance at the upcoming dance and plot to beat him up ("Teach Him a Lesson"). On the night of the dance, Doc thanks Marty for giving him hope for his future; Marty secretly writes a letter to warn him of his death in 1985, despite being warned of the harm from disclosing future events.
The song is featured in the 1989 film Back to the Future Part II, when Marty McFly discovers he has returned to an alternate, hellish version of 1985 Hill Valley, replete with strip joints, pawn shops, and in the center of it all, a huge 27-story casino hotel called "Biff's Pleasure Paradise", featuring villain Biff Tannen's face. At other ...
But in reality, a new study suggests that rather than becoming something resembling Back to the Future’s Biff Tannen, the class jock is increasingly likely to become your future boss.
Neil Ross provides the voiceover for the Biff Tannen museum while George Buck Flower reprises his role as Red the Bum. In 1955, Harry Waters Jr. reprises his role as Marvin Berry, Lisa Freeman reprises her role as Babs, Wesley Mann plays a student who mistakes Marty for a thief, and Joe Flaherty plays the Western Union representative who ...