Timothy Busfield
Timothy Busfield is an American actor and director. He played Elliot Weston on the television series Thirtysomething, Mark in Field of Dreams, and Danny Concannon on the television series The West Wing. In 1991, he received a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for Thirtysomething.
Busfield has been accused of sexual assault against four children and one adult, once in 1994, once in 2012, and three times in 2026. The 1994 case resulted in a settlement for the alleged victim. The 2026 allegations resulted in him being arrested and also dropped by talent agency Innovative Artists. He denied the allegations through his lawyer.
Early life and education
Busfield was born June 12, 1957, in Lansing, Michigan, to drama professor Roger Busfield and Michigan State University Press director Jean Busfield. He graduated from East Lansing High School in East Lansing in 1975.Career
Acting and directing
Busfield began his professional career in theater serving as an understudy to Matthew Broderick in Brighton Beach Memoirs in 1982. The following year, he relocated to Los Angeles and joined the cast of ABC's short-lived sitcom Reggie, an American adaptation of the BBC series The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin.In 1984, Busfield gained wider recognition with his first substantial film role as Arnold Poindexter, a member of the Lambda Lambda Lambda fraternity, in the comedy Revenge of the Nerds, later reprising the role in Revenge of the Nerds II. That same year, he joined the cast of the CBS medical drama Trapper John, M.D. as J.T. McIntyre, a role he played until the series concluded in 1986.
Following Trapper John, M.D., Busfield and his brother Buck founded the Fantasy Theatre, a professional touring company for children's audiences, later designated California's Honorary State Children's Theater. Based in Sacramento, California, the brothers also established the B Street Theatre in 1992, focusing on adult stage productions.
In 1987, Busfield was cast as Elliot Weston on the ABC drama thirtysomething, marking his first major mature role. His performance earned three Emmy nominations, culminating in a win in 1991 shortly before the series ended.
During this period, Busfield appeared as the antagonist Mark in Field of Dreams. In 1990, he replaced Tom Hulce as the lead in the Broadway production of A Few Good Men. That year, he also made his directorial debut on thirtysomething, directing three episodes. Subsequent film roles included supporting performances in Sneakers, Quiz Show, and the family sports film Little Big League, in which he portrayed Minnesota Twins manager Lou Collins, a character loosely based on first baseman Kent Hrbek.
Busfield returned to network television throughout the 1990s, starring as the head of the Byrd family in The Byrds of Paradise, and as one of several former high school athletes in the comedy-drama Champs. By the late 1990s, he increasingly split his time between acting and directing, helming multiple episodes of Sports Night, Ed —on which he also served as co-executive producer and guest-starred as Ed's brother Lloyd—and other network series.
During this era, Busfield began a recurring role as Danny Concannon on The West Wing, appearing intermittently throughout the show's run. He later directed and executive produced the CBS drama Without a Trace, occasionally appearing onscreen as Jack Malone's lawyer. He also directed episodes of Las Vegas, Damages, and Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, on which he co-starred as control director Cal Shanley. He subsequently served as executive producer of Lipstick Jungle.
From 2014 to 2015, Busfield guest starred on Sleepy Hollow as Benjamin Franklin.
In 2019, Busfield directed Guest Artist, which premiered at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. The project launched Grand River Productions, a production company formed by Jeff Daniels, Busfield, and Busfield's wife, Melissa Gilbert. Also in 2019, he guest starred in Dolly Parton's Heartstrings as Logan Cantrell in the episode "Sugar Hill".
In 2020, Busfield appeared as a guest during the Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip marathon fundraiser episode of The George Lucas Talk Show and voiced the title character in the Marvel/SiriusXM radio drama podcast series Marvel’s Wastelanders: Star-Lord.
Baseball
In the summer of 1992, Busfield signed as a pitcher with the semi-pro Sacramento Smokeys. He pitched for the Smokeys in between acting jobs through the 2000 season, amassed a pitching record of 30 wins and 12 losses over 9 seasons. In 2024, he was inducted into the Sacramento Baseball Hall of Fame as a pitcher.Stage and theater
Busfield's theater credits include A Few Good Men and Brighton Beach Memoirs. Off-Broadway, he worked with Circle Repertory Company in 1982. With elder brother Buck, he is co-founder of the B Street Theatre in Sacramento, California. The brothers also established Fantasy Theater, a touring troupe that plays to children. Busfield has written children's plays for the Fantasy troupe.Personal life
Relationships and marriages
Busfield's first marriage was to actress and director Radha Delamarter, with whom he has a son. The couple divorced in 1986. In 1988, he married fashion designer Jennifer Merwin, with whom he has two children. He and Merwin filed for divorce in 2007.Busfield and actress Melissa Gilbert married on April 24, 2013, in a private ceremony at San Ysidro Ranch in Santa Barbara, California. They lived in Howell, Michigan, from 2013 to 2018, and Busfield was an artist in residence at Michigan State University in East Lansing during the 2016–17 academic year. The couple moved to New York City in late 2018.
Legal issues
1994 sexual assault allegation
In 1994, a 17-year-old female extra accused Busfield of sexual assault during the filming of Little Big League in 1993, when she was 16. Busfield denied the allegations and filed a countersuit against the girl's lawyers, accusing them of defamation. The actor eventually settled the lawsuit for an undisclosed amount. In 1996, a judge ordered the actor to pay to the Minneapolis law firm that had represented the accuser following the loss of his defamation suit.2012 sexual assault allegation
In 2012, a 28-year-old woman accused Busfield of groping her while the two were on a date, attending a film at a Los Angeles-area movie theater, but the Los Angeles City Attorney's Office declined to file charges against him, citing insufficient evidence. Busfield said "the contact was consensual."2026 sexual abuse charges
On January 9, 2026, American media reported that a warrant had been issued in New Mexico for Busfield's arrest. He is accused of sexually assaulting twin boys on set during the filming of the TV series The Cleaning Lady. The boys' parent said that the abuse occurred from November 2022 until early 2024. Busfield faces two counts of sexual abuse involving a minor and one count of child abuse, and an arrest warrant was issued by the Albuquerque Police Department. The investigation against Busfield reportedly began after the alleged abuse was first reported by a University of New Mexico doctor in November 2024. Busfield's legal counsel described the charges as trumped-up allegations from the child actors' family because the boys had been fired from the show.After news of the alleged sexual abuse came out, NBC decided not to broadcast a Law & Order: Special Victims Unit episode in which Busfield played a judge, with Amazon MGM Studios also editing out his scenes in You Deserve Each Other. On January 12, after police officers were unable to find Busfield three days after his arrest warrant was issued, the U.S. Marshals Service joined the case to apprehend him. He turned himself in to Albuquerque authorities on January 13. He denied the allegations and his lawyers have argued that an independent investigation by Warner Brothers found the allegations unfounded and that he passed a polygraph test.