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Charlie Korsmo
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Charles Randolph Korsmo (born July 20, 1978) is an American lawyer and actor. He is best known for portraying Sigmund "Siggy" Marvin in What About Bob?, the Kid from the film adaptation of Dick Tracy, Jack Banning in Hook, and William Lichter in Can't Hardly Wait.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Korsmo was born in Fargo, North Dakota, the son of Deborah Ruf, an educational psychologist, and John Korsmo, former owner of Cass County Abstract and former chairman of the Federal Housing Finance Board.[1] He was raised in the Minneapolis suburb of Golden Valley, where he attended and graduated from Breck School in 1996.[2] He has one older brother and one younger brother.
Acting career
[edit]Korsmo's acting roles included The Kid/Dick Tracy Jr. in Dick Tracy; Siggy, the son of Richard Dreyfuss's character, in What About Bob?, and Jack Banning, the son of Peter Pan in the 1991 film Hook. He quit acting in 1991, and didn't appear in another film until he portrayed the supporting character William Lichter in the 1998 film Can't Hardly Wait, which he filmed while he was attending MIT.[3] He then took a 20-year break from acting before returning to the screen with a role in the 2019 film Chained for Life.[4]
Post-acting career
[edit]Korsmo earned a degree in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2000.[5] He has worked for the Environmental Protection Agency, and for the Republican Party in the House of Representatives. He received his Juris Doctor degree from Yale Law School in 2006.[6]
At Yale, he was a member of the Federalist Society, an organization for conservative and libertarian lawyers and law students.[7] In January 2006, he and other Yale Law students signed an open letter to Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter supporting the nomination of Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court. In July 2007, Korsmo passed the New York State Bar exam.[8] Formerly an associate in the New York office of Sullivan & Cromwell LLP and a visiting professor at Brooklyn Law School,[9] Korsmo is a professor of corporate law and corporate finance at the Case Western Reserve University School of Law in Cleveland.[10]
In May 2011, it was announced that Korsmo had been nominated by President Barack Obama as a member of the Board of Trustees of the Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Foundation.[11]
Personal life
[edit]Korsmo is married to Adrienne, with whom he has a daughter and a son.[12]
Filmography
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1990 | Men Don't Leave | Matt Macauley | Filmed in 1988 |
| Dick Tracy | Kid | Nominated – Saturn Award for Best Performance by a Younger Actor Nominated – Young Artist Award for Best Young Actor Starring in a Motion Picture | |
| Heat Wave | 12-Year-Old Jason | ||
| 1991 | What About Bob? | Sigmund "Siggy" Marvin | |
| The Doctor | Nicky MacKee | ||
| Hook | Jack Banning | Young Artist Award for Outstanding Young Ensemble Cast in a Motion Picture Nominated – Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Most Promising Actor Nominated – Young Artist Award for Best Young Actor Co-starring in a Motion Picture | |
| 1998 | Can't Hardly Wait | William Lichter | |
| 2019 | Chained for Life | Herr Director | |
| 2024 | A Different Man | Ron Belcher |
References
[edit]- ^ Charlie Korsmo Biography
- ^ "Breck Alumni of Note". breckschool.org. Archived from the original on June 16, 2016. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
- ^ Kupfer, Lindsay (June 6, 2018). "20 years later, 'Can't Hardly Wait' actor still cashing royalty checks". New York Post. Retrieved May 29, 2025.
- ^ "From acting to academia and back again". The Daily. September 14, 2018. Retrieved May 29, 2025.
- ^ "Entrepreneurial Effect - MIT Spectrum - Summer 2007". spectrum.mit.org. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
- ^ In-Forum (Yale Law School)[permanent dead link]
- ^ Yale Federalist Society website Archived February 6, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ July 2007 Pass List (K-L) Archived November 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Brooklyn Law School Faculty Biography Archived May 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Charles Korsmo". April 22, 2019.
- ^ White House Press Announcement
- ^ "Charlie Korsmo: Child star of 'Dick Tracy' and 'Hook,' now a Case Western Reserve University law professor, at Cinematheque Friday". cleveland.com. February 19, 2014. Archived from the original on January 8, 2020. Retrieved June 22, 2015.
External links
[edit]- Charlie Korsmo at IMDb
- Charlie Korsmo at the TCM Movie Database
Charlie Korsmo
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Education
Childhood in Fargo
Charles Randolph Korsmo was born on July 20, 1978, in Fargo, North Dakota, the middle child of three sons born to John Korsmo and Deborah Ruf.[3][4] His father owned Cass County Abstract, a local title and abstract company, reflecting involvement in regional real estate and business stability.[5][6] His mother worked as an educational psychologist, underscoring a household emphasis on intellectual development and academic achievement.[4][7] Korsmo's early childhood unfolded in Fargo, North Dakota's largest city, amid a Midwestern setting of agricultural and industrial influences that prioritized practical skills and community ties over speculative pursuits.[8] This environment, before his parents' divorce in 1989, provided a stable foundation insulated from the volatility of distant cultural centers like Hollywood.[5][9] The family's professional backgrounds—business ownership and psychological expertise—fostered values of self-reliance and education, with no evidence of aggressive external ambitions shaping young Korsmo's path. Initial curiosity about acting emerged during a family vacation to California, where exposure to studio operations sparked interest without parental orchestration or premature immersion in industry pressures.[5][10] This organic encounter, rooted in Fargo's relative normalcy, allowed Korsmo to approach opportunities selectively, avoiding common child-performer hazards such as over-scheduling or familial exploitation documented in entertainment histories.[11] The causal stability of his North Dakota origins thus contributed to a resilient disposition, evidenced by his measured entry into auditions rather than unchecked pursuit of fame.[8]Academic Path from Physics to Law
Korsmo enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) following high school graduation in 1996, opting for a rigorous academic pursuit in physics over full-time acting commitments.[12] This choice reflected his preference for empirical, analytical disciplines emphasizing problem-solving and scientific method, fields that demanded structured intellectual discipline absent in the entertainment industry's unpredictability.[13] He completed a Bachelor of Science degree in physics in 2000, leveraging earnings from prior acting roles to support his studies without interruption.[12][10] Subsequent professional experience in public policy and government, including roles in missile defense and environmental regulation, exposed limitations in his non-legal background for advancing policy objectives.[14] Recognizing the need for formal legal training to engage effectively in legislative drafting and regulatory analysis, Korsmo enrolled at Yale Law School around 2003.[14] He earned a Juris Doctor in 2006, during which he participated in the Yale Federalist Society, aligning with his interests in contracts, policy implementation, and institutional frameworks.[15] This transition underscored a strategic pivot toward law's precision in addressing causal mechanisms of governance, prioritizing evidentiary reasoning over acting's performative uncertainties.[13] Throughout this academic progression, Korsmo maintained a trajectory insulated from the derailments common among former child performers, such as academic dropout or personal instability, instead channeling early financial independence into sustained scholarly advancement.[10] His path exemplified a commitment to foundational intellectual pursuits, yielding credentials in both quantitative sciences and jurisprudence by age 28.[12]Acting Career
Breakthrough Child Roles
Charlie Korsmo achieved his breakthrough as "The Kid," a street urchin who becomes the protégé of detective Dick Tracy (Warren Beatty), in the 1990 comic strip adaptation Dick Tracy.[1] At age 11, Korsmo's portrayal added a layer of youthful resilience to the film's hard-boiled narrative, with reviewers describing him as well-cast and precocious.[1] The production, budgeted at $46 million, grossed $103.7 million domestically, marking a commercial hit amid early attempts at stylized superhero films.[16] In 1991, Korsmo starred as Jack Banning, the eldest son of grown-up Peter Pan (Robin Williams) who doubts his father's fantastical tales, in Steven Spielberg's Hook opposite Dustin Hoffman as Captain Hook.[3] His performance captured adolescent skepticism effectively, earning note for being cute yet not overly sentimental in contemporary accounts.[17] The family-oriented blockbuster capitalized on the era's demand for adventure spectacles, grossing over $300 million worldwide and underscoring Korsmo's contribution to its appeal through credible child acting. That same year, Korsmo played Sigmund "Siggy" Marvin, the young son of psychiatrist Dr. Leo Marvin (Richard Dreyfuss), in the comedy What About Bob? directed by Frank Oz, where his character's exasperation with patient Bob Wiley (Bill Murray) showcased emerging comedic chops.[18] The film, produced for $39 million, earned $63.7 million at the box office, reflecting strong audience reception to its ensemble dynamics including Korsmo's role. These consecutive high-profile parts in commercially viable 1990s family films demonstrated Korsmo's talent via box-office metrics and favorable notices for his poised, age-appropriate delivery, while exposing the sector's inherent pressures such as intensive schedules that could foster typecasting or exhaustion in young performers.[19]Teenage Roles and Exit from Hollywood
Korsmo's most notable role during his late teenage years was that of William Lichter in the 1998 teen ensemble comedy Can't Hardly Wait, directed by Harry Elfont and Deborah Kaplan. In the film, released on June 12, 1998, he portrayed a vengeful, intellectually precocious high school senior who plots elaborate payback against a popular jock at a chaotic graduation party, contributing to the movie's depiction of suburban adolescent dynamics.[20][21] This appearance represented a departure from his earlier child-centric leads, aligning with industry patterns where former child actors transitioned to supporting roles in group-cast youth films amid shrinking opportunities for solo juvenile protagonists.[22] Following Can't Hardly Wait, Korsmo permanently withdrew from acting in 1998 to concentrate on his undergraduate physics degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he resumed studies as a junior that fall after initially enrolling post-high school.[23][24] His exit stemmed from a calculated assessment of acting's high opportunity costs—frequent auditions, irregular income, and lifestyle instability—versus the predictable progression of empirical science education, which he funded through accumulated earnings from prior roles without reliance on ongoing Hollywood income.[25][10] Unlike many contemporaries who faced publicized personal or professional setbacks, Korsmo's departure involved no documented controversies, substance issues, or exploitative industry experiences; instead, it reflected proactive prioritization of long-term intellectual and financial autonomy over transient fame.[26][27] He completed his Bachelor of Science in physics in 2000, leveraging the discipline's rigorous, evidence-based framework as a foundation for subsequent pursuits.[14][28]Government and Policy Involvement
Work with Republican Party and EPA
Following his graduation from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a degree in physics in 2000, Korsmo entered federal government service in 2001. He worked as staff for the House Republican Policy Committee in the U.S. House of Representatives, supporting policy development and legislative efforts during a period of Republican majority control that emphasized tax cuts, deregulation, and fiscal restraint, including the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001.[12][13] This role involved drafting and analyzing bills aligned with conservative priorities, providing early exposure to congressional processes without the progressive regulatory expansions critiqued in later analyses of federal overreach.[29] During the same timeframe from 2001 to 2003, Korsmo served at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), leveraging his technical background to address regulatory frameworks on environmental policy.[12][15] His contributions focused on practical implementation rather than the ideological shifts observed in subsequent EPA administrations, yielding experience in balancing scientific data with statutory constraints amid debates over Clean Air Act enforcement and cost-benefit analyses.[13] These positions equipped Korsmo with empirical insights into executive-branch regulation and legislative drafting, informing his subsequent emphasis on originalist interpretations of administrative law. His membership in the Federalist Society during Yale Law School further highlighted a commitment to constitutional limits on agency power, contrasting with expansive views in academic and media critiques of conservative governance.[15][26]Legal Practice and Expertise
Private Sector Experience
Following his federal clerkship, Korsmo joined Sullivan & Cromwell LLP as a litigation associate in its New York office, serving from 2007 to 2009.[2][30] The firm, renowned for its representation in complex corporate disputes, provided Korsmo with exposure to high-stakes litigation in competitive financial and business contexts. His earlier summer associateship at the same firm in 2005 offered initial immersion in such matters.[31] In this role, Korsmo handled aspects of corporate litigation, which often centered on enforcing contractual obligations and resolving disputes arising from mergers, acquisitions, and financing arrangements—core elements of market-driven economic activity.[30][15] Such practice underscored the practical value of clear, predictable legal frameworks in minimizing transaction costs and enabling efficient capital allocation, countering views that portray corporate legal work as extractive rather than facilitative of growth.[12] No public records indicate significant adverse outcomes or major losses during his tenure, reflecting effective adherence to rule-of-law principles in adversarial settings.[32] This private sector stint, preceded by a summer position at LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae LLP in 2004, honed Korsmo's expertise in contract interpretation and dispute resolution, informing a grounded perspective on how robust private enforcement mechanisms sustain voluntary exchange over reliance on expansive regulation.[31]Areas of Specialization
Korsmo's primary areas of legal specialization encompass corporate law, with a focus on mergers and acquisitions (M&A) and corporate finance, areas informed by his prior practice at Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, a firm renowned for handling high-stakes transactions. His expertise involves dissecting governance structures, securities regulations, and financial incentives in corporate deals, applying doctrinal analysis to mitigate risks in multibillion-dollar contexts, as reflected in his teaching of advanced courses on these topics at Case Western Reserve University School of Law.[12][33] In tort law, Korsmo emphasizes foundational principles of negligence, strict liability, and damages calculation, prioritizing judicial precedents and economic incentives over expansive liability theories, which he imparts through first-year coursework designed to equip students with tools for real-world litigation. His scholarship in this domain, published in journals such as the Iowa Law Review and Washington University Law Review, has been cited by federal courts, including the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, underscoring its influence on interpretive rigor in liability disputes.[12] Serving as U.S. Director of the Canada-U.S. Law Institute, Korsmo addresses cross-border legal challenges, particularly in commercial and trade law, advocating for targeted harmonization based on verifiable economic interdependencies rather than broad supranational frameworks. This role leverages empirical realities of U.S.-Canada bilateral trade, which totaled approximately $916 billion in goods and services in 2023, to inform analyses of jurisdictional conflicts in areas like contract enforcement and regulatory compliance.[12][34]Academic Career
Professorship at Case Western Reserve
Charles R. Korsmo joined the Case Western Reserve University School of Law as an assistant professor in 2011, following prior academic experience at Brooklyn Law School.[2] He was promoted to associate professor in 2015 and later to full professor.[31] Korsmo's teaching focuses on corporate law subjects, including business associations, corporate finance, mergers and acquisitions, and torts, emphasizing practical applications in market-driven contexts.[12] [31] His courses integrate rigorous analysis of financial structures and liability principles, drawing from his prior private practice in high-stakes transactions.[15] Within the institution, Korsmo serves as the U.S. Director of the Canada-U.S. Law Institute, a role that promotes bilateral legal exchange grounded in empirical cross-border issues such as trade and regulatory alignment, rather than expansive international frameworks.[12] [31] This position facilitates targeted scholarly and professional dialogues between U.S. and Canadian jurists.[35]Contributions to Legal Scholarship
Korsmo's legal scholarship primarily addresses corporate governance, shareholder litigation, and the economic incentives shaping mergers and acquisitions (M&A). In collaboration with Minor Myers, he has critiqued the rise of "appraisal arbitrage," where activist investors demand appraisal rights post-merger to extract higher valuations, arguing this practice disciplines lowball offers but risks over-deterring efficient deals due to litigation costs and uncertainty; they propose targeted reforms like interest penalties on premature demands to align incentives with value creation.[36][37] Similarly, their analysis of Delaware's reduced judicial scrutiny in M&A highlights how doctrinal shifts toward deferring to deal prices have curbed opportunistic suits but may overlook flawed corporate finance in transactions like Dell and DFC Global, where market evidence was misapplied, potentially harming minority shareholders. A recurring theme in Korsmo's work is the tension between shareholder activism and firm value maximization, grounded in empirical observations of market behavior over abstract ideals. In "Woke Capital and the Ownership of Enterprise," he examines how institutional investors' pursuit of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) agendas—often termed "woke capital"—diverts resources from profit-oriented decisions, eroding director accountability and innovation by prioritizing non-economic goals without clear causal links to long-term returns.[38] This aligns with his broader critique of disclosure regimes and market efficiency assumptions, as in "The Audience for Corporate Disclosure," where he contends that bundled information releases distort valuations, advocating deference to trading prices only when supported by rigorous evidence of informational efficiency. His Federalist Society affiliations underscore a commitment to textualist interpretation of corporate statutes, emphasizing original economic purposes over expansive judicial interventions.[15] Korsmo's contributions have shaped academic discourse on reforming aggregate litigation and ownership paradigms without generating public controversies, influencing policy through cited analyses in journals like the Delaware Journal of Corporate Law rather than media amplification.[39] Works such as "Aggregation by Acquisition" propose market-based alternatives to class actions, fostering competition in claims trading to reduce attorney-driven inefficiencies while preserving deterrence. This body of peer-reviewed output, spanning over 20 articles since 2009, prioritizes causal mechanisms in legal design—e.g., how appraisal deters underpayment without inviting rent-seeking—over normative activism, earning recognition in conservative legal circles for advancing principled reforms.[12]Personal Life
Marriage and Family Influence on Career Shift
Korsmo married Adrienne, with whom he has two children: daughter Lilah and son William.[10][40] The family resides in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, where Korsmo has maintained a low-profile existence since transitioning from high-profile acting roles.[40] The onset of family responsibilities significantly influenced Korsmo's professional trajectory, prompting a move from intensive legal practice to academia. Specifically, after beginning a family with his wife, he opted for a teaching position at Case Western Reserve University School of Law, citing the demands of parenthood as a factor in seeking greater stability over the unpredictability of private sector law.[10] This shift underscores a causal link between establishing a traditional family unit and prioritizing roles that afford work-life balance, contrasting with the instability often associated with prolonged entertainment careers.[10] Korsmo's personal life has remained free of public scandals, reflecting a deliberate emphasis on privacy and familial continuity over celebrity pursuits. By settling in the Cleveland area, he avoided the transient lifestyle of former child actors, enabling sustained focus on legal scholarship and family amid the empirical advantages of rooted domesticity.[40][10]Filmography
Selected Film Appearances
- Dick Tracy (1990): Korsmo portrayed The Kid, a resourceful orphan who aids detective Dick Tracy, in Warren Beatty's adaptation of the comic strip, which grossed $162.7 million worldwide.[1][41]
- Hook (1991): He played Jack Banning, the resentful son of Peter Banning (Robin Williams), in Steven Spielberg's fantasy sequel to Peter Pan, earning $300.8 million at the box office.[42][2]
- What About Bob? (1991): Korsmo appeared as Sigmund "Siggy" Marvin, the brooding son of psychiatrist Dr. Leo Marvin (Richard Dreyfuss), in Frank Oz's comedy, which grossed $63.7 million domestically.[43][1]
- Can't Hardly Wait (1998): In this teen comedy directed by Harry Elfont and Deborah Kaplan, he starred as William Lichter, a high school senior seeking revenge and romance at a party, marking his return after a seven-year hiatus from acting.[20][44]
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