Spano was a member of the improvisation group The Wing, and in college debuted as Paris in a production of
Romeo and Juliet in 1967. In 1968, he helped found the
Berkeley Repertory Theatre, acting in its first production, and stayed with the company for ten years. He relocated to
Hollywood during the late 1970s, obtaining guest roles for television and minor roles in
American Graffiti (1973) and
The Enforcer (1976). In
Hill Street Blues he played Henry Goldblume during the entire seven-year run of the series, first as a detective sergeant, later as a lieutenant. Goldblume was one of Hill Street precinct captain Frank Furillo's trusted junior officers, serving at times as a hostage negotiator and gangs relations officer. The character was sympathetic to crime victims, sometimes conflicting with his duties as a police officer. Spano was one of many actors appearing throughout each episode, which typically had several story lines intermingled. After
Hill Street Blues ended, Spano won recurring roles in television police shows
Murder One (1995) and
NYPD Blue (1993), again as a detective, and has appeared regularly in television movies and television shows like
The X-Files (episodes "
Tempus Fugit" and "
Max"),
Mercy Point and
Amazing Grace. Spano won an
Emmy award in 1988 for Best Guest Actor in a Drama Series for a role he played in an episode of
Midnight Caller. He has appeared in several feature movies, including
Apollo 13 and
Primal Fear. His credits are often confused with Australian actor Joseph Spano. They are not related. He is a veteran stage actor on the east and west coasts. Spano made his Broadway debut in 1992 in the Roundabout Theater revival of
Arthur Miller's
The Price, with
Eli Wallach, which was nominated for a Tony for Best Revival. West coast stage credits include Eduardo Pavlovsky's
Potestad, and
David Mamet's
Speed-the-Plow and
American Buffalo, for which he was awarded an LA Drama Critics Circle Award. At the Rubicon Theater in Ventura he has played General Burgoyne in
George Bernard Shaw's ''
The Devil's Disciple'', Greg in
A. R. Gurney's
Sylvia and Vladimir in
Waiting for Godot. He is a member of the Antaeus Theater Company and a founding member of three other theater companies. He played a seductive vampire in the cult musical
Dracula: A Musical Nightmare in a small Los Angeles theatre. He also appeared in the TV movie
Brotherhood of Justice with
Keanu Reeves and
Kiefer Sutherland. He is the voice of the Wild Flower Hotline for the Theodore Payne Foundation, which can be reached by telephoning (818) 768-1802.
NCIS Spano has been a recurring character of
NCIS since its premiere episode, "
Yankee White", playing FBI Special Agent
Tobias Fornell, the FBI counterpart to NCIS Special Agent
Leroy Jethro Gibbs, portrayed by
Mark Harmon. In Season 15, Fornell is no longer with the FBI, but is a private investigator. Two episodes have used Fornell's personal life as the basis of an
NCIS episode: one where Fornell's daughter is imperiled and another where Fornell's career is imperiled. In each episode, it is the friendship between Gibbs and Fornell which is invoked in order to involve NCIS in the resolution. ==Personal life==