VideoDetective.com

Fred Willard

Fred Willard
Fred Willard
Born: Sep 18, 1939
Occupation: Actor
Active: '70s-2000s
Major Genres: Comedy
Career Highlights: Best in Show, Waiting for Guffman, The Wedding Planner
First Major Screen Credit: Chesty Anderson - U.S. Navy (1976)
35 Videos for Fred Willard
Youth in Revolt (2010) Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004) Elvis is Alive! I Swear I Just Saw Him Eating a Ding Dong Outside the Piggly Wiggly (1998)
imps* (2009) Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle (2004) Permanent Midnight (1998)
Comic Relief: The Greatest... and the Latest (2008) How to Lose Your Lover (2004) Waiting for Guffman (1996)
Harold (2008) The Nutcracker and the Mouseking (2004) Sodbusters (1994)
WALL-E (2008) A Mighty Wind (2003) The Return of Spinal Tap (1992)
Back to You [TV Series] (2007) American Wedding (2003) Portrait of a White Marriage (1988)
Epic Movie (2007) The Year That Trembled (2002) Roxanne (1987)
Date Movie (2006) How High (2001) This Is Spinal Tap (1984)
Ira & Abby (2006) The Wedding Planner (2001) This Is Spinal Tap (1984)
Monster House (2006) Best in Show (2000) Salem's Lot (1979)
Chicken Little (2005) Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999) Silver Streak (1976)
The Aristocrats (2005) Idle Hands (1999)
Photos


There are currently no photos.

Biography:

Born in the Midwest and educated in the military, actor Fred Willard has proven his talent for improvisational comedy on the stage, television, and the big screen. His characters are frequently grinning idiots or exaggerated stereotypes, but Willard's skillful timing has always added a unique spin.

An alumni of Second City in Chicago, he's worked with many of the biggest-named comedians of his time. His early TV credits include a regular stint on The Burns and Schreiber Comedy Hour, a supporting part on the sitcom Sirota's Court, and the role of Jerry Hubbard, sidekick of TV talk-show host Barth Gimble (Martin Mull) in the satirical Fernwood 2Night.

He went on to appear in subsequent incarnations of Fernwood and continued to work with Mull and his gang for the next few decades. In the early '80s, he hosted the actuality series Real People and co-hosted the talk show Thicke of the Night. Some of his small, yet memorable, performances in feature comedies included President Fogerty in National Lampoon Goes to the Movies; the garage owner in Moving Violations who's mistaken for a doctor; the air force officer in This Is Spinal Tap; and Mayor Deebs in Roxanne.

Doing a lot of guest work on television, he was also involved in Martin Mull's The History of White People in America series and was the only human actor amid a cast of puppets on the strange show D.C. Follies. In the '90s, he worked frequently in the various projects of fellow satirists Harry Shearer, Christopher Guest, and the like.

He was travel agent Ron Albertson in Waiting for Guffman, TV announcer Buck Laughlin in Best in Show, and manager Mike LaFontaine in A Mighty Wind. He also appeared in Eugene Levy's Sodbusters, Permanent Midnight with Ben Stiller, and showed up in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me.

On television, he picked up a regular spots on The Tonight Show With Jay Leno, Roseanne (as Martin Mull's lover), and Mad About You, along with voice-over work on numerous cartoons. He also received an Emmy nomination for his role as Hank McDougal on Everybody Loves Raymond.

Since 2000, he has shown up in quite a few mainstream commercial films, including The Wedding Planner, How High, and American Wedding; but he also played Howard Cosell in the TV movie When Billie Beat Bobby. Projects for 2004 include Anchor Man: The Legend of Ron Burgundy and Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle. In 2004, however, he returned to his roots in outlandish comedies with Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy.

He also joined up with his Mighty Wind and Waiting for Guffman castmates again in 2006 with For Your Consideration, a satire of Hollywood self importance injected with Willard's trademark clever silliness. The next year he appeared in the spoof Epic Movie, as well as the romantic comedy I Could Never Be Your Woman.

~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide.