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Jeff Garlin

Jeff Garlin

Jeff Garlin spent the first 11 years of his life in the Chicago, IL suburbs, where his father had a plumbing supply business and his mother was active in community theater. His parents took their funny eight-year-old son to see a live performance of Jimmy Durante at a Chicago theater, at which point Garlin decided "That's the job I want." The family moved to Southern Florida, where Garlin graduated from Nova High School in Davie before entering the film program at the University of Miami as a "backup plan" to appease the parents who insisted the wannabe comedian get an education. On the night of his 20th birthday, Garlin made his stand-up comedy debut at The Comic Strip in Ft. Lauderdale and returned to the stage many times before moving to Chicago in 1984 to study sketch and improv comedy with the famed Second City theater. Garlin had a great natural instinct for comedy and understanding of what works on stage, and his Attention Deficit Disorder only boosted the improvisation skills of someone less inclined to memorize lines.After five years honing his skills in Chicago, Garlin moved between New York and Los Angeles several times, doing national stand-up comedy tours, debuting on TV on VH1's "Stand-up Spotlight" (1988-2004) and landing small character roles - often as working class lunkheads - in films like "Robocop 3" (1993) and "Little Big League" (1994). In 1997, the seasoned performer who was earning a reputation as "the comedian's comedian," helped direct friends Jon Stewart and Denis Leary in their own respective HBO comedy specials, "Lock 'n Load: Denis Leary" (1997) and "Jon Stewart: Unleavened" (1997). He gave TV audiences a taste of his own talent with regular appearances on HBO's "Comedy Half Hour" (1995-2002) and received a profile boost when a single guest spot on the Paul Reiser/Helen Hunt comedy "Mad About You" (NBC, 1992-99) so charmed producers that Garlin's character - a sporting goods store employee - was written into a dozen more episodes over the next two years.At some point during that prolific time, Garlin had lunch with producer and writer Larry David and suggested he create a behind-the-scenes documentary about his return to stand-up comedy after his departure from producing "Seinfeld" (NBC, 1989-1998). Garlin's off-the-cuff suggestion morphed into the basis of "Curb Your Enthusiasm," a "mockumentary" of David's life in Hollywood that blended real and fictional. Garlin played the fictional role of David's accommodating manager and sidekick and Cheryl Hines his fictional wife while a steady stream of guest stars played both fictional roles and themselves. The smart but cynical comedy was a critical hit with a loyal following and earned plenty of attention for being largely improvised by actors, based on very brief plot outlines written by David. Garlin's outstanding performances season after season cemented his reputation as a top improvisational comic, and he also earned four Emmy nominations as part of the shows team of executive producers. Meanwhile, through the exposure from his weekly appearances on the HBO show, more film and TV opportunities opened up. He had guest roles on "King of the Hill" (Fox, 1997-2010) and two episodes of "Everybody Loves Raymond" (CBS, 1996-2005) and used his improv skills to confuse and outrage unwitting victims on Comedy Central's "Crank Yankers" (2002-07). On the big screen, Garlin had supporting roles in Steven Soderbergh's Hollywood send-up "Full Frontal" (2002) and hit wide release as Eddie Murphy's sidekick in the formulaic family romp "Daddy Day Care" (2003). While helming a regular Sunday night stand-up showcase called "Jeff Garlin's Combo Platter" at comedy clubs around L.A., Garlin also maintained a high profile with a recurring role as a studio executive on the Fox "alternative" comedy "Arrested Development" (2003-06). Behind the scenes he worked with TBS to develop his own sitcom, "The Jeff Garlin Program," which followed the on- and off-camera exploits of the star in a show-within-a-show concept. The network decided to pass on the idea, but Garlin carried on undaunted and wrote and directed his first feature the same year, the unexpectedly sweet romantic comedy "I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With" (2007), which focused on a comedian's unnatural relationship with women and food. The screenplay was based on a one-man stage show Garlin had developed at Second City, and it enjoyed nearly unanimous rave reviews on the film festival circuit, though did not receive wide release despite an appealing comic cast including Sarah Silverman, Dan Castellaneta and Amy Sedaris.Representing the full range of Garlin's audience spectrum, he directed a filmed version of John Water's one-man show "This Filthy World" (2007), had a supporting role in the delightfully adolescent comedy "The Rocker" (2008) and lent his voice to one of the year's top films, Disney/Pixar's animated wonder "Wall-E." His steady appeal with family audiences also led to a role in Disney's live action preteen comedy "Wizards of Waverly Place" (Disney, 2007-11). Following a pair of supporting roles in "Toy Story 3" (2010) and "Cars 2" (2011), Garlin co-starred in indie comedy "Safety Not Guaranteed" (2012) before writing and directing his second feature, the Little League comedy "Dealin' With Idiots" (2013). Garlin finally gained mainstream notice when he co-starred in the hit comedy "The Goldbergs" (ABC 2013-) as grumpy patriarch Murray Goldberg. Between series, he wrote and directed his third feature, "Handsome" (Netflix 2017) and recorded his role for "Toy Story 4" (2019).
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