Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Aisha Tyler

 
Black Biography: Aisha N. Tyler

actor; television broadcaster; comedian

Personal Information

Born on September 18, 1970, in San Francisco, CA; daughter of Jim Tyler and Robin Gregory; married Jeff Tietjens (a corporate attorney), 1997
Education: Dartmouth College, B.A. (political science), 1996.

Career

Market analyst for land acquisitions firm; comedian, 1991-; writer, producer, director, and star of The Whipper, 2000; performer, The Fifth Wheel, 2000-01; host, Talk Soup, 2000-02; films: Showtime, 2002; The Santa Clause 2, 2002.

Life's Work

A six-foot stand-up sensation with a compelling figure and classic style, comic Aisha Tyler is a feminist pioneer--she is late-night cable TV's first female and African-American host of Talk Soup. A mouthy child and unpopular at prep school, she grew up to pursue her career in two directions--a college degree in political science and an avocation in wise-cracking, keenly observant one-woman comedy. At a fork in the road, she veered away from serious business into the funny business of mocking human foibles. Her aim is to be the female equivalent of Chris Tucker or Eddie Murphy.

A San Francisco native, Tyler was drawn to reading and comedy during her childhood. After the breakup and divorce of her parents, teacher Robin Gregory and freelance photographer Jim Tyler, she retreated into books and Scooby-Doo, her favorite cartoon character. At age ten, Aisha passed into her father's custody, and after 1980 she grew up in San Francisco's Haight district. Although she is now known for her willowy long legs and stunning onscreen beauty, she recalled to People magazine a youth lacking in grace and self-confidence: "I've been six feet tall since second grade. I was gigantic--this Godzilla kid."

As the only black at an upscale private school, Tyler was a social pariah and ugly duckling. Among the fashionable in-crowd she felt put down and unwelcome. She fought back by learning how to be a controller of laughs rather than the butt of them, and in her sophomore year she transferred to the McAteer High School of Performing Arts.

Rather than a music or straight drama course, Tyler wanted to opt for improvisation classes and a future as a stand-up comic, a goal that she craved for emotional reasons. After she set a record for skipping classes, her teachers gave into her fierce ambition to take instruction in sketch and improvisation. On the Essence website, she confided the gist of her comedic style: "I take the most wrenchingly painful moments of my life, brush them off and present them for the amusement of others. Luckily for me, my childhood was torture."

By the time she reached age 21, Tyler was feeling the need to nurture her creative style. After graduating from Dartmouth with a degree in political science and a minor in environmental policy, she worked for two-and-a-half years for an environmental firm that bought land for parks and conservation. At the end of her regular nine-to-five day, she entertained comedy-clubbers at the Los Angeles Improv and other vibrant humor venues. As she explained on her website, "This means hanging out in smoky clubs every night, drinking until three a.m. with groups of gropy, miserable guys ... cursing like a sailor, becoming embittered, and proving to club owners, comics, and yourself that you are utterly devoted to your art."

Although she became seasoned at performing comedy gigs in thirty states, Tyler found the amateur comedy round demanding, depressing, and low-paying. She took pride in learning from others rather than pirating jokes. While she was willing to take the hardships and failures along with the triumphs, she admitted that the downside of the club circuit was poverty, late-night loneliness at the back of the club, drinking too much alcohol, and forcing herself to laugh at the jokes of her peers. In 1996 she settled in Los Angeles with her college beau, Jeff Tietjens, and while he finished law school, she made the break from the land conservation office job to full-time professional stage comic. The couple were married and Jeff critiqued her monologues while buoying her confidence. Hilarious, yet cerebral, she has recognized the profession's threat to women stand-up comedians. In an interview with Essence.com, she explained, "Comedy doesn't always appeal to women because it's personal. And you can't be afraid to look stupid or ugly."

Although a newcomer to television, Tyler participated in guest spots on Politically Incorrect, and starred in a self-produced and self-directed cinema short called The Whipper, which featured men exposing their posteriors. Success came Tyler's way in the summer of 2000 after she took the lead at auditions for the job of emcee for E! Entertainment Television's popular Talk Soup, where she got the job, replacing former host Hal Sparks. A hip satire, the show drew its choice bits from daytime television talk shows. It suited Tyler's style. She told interviewer Phillip Zonkel of E! Online, "It's a comedian's medium. You get to sit there every day and make fun of people. A comedian couldn't come up with a better job, except for maybe sleeping and playing Nintendo."

Tyler bonded immediately with the camera and began attracting a band of Soupsters, her loyal fan base. For their entertainment, she culled the best tidbits from an unending parade of clips from daytime television. On camera she performed a full gamut of one-liners and skits opposite celebrity guests. The show's more colorful parts had her playing such characters as a leopard skin-clad Bootsy, Crouching Tigress, Foxy Chocolat, Frenchy, Gladiator, Diamonds, and Pot O' Gold. On Fridays, she performed before live audiences. For normal attire, she chose appealing outfits from the collections of Donna Karan, Calvin Klein, and Narciso Rodriguez.

Most popular in Tyler's scripts were digs at afternoon and late-night television talk fests. In her two-season run, her subjects ranged from male-female mismatches, strippers, and cross-dressers to the Japanese animated hero Pokemon. One of her targets, emcee Jerry Springer, remarked that Tyler is intelligent, gorgeous, and careful to omit cruelty from her shtick. After the September 11, 2001, attack on the World Trade Center, she halted the zaniness and honored a personal loss, a cameraman who was on the Talk Soup team. While managing a demanding comic audience, Tyler posed for the cover of Maxim and hosted a syndicated dating show, The Fifth Wheel, but vowed never to give these secondary jobs preference over Talk Soup. When the show came to an end on May 10, 2002, she joined the cast--Tom Macnamara, Alan Wu, Fred Mendes, Brad Gyori, and Mark Turner--in drinking champagne while lovingly dismantling the set.

Tyler left Talk Soup with a yen to create a career which would equal that of the best male comics. One of her guest spots placed her on the celebrity version of NBC's The Weakest Link, where she beat the competition. She explained on the Essence website that, after mastering the actor's craft, she worked hard in television and film before setting out for higher ground. Wistfully she added, "There's never been a female Chris Tucker or Eddie Murphy--someone who's young and funny and doing those great action films--that's what I'd like to do."

In March of 2001 Tyler joined Robert de Niro, Rene Rousso, and Eddie Murphy in the film Showtime. Tyler plays the love interest to Murphy, with whom she also appeared in 1997's Metro. She shared the stage with Jay Leno on the Tonight Show on September 10, 2001. In January of 2002 she scheduled a week-long appearance on Hollywood Squares, followed by appearances at the Golden Globe Awards and on the 2001 NAACP Image Awards. A comedy tour featured her at the Tempe Improv in Tempe, Arizona, the Key Club in Los Angeles, the Comedy Connection in Boston, the University of North Florida in Jacksonville, and the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen, Colorado. She continued in film that spring, winning a choice role in a film sequel, The Santa Clause 2, starring comic Tim Allen.

Versatile and eager, Tyler has pursued multiple media venues to expand her options. Covers and feature articles for Vibe, Self, Glamour, Vogue, Honey, Rosie, and Oprah have boosted Tyler's name and face recognition with the public, as she continues building a career in comedy. She possesses an insider's wisdom. She has advised would-be female stand-up comics to accept the fact that the job leaves them vulnerable. To Essence Entertainment Online she explained, "That's why there aren't many women in stand-up, because you're exposed. Men are socialized to be garish and foolish. Women are taught to be precious and composed--that doesn't work in stand-up."

Tyler glories in the rewards of doing comedy, which she has called exhilarating and cathartic, both for herself and for her audience. In the style of one of her favorites, Conan O'Brien, she surfs the edge of racy humor without going overboard. To Essence.com interviewer Janice Rhoshalle Littlejohn, Tyler remarked, "As long as you talk about what's real and it's original, fresh, and funny, it will be funny to other people." Tyler is thrilled to see people in her audience released from their troubles by laughter. Of her choice of career, she exulted on her website, "God, I love it."

Awards

Selected as a breakthrough talent, Variety, 2001.

Works

Selected filmography

  • Grand Avenue, HBO, 1996.
  • Metro, Buena Vista, 1997.
  • Dancing in September, HBO, 2000.
  • The Whipper (independent film), 2000.
  • Showtime, Warner, 2002.
  • The Santa Clause 2, Buena Vista, 2002.

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Arizona Republic, January 17, 2002.
  • Esquire, October 2001, p. 118.
  • Essence, May 2002, pp. 103-05.
  • Glamour, May 2001, p. 188.
  • Los Angeles Magazine, September 2001, p. 192.
  • People Weekly, April 9, 2001, p. 204.
  • Rosie Magazine, September 2001.
  • Vogue, May 2001, p. 151.
On-line
  • Playboy.com, http://www.playboy.com/
  • Essence Entertainment, http://www.essence.com/features/032101_aisha_tyler.shtml
  • Eonline, http://www.eonline.com/
  • Aisha Tyler Official Website, http://www.btdo.net/comedy/aishatyler.htm

— Mary Ellen Snodgrass

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Actor: Aisha Tyler
Top
  • Born: Sep 18, 1970
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer
  • Active: 2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Death Sentence, Ghost Whisperer: Season 01, The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause
  • First Major Screen Credit: Talk Soup (1991)

Biography

African-American actress, comedian, author, reality-show host, and occasional scriptwriter Aisha Tyler came of age in San Francisco and studied poly sci at Dartmouth College before mounting a (brief) career as an advertising executive in her hometown. Dissatisfied by this pursuit, and pining to launch herself as a full-time entertainer, Tyler "dropped out" of the corporate world and hit the road with a solo standup comedy act in the mid-'90s.

Around 2001 -- after five years in Los Angeles with occasional standup bookings and concomitantly limited acclaim and recognition -- Tyler landed two huge breaks, first as the host of the irreverent Talk Soup during that program's final year (a position she inherited from Greg Kinnear, John Henson, and others), and then as the primary host of the dating series The 5th Wheel. Riding the crest of popularity generated by reality television during the first several years of the millennium, Wheel coupled the unscripted spontaneity of The Real World and Survivor with the format of the dating series Blind Date. Its premise involved setting two couples up on blind dates, having them "swap" partners, and adding an unforeseen fifth member (the "wheel" of the title) to stir things up and add provocation. The program placed a greater emphasis on erotic and suggestive content than Blind and -- perhaps as a result -- it unsurprisingly became a massive, runaway hit.

The ever-ambitious Tyler, however, continued to expand her horizons. She maintained a short tenure with Wheel and quickly moved on to other endeavors, placing a particularly strong emphasis on television work. This included a stint as Charlie (the only recurring African-American cast member) in the final two seasons of the popular sitcom Friends, and a recurring role as covert terrorist Marianne Taylor on the weekly suspenser 24. Tyler also portrayed attorney Andrea Moreno (who dies in a car crash but is then "ushered" over to the other side by Jennifer Love Hewitt's psychic) in the first season (2005-2006) of the supernatural drama The Ghost Whisperer. After that, Tyler segued into feature-film work, with bit roles in such pictures as The Santa Clause 3 and .45.

Six feet tall and one of the most physically breathtaking young actresses of her generation, Tyler frequently provides beauty tips in such magazines as Ebony and Glamour; she is also an outspoken proponent of physical fitness and a strenuous exerciser who pushes herself to an almost unimaginable degree. A February 2007 issue of In Style magazine reported, "In addition to scaling walls, Tyler runs, uses a rowing machine, lifts weights, snowboards and scuba dives. But for her, nothing beats the mental rush of rock climbing." In 2004, Tyler also authored and published the best-seller Swerve: Reckless Observations of a Postmodern Girl, a free-form, witty expostulation on such "hot" topics as men, bikini waxing, reality television, dating wars, sex, and body image. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Aisha Tyler
Top
Aisha Tyler
Born Aisha N. Tyler
September 18, 1970 (1970-09-18) (age 39)
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Occupation Actress, Writer, Director, Comedienne
Years active 1996–present
Spouse(s) Jeffrey Tietjens (1992–present)
Official website

Aisha N. Tyler (born September 18, 1970) is an American actress, stand-up comedian and writer, known for her regular role in the first season of Ghost Whisperer and recurring roles in Friends and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.

Contents

Early life

Tyler was born in San Francisco, California, the daughter of Robin Gregory, a teacher, and Jim Tyler, a photographer.[1] Her parents divorced when she was 10 and she was raised by her father. She pursued an early interest in comedy during high school, when she would skip her regular courses to attend local improv classes. She attended McAteer High School in San Francisco.[2] She also attended high school classes at San Francisco School of the Arts. She attended Dartmouth College where she earned a degree in environmental policy and was a member of The Tabard, a co-ed fraternity. At Dartmouth, she co-founded and sang in the all-female a capella group, The Dartmouth Rockapellas, a group devoted to spreading social awareness through song. After briefly working for a San Francisco advertising firm, she toured the country pursuing a comedy career before finally moving to Los Angeles, California, in 1996.

Career

Her career in television took off in 2001 with jobs as the host of Talk Soup and the reality-dating series The Fifth Wheel, although Talk Soup was cancelled the following year and Tyler left The Fifth Wheel in 2002 to pursue other interests. Tyler has devoted a significant amount of her time to independent projects, including a role in the play Moose Mating, for which she received an NAACP Image Award. She also wrote, directed, and starred in the independent short film The Whipper.

Moving into acting, Tyler featured in Friends, having a recurring role as Charlie Wheeler, Joey's and then Ross' girlfriend in the ninth and tenth seasons. She followed this up with guest spots on CSI: Miami and Nip/Tuck, as well as balancing recurring roles on both CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and 24 during the 2004-2005 TV season. She also filmed her own sitcom pilot for CBS, which was not picked up. She has guest-starred on MADtv.

Following her regular role on the CBS series Ghost Whisperer during its first season and in the first episode of season 2, she has appeared in another CBS drama Without A Trace. Tyler appeared in several movies, including The Santa Clause 2, the sequel The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause, .45, and the comedy Balls of Fury. In 2007, she filmed the thriller Death Sentence and the crime drama Black Water Transit. She also continues to appear on television, with appearances on Boston Legal, Reno 911!, The Boondocks, and as a guest movie critic on several episodes of At the Movies with Ebert & Roeper, filling in for the absent Roger Ebert while he recuperated from surgery.

Tyler has moved into print media as a regular contributor to Glamour and Jane magazines. Her first book, Swerve: A Guide to the Sweet Life for Postmodern Girls was released in January 2004.[3] Tyler also plays on the World Poker Tour in the Hollywood Home games for the Childhelp USA charity. She also made a guest appearance on Kanye West's single, "Slow Jamz", which also featured Twista and Jamie Foxx.

Tyler appeared in a nude story along with other celebrities in the May 2006 issue of Allure.[4] Allure's annual Nude Issue raises money to combat skin cancer.

In May 2009, it was announced that ABC had given Tyler her own talk show pilot called The Aisha Tyler Show.[5]

Personal life

Since 1992, Tyler has been married to an attorney, Jeff Tietjens. Tyler and her husband are avid fans of beer; both are home brewers. She discussed her love and passion for beer on DC 101's Elliot in the Morning and The Sharon Osbourne Show.[6]

In January 2008, she participated in a video for Barack Obama produced by will.i.am called "Yes We Can".

By her own admission, Aisha is an avid gamer, with the Halo series being her favorite.

She is quoted as saying that "Anyone who doesn't laugh at farts has no soul."

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role
2000 Dancing in September Woman with Weave
2001 Moose Mating Josie
2002 The Santa Clause 2 Mother Nature
2003 One Flight Stand Alexis
2004 Never Die Alone Nancy
2006 The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause Mother Nature
.45 Liz
2007 Death Sentence Detective Wallis
Balls of Fury Mahogany
The Trap Angela
2008 Meet Market Jane
Bedtime Stories Donna Hynde
2009 Black Water Transit Casey Spandau

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1996 Nash Bridges Reporter Guest role
Grand Avenue Girl #1 TV movie
1999 The Pretender Angela Somerset Guest role
2001 Curb Your Enthusiasm Shaq's Girlfriend Guest role
Off limits[7] Guest role
2002 The Sausage Factory Jamie Guest role
2003 Friends Charlie Wheeler Recurring role
CSI: Miami Janet Medrano Guest role
2004 Untitled Aisha Tyler Project Melanie Haywood Rejected TV pilot
Nip/Tuck Manya Mabika Guest role
2004-2005 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Mia Dickerson Recurring role, 8 ep.
2005 24 Marianne Taylor Recurring role
2005-2006 Ghost Whisperer Andrea Marino Series regular
2006 For One Night Desiree Howard TV movie
2007 Boston Legal Taryn Campbell Guest role
The Boondocks Luna Guest role
2008 Million Dollar Password Herself Celebrity Player
Reno 911 Befany Dangle Guest role
2009 Aisha Tyler is Lit: Live at the Fillmore Herself Stand-up special
Celebrity Jeopardy! Herself Celebrity episode
Archer Agent Lana Kane Guest star

References

  1. ^ "Aisha Tyler Biography". filmreference. 2008. http://www.filmreference.com/film/35/Aisha-Tyler.html. Retrieved 2008-07-28. 
  2. ^ "Adam Carolla Podcast". 2009. http://carollaradio.com/2009/03/09/acp-20090310-adam-and-aisha-tyler/. Retrieved 2008-04-13. 
  3. ^ Tyler, Aisha; 237 p (2004). Swerve: A Guide to the Sweet Life for Postmodern Girls. New York: Plume. ISBN 0525948066. 
  4. ^ Staff writers (2007-04-24). "Carla Gugino - Stars line up for naked spread". Contact Music. http://www.contactmusic.com/news.nsf/article/stars%20line%20up%20for%20naked%20spread_1028957. Retrieved 2008-07-29. 
  5. ^ "Aisha Tyler Nabs Talk Show Pilot". TVGuide.com. http://www.tvguide.com/News/Aisha-Tyler-Talk-1005895.aspx. Retrieved 2009-05-08. 
  6. ^ Staff writers (2004-04-02). "Aisha Tyler's Home-Brewed Beer". Contact Music. http://www.contactmusic.com/new/xmlfeed.nsf/mndwebpages/aisha%20tyler.s%20home.brewed%20beer. Retrieved 2008-07-29. 
  7. ^ [1]

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Aisha Tyler" Read more