Jason Marsden
| Jason Marsden | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Jason Christopher Marsden |
| Born | January 3 1975 |
| Spouse(s) | Christy Marsden (2004-Present) |
| Children | Ryan and Brian, Lizzy |
| Official site | http://www.itsjasonmarsden.com |
Jason Christopher Marsden (born January 3, 1975) is an American screen and voice actor largely known for numerous voice roles in animated films, as well as various television series.
Biography
Born in Providence, Rhode Island, Marsden is the youngest of four children (he has two step brothers, Rick and Mark and one step sister Ana. His mother's name is Linda, a former fashion model and his father, Myles Marsden former Premier danseur of the Yugoslav National Ballet and co-founded of the first regional ballet company in New England called [State Balletof Rhode Island).
Jason and his parents moved from Rhode Island to California in August of 1985 when he was 10. He was discovered by producer Bud Barth (Director of Del Mar Media Arts). Barth introduced the young actor and his parents to one of Hollywoods top childrens agencies Cunningham, Escott and Dipene. CED Childrens agent, Bob Preston, was extremely impressed with Jason and immediately signed him for representation. It wasn't lomg after that when Marsden booked his first major role, a movie called Robot Jox which was filmed in Rome, followed by a national commercial for McDonalds for Halloween featuring the Mcpumpkin. He went on to do various commercials and memorable reoccuring roles. He played Alan Quartermaine, Jr., in the long running American soap opera General Hospital. He continued this role for two years, while still attending elementary school. This was followed soon afterwards by the role of Eddie Munster in the TV series remake of The Munsters titled The Munsters Today. At the same time, Jason also had his first voice acting role in a cartoon, that of Cavin in the Disney cartoon TV series Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bearsas well as being the young announcer of the (new) Mickey Mouse Club and other disney informercials.
Jason continued his career with many guest star appearances on prime time sitcoms and became very much in demand as a voice over artist at a very young age. He was well respected by his peers in the voice over world actors who had been in the business more years than the young actors age. More guest starring roles in sitcoms, cartoons, and films continued to come his way until 1992, when he landed the role of Dash X in Eerie, Indiana. While the program only ran for 19 episodes, and Jason only appeared for six of them, the program gathered a cult following and is still enjoyed today.
Although starring in a TV film, providing voices for cartoons, and guest-starring in sitcoms, Jason's next memorable roles were voice-acting ones, those of Goofy's son Max Goof in the animated film A Goofy Movie (1995). A prominent role in White Squall (1996) closely followed this, where Jason had the opportunity of working with the famous director Ridley Scott and actors Jeff Bridges, Ryan Phillippe, and Ethan Embry.
Some other roles that made him a household name were that of Rich Halke (J.T's best friend) in Step by Step, which was from 1995 until the show's cancellation in 1998; and Nelson Burkhard (D.J.'s rich boyfriend) in Full House. In Boy Meets World he played a character who was the best friend of Eric Matthews, who was played by Marsden's real-life best friend Will Friedle.
Since Step by Step, Jason has provided voices for numerous animated television shows and computer games, appeared in a direct-to-video film, been the voice of Kovu in The Lion King II: Simba's Pride, the voice of Haku in the American dub of Sen to Chihiro no kamikakushi (more commonly known as Spirited Away) (2001), starred in several TV films, and has made guest appearances on some of the most popular American sitcoms out there. He played the young Burt Ward/Robin in the 2002 television movie Return to the Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt. In Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn, he voiced several characters, most notably Lilarcor the talking sword, and the druid Cernd.
Jason is also famed for voicing the Sarcastic Scott McCloud in Lloyd in Space since series 5 (Scotts Debut)onwards, providing the comical and bring the shows hilarity to a whole new level
Jason has a passion for acting and directing. His first foray into directing was an episode of the Nickelodeon series The Journey of Allen Strange (1997). He also directed, wrote, produced, and edited The Greatest Short Film Ever!!! in 2004. He is known for his talent for physical and vocal comedy, multi-faceted acting skills, and short stature (as he is five feet, three inches tall[1]).
In recent years he is probably best known for his voice over work on the various DC Warner Bros animated series such as Superman: The Animated Series. Justice League, Static Shock, Teen Titans, Batman Beyond, Loonatics Unleashed, and The Batman.
His best man at his wedding in 2004 to wife Christy Marsden, a script supervisor,[citation needed] was his best friend, actor Will Friedle (known in recent years for playing Terry McGinnis/Batman in Batman Beyond). The two have worked together in the series in a couple of episodes.
His hobbies are ice-skating, rollerblading, drawing, swimming, and collecting Disney videos. As he is a huge Walt Disney fan, his pets are named Aladdin, Jasmine, and Lady.
From late Summer 2004 to early Spring 2007, Jason was the head announcer for Toon Disney (excluding Jetix), but he also serves as a part-time announcer for Disney Channel. He was recently seen in the film Fun with Dick and Jane as the cashier at the gas station, and is cast as Tasslehoff Burrfoot in the upcoming movie Dragonlance: Dragons of Autumn Twilight. [2]
Trivia
- Although not related to actor James Marsden, Jason's wife Christy and James' wife Lisa Linde have been best friends since they were six.[1]
Selected filmography
Notes
- ^ a b c Marsden, Jason. Jason Marsden (English). Retrieved on 2006-11-01.
- ^ Cast list at dragonlance-movie.com
Jason Marsden plays Tak in the Tak and the Power of Juju video game series.
External links
- Jason Marsden article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki
- Jason Marsden interview at findyourfav. 2007.
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