Mike Myers

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Biography

One of the few Saturday Night Live cast members to make a successful transition to film, Mike Myers gained worldwide fame with his impersonations of a heavy metal-loving couch potato in Wayne's World and an oversexed British secret agent in the Austin Powers series.

A native of Scarborough, Canada, where he was born on May 25, 1963, Myers seemed destined to link up with Saturday Night Live; when he made his TV debut in a commercial at the age of eight, the actress playing his mother was none other than a pre-SNL Gilda Radner. Myers went on to appear in a number of Canadian television shows, and after graduating high school, he almost immediately joined Second City, Toronto's famed improv group. By the age of 20, Myers was the star of his own TV series, Mullarkey and Myers, and also did time as the veejay of an all-night Canadian music video show. While he worked on various programs, the comedian continued to hone the characterizations that would later make him famous on SNL. The Wayne's World character of Wayne Campbell, for example, was one that Myers had been doing since high school, when he used the impersonation to impress girls at parties.

In 1989, Myers fulfilled a longtime dream by becoming a member of Saturday Night Live. During his time on the show, which lasted until 1994, he won an Emmy for his writing, and he starred alongside fellow-SNL cast member Dana Carvey in the successful 1992 film Wayne's World. Unfortunately for Myers, the film's 1993 sequel, Wayne's World 2, proved to be a disappointment, as did his other film that year, So I Married an Axe Murderer. However, he struck gold four years later, writing and starring in the sleeper hit Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery. The film's success all but guaranteed a sequel, but before writing and starring in it, Myers explored previously uncharted dramatic territory in 54 (1998). His portrayal of the titular club's drug-addled owner, Steve Rubell, met with wide acclaim; unfortunately, it was about the only aspect of the film that did. The following year, Myers switched back to comedy with the much-anticipated Austin Powers sequel, Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. The recipient of a marketing campaign whose volume was bested only by that of Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace, the film was even more popular than the original (which made more money on home video than in its initial theatrical release), although not as well received by critics. That same year, Myers returned to more northerly climes and his lifelong love of hockey when he appeared in Mystery, Alaska, which was helmed by Austin Powers director Jay Roach.

In 2001, Myers made an audible return to movie screens as an unsightly ogre with the kid-friendly fairy tale spoof Shrek. Realizing that his voice-over work didn't quite work after having recorded all of his dialogue, Myers dusted off the patented Scottish accent he had utilized with humorous effect in both SNL and So I Married an Axe Murderer and breathed new life into the tale of an unlikely hero enlisted to restore order to the land of fairy tales and rescue the princess. A hit with children and adults alike, Shrek scored big in the 2001 summer movie season, easily holding its own against such heavies as Pearl Harbor and The Mummy Returns.

The folowing year Myers once again returned to the screen as everyone's favorite snaggletoothed superspy in Austin Powers in Goldmember. Returning as series stalwarts Dr. Evil and Fat Bastard as well, the third film in the series also found Myers stepping into the shoes of the newest master criminal, the titular Goldmember. As a double jointed Danish criminal mastermind with an unsightly skin disorder and a plan for world domination, Myers once again scored a hit at the box office, raking in an impressive opening weekend gross and holding its own against a slew of notable summer releases.

The triumphant success (and staggering income) of the third Powers outing seemed then to set a pattern for Myers, who - after a disastrous portrayal of the title character in the live-action fiasco Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat (2003) - clung largely to franchise-oriented work over the next several years. He did so via extensive voiceover work in the second (2004) and the third (2007) Shrek outings. To no one's surprise, these efforts netted an unholy amount at the U.S. and international box offices. Myers followed this up by writing, producing and starring in The Love Guru (2008), about an Indian-raised swami who takes it upon himself to heal the schism between a Toronto hockey player and the man's soon-to-be ex-wife. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi
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Mike Myers

Mike Myers at the Shrek the Third premiere, London in 2007.
Birth name Michael John Myers
Born (1963-05-25) May 25, 1963 (age 49)
Scarborough, Ontario, Canada
Medium Film, television, stand up
Nationality Canadian
Years active 1975–present
Influences Peter Sellers, Dan Aykroyd, John Cleese, Chevy Chase
Spouse Robin Ruzan (1993–2007)
Kelly Tisdale (2010–present)
Notable works and roles Saturday Night Live
Wayne's World
Wayne's World 2
So I Married an Axe Murderer
Austin Powers
Shrek
Emmy Awards
Writing In A Variety, Music Or Comedy Program
1989 Saturday Night Live
Broadcast Film Critics Association
Best Cast
2009 Inglourious Basterds
Screen Actors Guild Award
Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
2009 Inglourious Basterds

Michael John "Mike" Myers (born May 25, 1963) is a Canadian actor, comedian, screenwriter, and film producer of British parentage.[1] He was a long-time cast member on the NBC sketch show Saturday Night Live in the late 1980s and the early 1990s and starred as the title characters in the films Wayne's World, Austin Powers, and the Shrek film series.

Contents

Early life

Myers was born and raised in Scarborough, Ontario, the son of British-born parents Eric Myers (1922–1991), an insurance man and World War II veteran of the Royal Engineers, and his wife Alice E. (née Hind; born 1926), an office supervisor and veteran of the Royal Air Force.[2] Both of his parents are from Liverpool, England. He has two older brothers, Peter Myers and Paul Myers, an indie rock singer-songwriter, broadcaster and author. Myers is of English, Irish, and Scottish ancestry,[3] and was raised Protestant.[4] He holds three citizenships, American, British, and Canadian.[1]

Myers began school at Bishopbriggs Academy then changed to the Stephen Leacock Collegiate Institute in Scarborough, Ontario. He began performing in commercials at age eight, and at ten he made a commercial for British Columbia Hydro Electric, with Gilda Radner playing his mother. When he graduated from high school, he joined the Second City Theatre. He left to tour Britain with comedian Neil Mullarkey.

Career

Early career

One of Myers's first acting jobs was in a TV commercial when he was ten years old.[2] Gilda Radner played his mother. A few months later, according to Myers, his brother was teasing him about his "girlfriend (Radner) being on some stupid show on Saturday". Myers swore that, one day, he too would be on that show, the then-fledgling Saturday Night Live.

Myers graduated from high school in 1982 and was immediately accepted into the Second City Canadian Touring Company, after which he moved to the UK where in 1985 he was one of the founding members of The Comedy Store Players, an improvisational group based at The Comedy Store in London. The next year, he starred in the British children's TV program Wide Awake Club, parodying the show's normal exuberance with his own "Sound Asleep Club", in partnership with Neil Mullarkey. He returned to Toronto and Second City in 1986 as a cast member in the Second City's Toronto main stage show. In 1988 he moved from Second City in Toronto to Chicago. In Chicago, he trained and performed at the Improv Olympic. He made numerous appearances, including as Wayne Campbell, on Toronto's Citytv in the early 1980s, on the alternative video show City Limits hosted by Christopher Ward. Myers also appeared as his Wayne Campbell character in the music video for Ward's Canadian hit "Boys and Girls". Later, Ward appeared as one of Austin Powers' band members in Ming Tea in Myers's popular movie series. The Wayne Campbell character was featured extensively in the 1986 summer series It's Only Rock & Roll, produced by Toronto's Insight Production Company for CBC Television. Wayne appeared both in studio and in a series of location sketches directed and edited by Allan Novak. Myers wrote another sketch, Kurt and Dieter co-starring with Second City's Dana Andersen and also directed by Novak, which would later turn into the popular "Sprockets" sketch on Saturday Night Live.

On 3 July 2011 Myers returned to The Comedy Store in London to reprise his role 'for one night only' with the improvisational troupe (The Comedy Store Players). The UK comedy website Chortle were full of glowing praise for Myers, claiming "Myers himself excelled, (and was) strikingly adept and quick-witted, when his laughs came they were the biggest squeals of the night...this was no chore for Myers- being funny comes naturally to him- he could’ve spent the whole two hours farting the Canadian national anthem and the audience would’ve still lapped it up."[5]

Film

Myers' star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

In 1992, Myers and Dana Carvey adapted Wayne's World into a full-length motion picture based on the SNL sketch. It was among the most successful movies of the year and the following year a sequel was released - Wayne's World 2. That year Myers also starred in So I Married an Axe Murderer which garnered a cult following. The characters in the movie were based on people Myers knew growing up in the Bridlewood section of Scarborough. After Wayne's World 2, Myers took a hiatus from television.

After a four year hiatus from television, Myers returned to acting in 1997 with the film Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, then a sequel in 1999, Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, finally topping it off with Austin Powers in Goldmember in 2002. Myers played both the title role (Austin Powers) and the villain (Dr. Evil), as well as other characters, in all three Austin Powers films. In 1998, he played one of his rare non-comedic roles in the film 54: Steve Rubell, proprietor of New York City's famous Studio 54, a 1970s discotheque. The film was moderately successful, and Myers's performance was widely praised. Myers later parodied the club as "Studio 69" in Goldmember.

In June 2000, Myers was sued by Universal Pictures for $3.8 million for backing out of a contract to play Dieter, the SNL character, in a feature film. Myers said he refused to honor the $20 million contract because he did not want to cheat moviegoers with an unacceptable script - one that he himself had written. Myers countersued, and a settlement was reached after several months where Myers agreed to make another film with Universal. That film would be The Cat in the Hat, released in November 2003 and starring Myers as the title character. In 2001, Myers played the title character in the DreamWorks animated film Shrek (2001). He reprised this role in Shrek 4-D in 2003, Shrek 2 (2004), Shrek the Third, and the Christmas special Shrek The Halls, both in 2007. In 2009 he did another non-comedic role, as British General Ed Fenech, in Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds. In 2010 Myers returned for what is apparently the last in the Shrek series, Shrek Forever After. Myers made a cameo appearance in Britney Spears' music video 'Boys' as his film character Austin Powers. Myers is a member of the band Ming Tea along with The Bangles' guitarist and vocalist Susanna Hoffs and musician Matthew Sweet. They performed the songs "BBC" and "Daddy Wasn't There" for the Austin Powers movies.

Myers at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival.

In a 2005 poll to find The Comedian's Comedian, he was voted among the top 50 comedy acts ever by fellow comedians and comedy insiders.

During a CBS interview in 2007, Myers noted that he normally takes three years between films. He spends one year "living his life" and then writes various screenplays, develops characters, practices them in front of live audiences, and then selects one of the screenplays to film. Myers noted that this was the Marx Brothers' procedure for developing their film material.

Myers received the MTV Generation award in June 2007, making him the second Canadian to win the award (Jim Carrey was the first in 2006), for bringing his unique style of comedy to small and big screens alike.

Personal life

Myers began dating actress and comedy writer Robin Ruzan in the late 1980s after meeting at a hockey game in Chicago, during which Myers caught a puck and used the incident as an icebreaker to strike up a conversation with Ruzan. The couple married in 1993, and Myers later referred to Ruzan as "his muse".[6] The couple filed for divorce in December 2005.[7]

In 2006, cafe owner Kelly Tisdale confirmed reports that she and Myers were dating, telling the National Enquirer, "we're actually surprised you didn't find out about us sooner." Myers and Tisdale wed in New York in the fall of 2010.[8] The couple have a son, Spike, born in September 2011.[9]

Myers is a Dungeons & Dragons player[10] and was one of several celebrities to have participated in the Worldwide Dungeons & Dragons Game Day in 2006.[11]

Myers has played for Hollywood United F.C., a celebrity football team.[12] He played in the 2010 Soccer Aid for UNICEF UK football match, England vs. R.O.W (Rest of the World) and scored his penalty during a sudden death shootout after the game ended 2-2 (June 6, 2010). The Rest of the World team beat England for the first time since the tournament started.

Filmography

Year Film Role Notes
1992 Wayne’s World Wayne Campbell Also Writer
MTV Movie Award for Best On-Screen Duo shared with Dana Carvey
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance
1993 So I Married an Axe Murderer Charlie McKenzie/ Stuart McKenzie
Wayne’s World 2 Wayne Campbell Also Writer
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best On-Screen Duo shared with Dana Carvey
1997 Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery Austin Powers / Dr. Evil Also Writer/ Producer
MTV Movie Award for Best Dance Sequence
MTV Movie Award for Best Villain
Nominated — Blockbuster Entertainment Award for Favorite Actor - Comedy
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance
1998 54 Steve Rubell Nominated — Csapnivalo Award for Best Male Performance
Thin Pink Line, TheThe Thin Pink Line Tim Broderick
Pete’s Meteor Pete
1999 Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me Austin Powers / Dr. Evil
Fat Bastard / Austin Ten-Minutes-From-Now
Also Writer/ Producer
American Comedy Award for Funniest Actor in a Motion Picture (Leading Role)
Blockbuster Entertainment Award for Favorite Villain
Canadian Comedy Award for Film - Performance - Male
Canadian Comedy Award for Film - Writing - Original
MTV Movie Award for Best On-Screen Duo shared with Verne Troyer
MTV Movie Award for Best Villain
Teen Choice Award for Film - Choice Sleazebag as Fat Bastard.
Nominated — Blockbuster Entertainment Award for Favorite Actor - Comedy
Nominated — Blimp Award for Favorite Movie Actor
Nominated — Blimp Award for Favorite Movie Couple shared with Heather Graham
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Fight shared with Verne Troyer
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Musical Performance shared with Verne Troyer
Nominated — Teen Choice Award for Film - Choice Chemistry shared with Mindy Sterling
Mystery, Alaska Donnie Shulzhoffer
2001 Shrek Shrek / The Narrator Voice
Nominated — Blimp Award for Favorite Voice from an Animated Movie
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best On-Screen Team shared with Eddie Murphy and Cameron Diaz
2002 Austin Powers in Goldmember Austin Powers / Dr. Evil
Fat Bastard / Goldmember
Also Writer/ Producer
Canadian Comedy Award for Film - Pretty Funny Male Performance
Canadian Comedy Award for Film - Pretty Funny Writing
MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance
Nominated — Blimp Award for Favorite Movie Actor
Nominated — Empire Award for Best Actor
Nominated — MTV Movie Award for Best Villain
Nominated — Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Actor - Comedy
2003 Nobody Knows Anything! 'Eye' Witness
Cat in the Hat, TheThe Cat in the Hat The Cat Nominated — Blimp Award for Favorite Movie Actor
Nominated — Razzie Award for Worst Actor
Nominated — Razzie Award for Worst Screen Couple
Shrek 4-D Shrek Voice
View from the Top John Witney
2004 Shrek 2 Shrek Voice
Nominated — Blimp Award for Favorite Voice from an Animated Movie
2006 Home Himself
2007 Shrek the Third Shrek Voice
2008 Love Guru, TheThe Love Guru Guru Maurice Pitka Also Writer/Producer
Razzie Award for Worst Actor
Razzie Award for Worst Screenplay
Nominated — National Movie Award for Best Performance - Male
2009 Inglourious Basterds Gen. Ed Fenech Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Cast
Central Ohio Film Critics Association Award for Best Ensemble
Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Cast
San Diego Film Critics Society Award for Best Performance by an Ensemble
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
2010 Shrek Forever After Shrek Voice

Awards

Myers has won the following awards:

Notable SNL characters

The following characters were created and played by Myers on SNL:
Characters

  • Dieter - host of Sprockets
  • Linda Richman - hostess of Coffee Talk
  • Simon - a little boy who does drawings in the bath and complains about having "prune hands" (the theme song for this segment was a slightly modified version of the theme song from "Simon in the Land of Chalk Drawings" by Edward MacLachlan)
  • Wayne Campbell (SNL, the Wayne's World films)
  • Pat Arnold (SNL, Bill Swerski's Superfans)
  • Stuart Rankin - proprietor of "All Things Scottish"
  • Lothar (Of the Hill People)
  • Middle-Aged Man - An older man who helps young people with their problems
  • Phillip - A child of the age of six (though in the sketch when arguing with another girl he claims he's six and a half, six and four fifths, and six and infinity plus one.) who is hypoglycemic and hyperactive (quote: "I'm a hyper hypo"). Phillip appears in at least two sketches, one with Nicole Kidman and the other with Kim Basinger.


Myers also did some celebrity impressions. Such as Adolf Hitler, Carl Sagan, Barbra Streisand, Ron Wood, Steve Lawrence, Jesse Helms, Mick Jagger, Judy Garland, Phil Collins, Barry Livingston, Gregg Jarrett & Garth Brooks.

References

  1. ^ a b Paul Harrison (2005). Mike Myers. Heinemann-Raintree Library. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-4109-1088-2. 
  2. ^ a b "Mike Myers Biography". Tiscali.co.uk. http://www.tiscali.co.uk/entertainment/film/biographies/mike_myers_biog.html. Retrieved 2008-10-23. 
  3. ^ "icBirmingham - Q&A: Mike Myers". Icbirmingham.icnetwork.co.uk. http://icbirmingham.icnetwork.co.uk/wow/films/film_interviews/tm_headline=q-a-mike-myers&method=full&objectid=19392698&siteid=50002-name_page.html. Retrieved 2008-10-23. 
  4. ^ "Mike Myers - International man of Mirth". Daily Post (Liverpool, England). 2002-07-27. http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-89729450.html. Retrieved 2008-10-23. 
  5. ^ Butler, Marc. "Mike Myers & The Comedy Store Players 3/7/2011". Chortle Live Review. Chortle. http://www.chortle.co.uk/shows/misc_live_shows/c/18807/the_comedy_store_players/review. Retrieved 2011-07-07. 
  6. ^ "Mike and Kelly wed in secret". New York Post. 2011-03-04. http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/mike_and_kelly_wed_in_secret_KXds3MX5f4UdjiN850gXeN. Retrieved 2011-03-04. 
  7. ^ "Mike Myers, wife file for divorce: report". MSN. 2005-12-24. http://news.ninemsn.com.au/entertainment/78858/mike-myers-wife-file-for-divorce-report. Retrieved 2011-03-04. 
  8. ^ "Mike Myers secretly marries longtime girlfriend". CTV. 2011-03-04. http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/Entertainment/20110304/mike-myers-marries-110304/. Retrieved 2011-03-04. 
  9. ^ "Mike Myers becomes first-time father to baby boy". CTV News. 2011-09-29. http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/Entertainment/20110929/mike-myers-kelly-tisdale-baby-110929/. Retrieved 2011-10-01. 
  10. ^ "Mike Myers". Inside the Actors Studio. episode 9. season 7. 2001-02-04. 
  11. ^ "Dungeons and Dragons Game Day at London Dungeon". Viewlondon.co.uk. 2007-11-03. http://www.viewlondon.co.uk/whatson/dungeons-and-dragons-game-day-article-5339.html. Retrieved 2010-06-18. 
  12. ^ Philip, Robert (2008-03-05). "Frank Leboeuf ready to act on the ball". Telegraph.co.uk. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/2293564/Frank-Leboeuf-ready-to-act-on-the-ball.html. Retrieved 2010-06-18. 
  13. ^ "Hollywood Walk of Fame database". HWOF.com. http://www.hwof.com/stars?recipient=Mike_Myers. 
  14. ^ "Mike Myers". Canada's Walk of Fame. http://www.canadaswalkoffame.com/inductee/mike-myers. 

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