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Paul Reiser

 
Actor: Paul Reiser
 
  • Born: Mar 30, 1957 in New York City, New York
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer
  • Active: '80s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Diner, Aliens, Cross My Heart
  • First Major Screen Credit: Diner (1982)

Biography

One of the salutary byproducts of the TV series Seinfeld is that it created a market in the '90s for sitcoms built around the comedy routines of young, hip New York comics. One of the best of these programs was Mad About You, created by and starring Manhattan-born Paul Reiser. Reiser and Seinfeld share more than a similarity of sitcoms; together with comedians Larry Miller and Mark Schiff, they comprise what has been unofficially dubbed the Four Funniest Men in the World Club, which has met for lunch each New Year's Day for the past several years. Reiser's credentials include a degree from S.U.N.Y.-Binghamton, a short stint as a health food distributor, and a 1982 film debut in Diner. Most of his film roles have been in comedies, though he was effectively cast as a greedy space traveler (who comes to a well-deserved bad end) in 1986's Aliens. Reiser has noted that his weekly series Mad About You, in which he co-starred with Helen Hunt, was based on his relationship with his wife, Paula. In 1995, Paul Reiser took a brief respite from Mad About You to star in the "single dad" comedy Bye Bye Love, which despite a strong promotional tie-in with McDonald's restaurants, was not popular enough to encourage Reiser to give up his day job. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Quotes By: Paul Reiser
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Quotes:

"I always loved comedy, but I never knew it was something you could learn to do. I always thought that some people are born comedians ... just like some people are born dentists."

 
Wikipedia: Paul Reiser
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Paul Reiser

Paul Reiser in Philadelphia in August 2005
Born March 30, 1957 (1957-03-30) (age 52)
New York City, New York, U.S.

Paul Reiser (born March 30, 1957) is an American stand-up comedian, actor, author and writer.

Contents

Biography

Born to a Jewish American family, Reiser attended the East Side Hebrew Institute on the Lower East Side of Manhattan and graduated from Stuyvesant High School in New York City.[1] He earned his bachelor's degree at Binghamton University, where he majored in music (piano, composition). He was active in campus theater productions and founded "The Little Theater That Could", an on-campus community theater organization located in Hinman College, Reiser's dorm community. It was later renamed Hinman Production Company.[1] Reiser eventually found his calling when he performed in New York City comedy clubs during university summer breaks.

Career

After honing his skills as a stand-up comic in New York City, Reiser's break-out film role came in 1982 when he appeared in the Diner, a coming-of-age film by Barry Levinson. Reiser's character, Modell, a closet stand-up comedian, effectively brought Reiser's comic abilities to the attention of Hollywood. The film also helped boost the careers of his co-stars Kevin Bacon, Steve Guttenberg, and Mickey Rourke. He followed this success playing a detective in 1984's Beverly Hills Cop, a role he reprised in the 1987 sequel, Beverly Hills Cop II. Reiser also had roles in James Cameron's 1986 movie Aliens, in The Marrying Man (1991), and in the comedy Bye Bye, Love (1995).

Reiser starred for two years on television as one of two possible fathers of a teenage girl in the sitcom My Two Dads, and later rose to fame in North America as Paul Buchman on Mad About You, a long-running comedy series he helped create in which Helen Hunt co-starred as his wife. For his work in Mad About You, Reiser received nominations for an Emmy, a Golden Globe, an American Comedy Award, and a Screen Actors Guild award. In the successful show's final 1999 season, he and Hunt were paid US $1 million per episode.[2] In 2001, Reiser took on a dramatic role as a man desperate to find his birth mother after learning he has a serious illness in the British television movie My Beautiful Son.

Reiser has also written two books: Couplehood, about the ups and downs of being in a committed relationship, and Babyhood, about his experiences as a first-time father. Couplehood was unique in the fact it started on page 145. Reiser explained this as his way of giving the reader a false sense of accomplishment. Both books appeared on The New York Times bestseller list.

In 2002, Reiser made a guest appearance as himself on Larry David's critically-acclaimed HBO sitcom, Curb Your Enthusiasm.[3]

Describing himself in a 2006 interview with the Oxonian Review during a visit to the United Kingdom, Reiser said, "I think I'm perceived as a kind of poor man's Billy Crystal....nobody remembers Mad About You the way they remember Seinfeld. I stopped believing myself a long time ago."[4]

Trivia

  • Number 77 on Comedy Central's list of the 100 Greatest Stand-ups of All Time.
  • In May 1996, Reiser appeared on The Late Show with David Letterman in the middle of writing his second book. Since he didn't have a title yet (it would later be called Babyhood), he showed a prop book with the same cover as his first book Couplehood. The title was simply called Book, a name Whoopi Goldberg used for her 1997 publication.
  • Was considered for the role of Danny Tanner on the ABC sitcom Full House,[citation needed] along with John Posey and Bob Saget. Saget ended up getting the role.
  • The name of Reiser's production company - Nuance Productions - comes from one of his lines in the film, "Diner," explaining his discomfort with the word nuance.

Filmography


Television

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Paul Reiser" Read more