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Tom Arnold

 
Actor: Tom Arnold
  • Born: Mar 06, 1959 in Ottumwa, Iowa
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: True Lies, The Stupids, Carpool
  • First Major Screen Credit: Roseanne: Guilt by Disassociation (1989)

Biography

Brash, bullyish American comic actor Tom Arnold held down a number of "Joe" jobs after college--meat packer, box stacker, bartender, bouncer--before giving stand-up comedy at try. He was very funny in a blunt sort of way, but did not really make it big until his notorious union with comedienne Roseanne Barr in 1990. At the behest of his powerful spouse, who featured him as a semi-regular on her smash hit ABC sitcom Roseanne and made him a producer, Tom starred in two expensive network sitcoms, playing an obnoxious TV comedy star in one (The Jackie Thomas Show) and a standard-issue "lovable dad" in the other (Tom). Despite the strenuous efforts of Roseanne's production staff, neither program clicked with the public, though Arnold proved in both instances that he had the talent to stand on his own without the input of his wife.

The Roseanne/Tom marriage went down in flames in 1993, with scorching and libelous incriminations from both parties. Industry pundits predicted that Tom Arnold was washed up, but he confounded his enemies with a well-received performance as a gregarious secret agent in the blockbuster Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle True Lies (1994). He then did a memorable turn in the Hugh Grant vehicle Nine Months (1995). Subsequently, Arnold has steadily worked in a number of decidedly mediocre films including the roundly panned McHales Navy (1997) in which he played the role created by Ernest Borgnine for his mid-1960s television series of the same name.

Over the next several years, Arnold's film roles primarily consisted of straight-to-video comedies like National Lampoon's Golf Punks and Shriek If You Know What I Did Last Friday The 13th, but in 2001 he became one of the hosts of Fox Sports' The Best Damn Sports Show Period. The talk-show became one of the network's most popular series with Arnold remaining on full-time for four years and continuing to make guest appearances thereafter.

After leaving The Best Damn Sports Show, Arnold tried his hand at screenwriting with the 2005 comedy The Kid & I, which he also produced and starred in. The film failed to excite critics or audiences, but that same year, Arnold turned in an impressive and rare dramatic performance in the indie dramedy Happy Endings.

In 2007, Arnold could be seen in supporting roles in two sports dramas, Pride and The Final Season. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Tom Arnold (actor)
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Tom Arnold

Arnold at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival
Born Thomas Duane Arnold
March 6, 1959 (1959-03-06) (age 50)
Ottumwa, Iowa, U.S.
Occupation Actor, Comedian, Television host
Years active 1987–present
Spouse(s) Roseanne Barr
(1990 - 1994) (divorced)
Julie Champnella
(1995 - 1999) (divorced)
Shelby Roos
(2002 - 2008)

Thomas Duane "Tom" Arnold (born March 6, 1959) is an American actor and comedian.

Contents

Personal life

Arnold was born in Ottumwa, Iowa, the son of Linda Kay Graham (née Collier)[1] and Jack Arnold.[2] He has six siblings, Lori, Johnny, Scott, Chris, Marla and Mark. Arnold attended Ottumwa High School and began doing stand-up comedy when he was 23. He met comedian Roseanne Barr when she saw his act in 1983. Their relationship was complicated by his drug and alcohol addiction,[3] but eventually he became sober, and the two married. Arnold, who had Jewish ancestors named Cohen on his maternal grandfather’s side, converted to Judaism upon marrying Barr in 1990.[4] In a April 2009 interview on Anytime with Bob Kushell Arnold discussed how when he divorced Barr, he did not take any alimony.[5]

In August 2008, Arnold broke his scapula in a motorcycle accident on the Pacific Coast Highway.[6]

On March 6, 2009, he became engaged to Ashley Groussman.

Arnold has been very outspoken about having been molested as a young child. His perpetrator was a 19 year old man that his mother hired to babysit while she would leave the house to engage in extramarital affairs.

On an episode of Loveline, Arnold revealed that at the age of 30, Arnold tracked the man down and confronted him at his workplace. The man denied the molestation and told Arnold that his memories were wrong. Arnold discovered that the man had adopted three boys and was attempting to adopt a fourth. He tried to enlist the help of then-Iowa governor Terry E. Branstad to intervene with the pending adoption. Arnold says he also had his employees print up and post flyers around the man's town.

Career

In the early 80s, Tom Arnold had a comedy routine called "Tom Arnold and the Goldfish Review". Starting with a bowl full of goldfish, he used various props such as a toy motorcycle, condoms and such. At the end of the routine, Tom would swallow all the goldfish for the final laugh. Arnold as a stand-up comic became a writer for the television sitcom Roseanne (which debuted in 1988). He married the show’s star, Roseanne Barr, in 1990, after she divorced her first husband. He appeared occasionally on the show as the character “Arnie Thomas” (a spoof of his name). The couple’s marriage attracted media and especially tabloid attention due to their sometimes outrageous behavior. In 1992, Arnold starred in his own sitcom, The Jackie Thomas Show. Airing after Roseanne on ABC, the show lasted 18 episodes.

In 1993, Arnold and Barr bought a house together in Arnold’s hometown of Ottumwa and opened a restaurant, Roseanne and Tom's Big Food Diner, in nearby Eldon, Iowa. Both appeared in the 1993 movie The Woman Who Loved Elvis, which was filmed in Ottumwa. Arnold and Barr divorced in 1994, and their restaurant closed in 1995. In a late-1990s interview on radio's Howard Stern Show, Arnold admitted that his share of his and Barr’s estate amounted to “over $20,000,000,” including a percentage of the Roseanne ABC-TV series, but would not elaborate further, citing a confidentiality clause.

In 1994, Arnold appeared as the sidekick to Arnold Schwarzenegger’s character in the James Cameron feature film True Lies. He later supported Schwarzenegger’s bid for the California governorship. His role in True Lies was parodied in an episode of The Simpsons, where washed-up actor "Troy McClure" makes a comeback in a McBain movie. The Simpsons has also shown Tom Arnold among the people sent to the sun in a rocket, in their 10th Halloween episode.

Arnold was a host of Fox Sports Net’s talk show Best Damn Sports Show Period. He has also provided the voice for the Arby’s “Oven Mitt” character in television commercials for the fast-food chain.

Arnold had his first romantic leading man part in the 2005 movie Happy Endings. That same year, Arnold starred in The Kid & I, which paired him with Eric Gores, the son of billionaire Alec Gores.

Since 2008, Tom hosts the CMT show, "My Big Redneck Wedding." Arnold also hosted a special episode of CMT's "The Biggest Redneck Wedding Ever." In this episode, he served as the wedding planner, and created a wedding that exceeded the dreams of a couple who wanted to be married in a mud bog, including performing the actual ceremony.

Arnold's role as a child molester in Gardens of the Night had special significance as he was the victim of sexual abuse in his childhood. Arnold decided to take on the role to shed more light on the issue.[7]

Arnold appeared in the ER episode "I Feel Good" as a pediatrician at a camp for children with heart conditions.

Filmography

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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