Fred Willard(1933-2020)
- Artiste
- Scénariste
- Bande sonore
Fred Willard est né le 18 septembre 1933 dans l'Ohio, États-Unis. Il était acteur et scénariste. Il est connu pour Le clou du spectacle (2000), Les grandes retrouvailles (2003) et Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004). Il était marié à Mary Lovell. Il est mort le 15 mai 2020 en Californie, États-Unis.
- Nommé pour 5 prix Primetime Emmy
- 4 victoires et 24 nominations au total
Artiste
- 2023
- 2021
- 2017–2021
- 2020
- 2020
- 2020
- 2020
- 2020
- 2009–2020
- Jimmy Kimmel Live!6,4Série télévisée
- Gil Fredricks
- Chip Anderson - Phony Test Taker
- Donald Trump's old teacher ...
- 2010–2020
- 2016–2019
- 2019
- 2019
- 2019
- The Bobby Roberts Project
- Ben Brinstein
- 2018
Scénariste
Bande sonore
- Waiting for Guffman7,4
- performer: "Midnight At The Oasis", "Covered Wagons, Open-Toed Shoes", "Stool Boom", "Nothing Ever Happens In Blaine" (uncredited)
- 1996
- 1978
- Sites officiels
- autres noms
- Ace Trucking Company
- Taille
- 6′ 1½″ (1,87 m)
- Naissance
- Décédé(e)
- 15 mai 2020
- Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(arrêt cardiaque)
- Conjoint(e)
- Mary Lovell1968 - 13 juillet 2018 (son décès, 1 enfant)
- Enfants
- Parents
- Fred Willard
- Autres travauxCo-host for a California-based program called What's Hot, What's Not (1985) which was broadcast every weekday. The show analyzed what was and wasn't "hot" in society at the time.
- Offres publicitaires
- Citations(2012, on landing WALL-E) It was amazing; they called me, and it was like they were trying to woo me to convince me to do it. They said, "We'd like to bring you up to San Francisco and have you tour Pixar," and I said, "Gee, my grandson is a huge fan of all the Pixar movies." So they said, "Bring your whole family up." They flew us up, they took me to their offices, and it was like they thought I had to be won over. I was thrilled to be up there. They took my grandson on a trip to see how they make the films, and then I went there twice to film this stuff. It was a very easy day, but they hadn't even finished the film then, and they wouldn't tell me anything about it. I couldn't be told the plot, and they asked me to do no publicity for it until like a week or two before the film. So that was a very strange experience. But it was wonderful, I just loved working with them. Pixar is like a cartoon itself: The writers can design their own offices-it's like a fun factory. And [the film] won an Academy Award. It was the only time I went to the Academy Awards, and I was sitting way back, behind the people who did Slumdog Millionaire. Every time they won-and they won every category-the guys in front of me would stand up, with their arms up cheering. I wanted to say, "We get it-you're winning every Academy Award." I was like in the right-field bleachers. Finally, they got to Best Animated Film, and I thought this could go any way. When they said Wall-E, I was thrilled. Because Pixar are such great people, and I thought it was such a wonderful message, that movie, for kids, without hitting them over the head about making the Earth a safe place and all. Maybe when they grow up, and they're 30 years old, subliminally they'll remember that message, and think twice about throwing trash or cigarette butts away.
- Marque de commerceTalkative and Shallow Yet Confident Characters
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