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Stephen Harold Tobolowsky (born May 30, 1951) is an American character actor and writer. He is known for film roles such as insurance agent Ned Ryerson in Groundhog Day [1] and amnesiac Sammy Jankis in Memento, as well as such television characters as Commissioner Hugo Jarry in Deadwood, Bob Bishop in Heroes, Sandy Ryerson in Glee, Stu Beggs in Californication and White Famous, "Action" Jack ...
That was the famous phrase that came out of Home Improvement, the ABC sitcom that aired from September 1991 to May 1999. The 30-minute comedy followed Tim "The Toolman" Taylor (Tim Allen) as he ...
Richardson attended multiple schools including Holton-Arms School and Hockaday School. [4] [5] She is a 1972 graduate of Southern Methodist University, [6] where she was friends with classmates Beth Henley and Stephen Tobolowsky, who was slated to be a cast member of Home Improvement, but had other contractual commitments when the series began filming.
Richard Karn Wilson was born in Seattle, Washington, on February 17, 1956. [1] His father, Gene, was a Seabee who served in World War II.Richard graduated from Roosevelt High School and the University of Washington Professional Actor Training Program, [2] where he was a member of Beta Theta Pi.
Landing a role on Glee was not an easy task for Stephen Tobolowsky.In fact, it involved a “ridiculously strange story” leading up to the audition. Tobolowsky, 73, played Sandy Ryerson — an ...
Ann Hearn (born Ann Neel Simons) is an American actress and stage director, born in Griffin, Georgia, and now living in Los Angeles, California with her actor-husband Stephen Tobolowsky. Her most prominent roles were with Jodie Foster in The Accused (1988) and in the 1992 film Lorenzo's Oil .
Tobolowsky recounted the story on a 2010 Groundhog Day-only episode of his podcast, The Tobolowsky Files. "Harold asked Bill what we thought [the answer was], and Bill said, 'Hey, I’m asking you!'
While Home Improvement did finish in 10th place during season 7 in 1997-98 (with an average of 18.4 million viewers), I have a source that says Home Improvement fell out of the Nielsen Top-10 during its eighth and final season (placing at #14 with 14.8 million viewers). And those figures are in terms of viewers, not households.