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Atticus Shaffer (born June 19, 1998) is an American actor known for playing Brick Heck on the ABC sitcom The Middle (2009–2018), as well as for voicing Edgar in the film Frankenweenie (2012) and Ono on the Disney Junior series The Lion Guard (2016–2019), and for his brief appearance in Hancock (2008). [1]
Doris Roberts as Mrs. Rinsky, Brick's third grade teacher ("Back to School", "The Math Class", "Back to Summer"). Matthew Moy as Takayuki, a foreign exchange student from Japan ("Foreign Exchange"). Sarah Wright as Kasey, Axl's new manager at the movie theater ("A Birthday Story"). Norm Macdonald as Rusty Heck, Mike's brother ("Thanksgiving II").
The show is about Frances "Frankie" Heck (Patricia Heaton), a middle-class, middle-aged Midwestern woman married to Michael "Mike" Heck who resides in the small fictional town of Orson, Indiana. They are the parents of three children, Axl ( Charlie McDermott ), Sue ( Eden Sher ), and Brick ( Atticus Shaffer ).
Flynn's long-running role, Mike Heck, was on ABC's The Middle (2009–2018). The character had three children and worked at the Orson Limestone Quarry. The Heck Family was a working-class family in Indiana. [8] For his work on The Middle, Flynn was nominated for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series at the 6th Critics' Choice Television Awards.
Somewhere Sue Heck is unleashing an ear-piercing shriek. The Middle‘s Patricia Heaton, who played Heck family matriarch Frankie on the long-running ABC sitcom, reunited with former TV daughter ...
The pilot, ordered by ABC in August 2018, would have seen Sher reprise her breakout role as Mike and Frankie’s daughter, Sue Heck, as she leaves Orson, Ind., to pursue a c
The show revolves around Frances "Frankie" Heck (Patricia Heaton), a working-class, Midwestern woman who resides with her husband Mike in the small fictional town of Orson, Indiana. Frankie and Mike are the parents of three children, Axl ( Charlie McDermott ), Sue ( Eden Sher ), and Brick ( Atticus Shaffer ).
Major alcohol companies have been bracing for a culture shift favoring nonalcoholic options. Consumers under 30 tend to buy less alcohol and drink less often.