Robin Williams

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Image:Robin Williams.jpg Robin McLaurin Williams (born July 21, 1951) is an Academy Award-winning American actor and comedian. As an actor he has had starring roles on television, stage, and film.

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Early life

Williams was born in Chicago, Illinois, and raised in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan and Marin County, California. His father, Robert Fitzgerald Williams, of English, Welsh, and Irish descent, was a senior executive at Ford in charge of the Midwest area, and his mother Laurie was a New Orleans-born former model of French descent.

Comic career

He first achieved notice for his stand-up routines in San Francisco. After studying at Claremont McKenna College (then called Claremont Men's College) with the Strut and Fret theatre group in Claremont, California, and at Juilliard Drama School (where he befriended and roomed with actor Christopher Reeve), he was cast by Garry Marshall as the alien Mork in a guest star part in the TV series Happy Days.

Mork's appearance was so popular with viewers that it led to a spin-off hit television series, Mork and Mindy, which ran from 1978 to 1982.

Film and cinema fame

The majority of Williams' acting career has been for cinema, although he has given some memorable performances on stage as well (notably as Estragon in a production of Waiting for Godot). His first starring roles, Popeye (1980) and The World According to Garp (1982), were both flops, but with Good Morning, Vietnam (1987) Williams was nominated for an Academy Award and established a screen identity. Many of his roles have been comedies tinged with pathos (e.g., The Birdcage, Mrs. Doubtfire).

In particular, his role as the Genie in the animated film Aladdin was instrumental in establishing the importance of star power in voice actor casting. Later, Williams once again used his voice talents in A.I.: Artificial Intelligence and in the 2005 animated feature Robots.

Williams has also starred in dramatic films. The Academy nominated him for the Best Actor award for his role as an unorthodox and inspiring English teacher in Dead Poets Society (1989). His later dramas included Awakenings (1990) and What Dreams May Come (1998).

In 1997 he won an Oscar as Best Supporting Actor for his role as a psychologist in Good Will Hunting. However, by the early 2000s, he was thought by some to be typecast in films such as Patch Adams (1998) and Bicentennial Man (1999). This apparently prompted Williams to take radically unconventional roles, beginning with the dark comedy Death to Smoochy, followed by One Hour Photo, Insomnia, and The Final Cut.

He is known for his wild improv skills and impersonations. He is a talented mimic and can jump in and out of characters at an extremely fast pace. Williams states that he began doing impersonations as a child, mimicking the Southern accent of his aunt.

Personal life, charity work

Williams' first marriage was to Valerie Velardi on June 4, 1978, with whom he had one child, Zachary. That marriage ended in 1988. He married for a second time on April 30, 1989, to Marsha Garces and they have two children together.

Robin Williams and his wife Marsha Garces Williams founded the Windfall Foundation, a philanthropic organization to raise money for many different charities. Williams devotes much of his energy doing work for charities, including the Comic Relief fund-raising efforts. He is also a cycling fan, known to own hundreds of bicycles and to attend the Tour de France. Through his interest in cycling, he has been a friend and supporter of Lance Armstrong and his foundation, performing at events for the foundation.

Watching his frantic mannerisms and immediate changes in personality, some have speculated that Williams is affected by bipolar disorder, but this has never been confirmed. A more likely explanation for his remarkable creativity and intense impulsive humor may be the reason that he is often referred to as "the poster child for ADD," though this statement is often said with a sarcastic edge.

In a 2005 poll to find The Comedian's Comedian, he was voted one of the top 50 comedy acts ever by fellow comedians and comedy insiders. He was portrayed by Chris Diamantopoulos in the made for television biopic Behind the Camera: The Unauthorized Story of Mork & Mindy (2005), documenting the actor's arrival in Hollywood a struggling comedian and becoming an overnight star when he landed the role in Mork & Mindy.

He will next be seen in Barry Sonnenfeld's R.V. as a family man who ends up in an unlikely competition with another family, headed by Jeff Daniels.

In The 2006 Nickeloden Kid's Choice Awards he was the Surprise Guest who got slimed.

Trivia

  • Robin Williams has performed in the USO for U.S. troops stationed in Iraq for 3 years. Just days after the start of the Iraq War, Williams performed for American troops stationed in Afghanistan.
  • Was roommates with the late Superman star Christopher Reeve. They remained good friends for the remainder of his life. Williams visited Reeve after the horse back riding accident that paralyzed him from the neck down and tried to cheer him up by arriving dressed as a clown doctor. Williams even helped Reeve pay his medical bills during his final years.
  • In Blizzard's World of Warcraft, he plays a level 60 Dwarf priest named Jet in the guild <Iconoclast> on the Mannoroth server.
  • During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Williams had a serious addiction to cocaine; he has since kicked the habit. One quote attributed to him: "Cocaine is God's way of telling you that you are making too much money."
  • He named his daughter Zelda because his son is a devoted fan of the Legend of Zelda video game series.
  • At High School he was voted "Least Likely To Succeed"
  • He appeared on an episode of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition that aired on January 30, 2006. Via a live video link to the De'Aeth family whose house and animal rescue shelter were being made over, he encouraged their son Cody, a budding comedian, and gave the family's shelter a recreational vehicle used in the R.V. movie.
  • He was the voice of The Timekeeper, a former attraction at the Walt Disney World Resort about a time-travelling robot who encounters Jules Verne and brings him to the future.
  • Has stated in an interview for a video game magazine, that Nintendo contacted him once and told him because of his love of video games, if there ever is a live action Pokemon movie made he'd be their first, last and only choice to play Professor Oak
  • He once appeared on an episode of Whose Line is it Anyway? (Season 3, Episode 9: Nov. 16, 2000). During a game of "Scenes from a Hat," the scene "What Robin Williams is thinking right now" was pulled, and Williams stated "I have a career. What the hell am I doing?"
  • Shown donating blood numerous times directly after 9/11 to help victims of the attacks.

Filmography

Year Film Role Notes
2007 License to Wed
2006 Night at the Museum Filming
Mrs. Doubtfire 2 Announced
The Krazees Announced
August Rush Pre-production
R.V.
Happy Feet Voice; filming
The Night Listener Filming
2005 In Search of Ted Demme Pre-production
The Big White
Robots Voice
The Aristocrats Documentary
2004 Noel Cameo
House of D
The Final Cut
2002 The Rutles 2: Can't Buy Me Lunch Cameo
Insomnia
Death to Smoochy
One Hour Photo
2001 A.I.: Artificial Intelligence Voice
1999 Bicentennial Man
Jakob the Liar Also executive producer
Get Bruce Documentary
1998 Patch Adams
Junket Whore Documentary
What Dreams May Come
1997 Good Will Hunting
Flubber
Deconstructing Harry
Fathers' Day
1996 Hamlet
The Secret Agent
Jack
The Birdcage
1995 Aladdin and the King of Thieves Voice
Jumanji
To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar Cameo
Nine Months
1993 Mrs. Doubtfire Also producer
Being Human
1992 Toys
Aladdin Genie Voice
From Time to Time (or The Timekeeper) Voice; short subject; this is a former ride at WDW, DLP and TDL, not a film
FernGully: The Last Rainforest Voice
Shakes the Clown
I'm From Hollywood Documentary
1991 Hook
The Fisher King
Dead Again
1990 Awakenings
Cadillac Man
1989 Dead Poets Society
1988 The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (uncredited)
Portrait of a White Marriage Cameo
1987 Good Morning, Vietnam
1986 Seize the Day
Club Paradise
The Best of Times
1984 Moscow on the Hudson
1983 The Survivors
1982 The World According to Garp
1980 Popeye
1977 Can I Do It 'Till I Need Glasses?

Discography

Template:Start box {{succession box | title=Best Supporting Actor, Oscars | before=Cuba Gooding, Jr. | after=James Coburn | years=1997}} Template:End box

External links

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