Hank Azaria Net Worth

Hank Azaria Net Worth is
$70 Million

Hank Azaria's salary
$300 Thousand Per Episode

Hank Azaria Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Henry Albert "Hank" Azaria is an American film, television and stage actor, director, producer, writer, voice actor, and comedian. He is noted for being one of the principal voice actors on the animated television series The Simpsons, on which he performs the voices of Moe S...

Full NameHank Azaria
Net Worth$70 Million
Salary$300 Thousand Per Episode
Date Of BirthApril 25, 1964
Place Of BirthForest Hills, New York City, New York, United States
Height5 ft 11 in (1.82 m)
ProfessionComedian, Actor, Voice Actor, Television producer, Writer, Film director
EducationTufts University, The Kew-Forest School, Forest Hills
NationalityUnited States of America
SpouseHelen Hunt (m. 1999–2000), Katie Wright
ChildrenHal Azaria
ParentsAlbert Azaria, Ruth Azaria
SiblingsElise Azaria, Stephanie Azaria
NicknamesHenry Albert Azaria , Hank Albert Azaria , 'Eh let's go with yank my area again' , Hack Azaria , The Shaws-Hank Azaria , Boo! Boo! Scare Ya Hank Azaria , Yank My Area , Hockey Mom Azaria , The Republican Party , Hank 'Out of Clever Names' Azaria
AwardsAnnie Award - Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting (1998), Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance, for Outstanding Supporting Actor, Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance, for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series (2016), Film Discovery Jury Award
NominationsTeen Choice Awards (2009), Screen Actors Guild Award (2005, 2000, 1997), American Comedy Award (1999), Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards (2001)
Movies"Godzilla" (1998), "Mystery Men" (1999), "America's Sweethearts" (2001), "Shattered Glass" (2003), "The Aristocrats" (2005), "Along Came Polly" (2004), "Run Fatboy Run" (2007), "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian" (2009), "The Smurfs" (2011)
TV Shows"The Simpsons" (1989–), "Family Ties" (1988), “Herman’s Head” (1991–1994), “Imagine That” (2002), “Huff” (2004–2006), Mad About You", "Friends", "Huff" (2004–2006), "Spamalot", "Tuesdays With Morrie" (1999), "Uprising" (2001)
Star SignTaurus
TitleSalary
The Simpsons (1989)$300,000 per episode (2011-)
The Simpsons (1989)$125,000 per episode (1998-2004)
The Simpsons (1989)$30,000 per episode (1989-1998)
The Simpsons (1989)$400,000 -$440,000 per episode (2008-2011)
The Simpsons (1989)$250,000 -$360,000 per episode (2004-2008)
#Quote
1[in a 2007 interview] But with age comes wisdom. After a while, you put things in perspective, and you're just aware that you're lucky to have any niche at all. You take what the defense gives you.
2(2011, on getting into acting) I was a huge fan of comedy and movies and TV growing up, and I was able to memorize and mimic a lot of things, not realizing that that meant I probably wanted to be an actor. I just really, really amused myself and my friends with memorizing entire George Carlin or Steve Martin albums, or mimicking whatever we saw on Happy Days the night before, or whatever, not realizing that kind of obsessive ability to mimic things meant that I probably had an affinity for acting. It probably wasn't until I was 16 and did a play at school. I was a rather good student... And then I did a play when I was 16 and completely lost all my concentration for academics. I didn't realize it. I just kind of became obsessed with acting, and then by the time I graduated... I did a lot of theater in college, and I knew that not many people make it, but I just figured, "Well, I really want to try acting while I'm young, and I don't ever want to look back and say that I never gave it a try." I fully figured I'd be back in grad school-probably for psychology-by, say, the time I was 28. But then I tried it and got jobs like Family Ties and Growing Pains. And that gave me enough encouragement to keep going.
3(2011, on Friends) Matthew Perry was the first friend I made in Hollywood. We met when he was 17 and I was 22. We booked our first pilot together: a show called Morning Maggie, with Ellen Greene, that never saw the light of day. So I was very happy to be working with him in the middle of his huge success. That was as fun a set to be on as you might imagine, but especially back in that first year, where it was literally like being in the middle of Beatlemania. It was really fun to be in the middle of that and enjoy it while it was the phenomenon that it was. Herman's Head had just gotten canceled when Friends was first starting up, and when I read that script, I was like, "Oh my God..." At the time, when it was a pilot, it was called Friends Like Us, and just about everybody who read it knew it was going to be special. I mean, they didn't know it was going to be as huge as it would become, but they knew it was a really funny script that they wanted to be in. And I went and auditioned for Joey and got rejected, but-and this was the first and only time I've done this-I asked to go back in. I said, "I know you said 'no' to me once, but I just want to try it again, because I like that show that much." And I went back in... And I got another very quick "no." Almost as quick as the first time. And you know, it's tough coming off a series that's just gotten canceled to be hired right back on another series, especially when they had their choice of every actor in town. But then I did the movie Quiz Show, which came out around that time, and I think my stock went up a bit. And as a result, they offered me the role of David, which is one of those examples of how in Hollywood, you're only as good as your last thing. When you're on a series that's been canceled, there's a little bit of a stink on you. When you do well in a movie that's seen as really great, you're revitalized for six weeks.
4(2011, on The Birdcage) That was very fun for me to do. And also terrifying. It was my first big role in a film, and it was kind of an out-there role to be my first big one. It was really a fluke, the way I got that. It was originally written just to be a one-scene part. That first scene where I'm dressing Nathan Lane, getting him all dressed up? The maid/houseman was supposed to be a whole other character, who was supposed to be a black character like it is in the French version, and... I think he was going to be played by David Alan Grier. And they thought David was brilliant, but they thought that in an American context, the idea of a black houseman would be somewhat distasteful and have racist overtones. So since it's set in Miami, they decided to make it a Latin character. And I was already playing the other character. So I think it was Robin Williams' idea: "Why not just combine the two roles and just let Azaria do it?" Which turned into what you could call my big break, I suppose.
5(2011, on Heat and working with Al Pacino) There's a scene where Al Pacino's interrogating me, and... I shot that on the night of my 30th birthday. And it happened to also be Al's birthday. We have the same birthday: April 25. It just so happened, however, that I was shooting The Birdcage at the same time, and my first day on The Birdcage was the following morning. So I had to go straight from the Heat set, where I shot 'til 6 in the morning, over to the Birdcage set, where I shot the whole rest of the day. That was my 30th birthday. And Mike Nichols found that out and took pity on me. He said, "It's your birthday?" I said, "Yeah." He said, "What are you going to do?" I said, "Well, I've been shooting for 18 hours straight so far." And he's, like, "Oh, God, go home. We'll do something else." Which was very sweet. Although I kind of felt robbed, too, because I kind of wanted to say that I shot for 24 hours straight...Pacino was awesome. Michael Mann does like to shoot a lot of takes-if you're going to shoot it once, you're going to shoot it about 25 times-and Al really likes to play around. But I was so young and naive then that I was silly enough to ask Michael Mann if, when Al was improvising, I could sort of improvise back and start riffing. And Michael Mann thought about it for a minute, then said, "Nah, just say what's on the page." I mean, now, of course, as a more experienced actor, I would just not ask. It's easier to ask forgiveness than permission, you know? I'd just start riffing right back at Al. But I asked Michael and he said no, so I'd be doing the same exact thing on every take while Al was improvising all these brilliant things. It probably frustrated Al, looking back on it. It was probably annoying to him. But one thing that did make it into the movie that was extemporaneous was... I don't know if you remember, but I say something like, "I don't know why I got mixed up with this stupid broad," and he says [Does a loud, spot-on Pacino impression.] "'Cause she's got a great ass!" He just screams it. And that was the line, but Al kind of yelled it for the first time, and he did it so completely out of nowhere that it scared me. So much so that I just went, "Jesus!" Not in character, just as Hank. I got frightened, and I went, "Jesus!" And then Al improvised [As Pacino.] "I'm sorry. Something happens to me when I think about a woman's ass." Or whatever it is that he said. And that actually made it into the movie! Michael Mann told me not to improvise, and the one line that I said that wasn't scripted made it in there because... I don't know, I guess because it was a good moment. Because I was scared of Al.
6(2011, on Huff) It was a very difficult show to make. As rough and hard to look at as the subject matter was, the doing of that show was equally difficult. It was very logistically challenging. There were a lot of disagreements about what the show should be, and Bob Lowry-who wrote the show, who is brilliant-it was tough to marry our visions all the time, and we both cared so much about it that neither of us were willing to let go. So it was one of those difficult situations where... I think it came out great, but that was the grain of sand, if you will, that created the pearl. And it was also because the subject matter was so rough. It was kind of hard to do that all day long. It's a lot more fun to do a comedy all day long. But I got to work with my very close friend Oliver Platt, who was one of the reasons I wanted to be an actor. When I went to Tufts, we did a lot of productions together, and he was equally great back then as he is right now. I found his performances back then inspiring. They inspired me to want to keep going as an actor...Working on that show, I just remember... Especially the first year was the hardest, most emotional job I had, both due to acting the subject matter and agreeing on what we were going to put out there. It was dark.
7(2011, on Mystery Men) That movie... I look at it now very, very fondly. I actually just saw a little bit of it a couple of weeks ago and enjoyed it. It was one of those that was very, very difficult to make and should've been much more fun than it was. It was logistically a very hard movie to shoot, with all the effects, and it was kind of the early days of CGI things, and people didn't know so well how to marry that kind of technical filmmaking with comedy. It was tough. It was really like trying to be funny in the middle of a math equation or something. And as a result, it made things... Very long hours, very stressful and tough on the set. I think we all felt-"we" being the actors: me and Ben, Bill [Macy], Janeane [Garofalo], and others-very out there, if you will. It was kind of a big swing, or a high-wire act, and it would've been hard enough just to do a little comedy with that subject matter, but given that it was a big, expensive CGI festival, it was highly pressurized. It was tough to all agree, between the producer, the director, and Ben, Bill, and myself, especially, and then all the others actors, too. I mean, when you've got that many comic minds-Janeane, Paul Reubens-not to mention Geoffrey Rush and Lena Olin, it was tough for everybody to agree on the vision. And it was a first-time director, a guy named Kinka Usher, who was a brilliant visual guy and does a lot of commercials, but was not an old salt, and he had to be a daddy on the set to a bunch of ego-y actors running around, wanting their funniest bits in. So it was... There were some hilarious moments where, y'know, there we are, dressed as these ridiculous superhero characters, having very heated arguments about what we should be doing or saying, and we'd take two steps back and go, "What are we doing? I have a turban on, I'm throwing a fork, and I'm yelling about what I think would be the funnier way to throw it at somebody." It was just ridiculous. But it was a long, technical, difficult shoot, and I think it could've come out better if we'd all found a way to have more fun with it.
8(2011, on Cool Blue) That was the very first film I ever did. I mean, Pretty Woman was the first film I had any lines in, and Quiz Show was the first kind of big film I did, but Cool Blue... I can't remember which came first, Pretty Woman or Cool Blue. But it was certainly the first big part I had in a film. I learned a lot. I became good friends with Woody Harrelson, and Richard Shepard and Mark Mullin and I got really close, the guys who wrote and directed that. I made a lot of friends doing that, and I was absolutely terrified. I had no idea what I was doing. I remember one night, we hung out with Sean Penn, which to me was like... I mean, I still hold him in the status of, like, Marlon Brando or whoever, but to be 23 years old and grow up pretty much idolizing Sean Penn, and then to get to hang out with him one night? I think I remember that more than anything we did while actually shooting the movie. He was as cool as you would imagine he'd be...I can tell you this story, which I've told a bunch of other places, but I kind of cut my teeth on that movie. As an actor, I look back and see a lot of mistakes and bad acting that I do here and there, but one time I was watching TV late-this was about 15 years ago-and it came on in the middle of the night. My girlfriend's asleep on my shoulder, and I'm watching it, and I'm kind of glad she's asleep, because I kind of wanted to check it out, 'cause I didn't feel like I was very good in it. And I'm watching it, and I'm, like, "You know, this isn't as bad as I thought. I mean, I'm doing okay." Sure, I found some moments that, if I could do 'em over again, I would. This is on a regular channel, with commercials and everything, and they even had an announcer. And he said [Announcer voice.] "We now return you to Cool Blue, starring Woody Harrelson... and Hand Azaria." Pronounced my name "Hand." I couldn't believe it. I woke my girlfriend up, I'm like, "Did you hear that? I just got called 'Hand Azaria'!" How do you make that mistake? He must be reading it off a card, but what, he's like, "Well, this is either 'Hank' or Hand,' and what with 'Hand' being the more common name..." [Laughs.] I have no idea how he made that mistake. But some of my friends to this day will refer to me as Hand Azaria.
9(2011, on Tuesdays With Morrie) Working with Jack Lemmon was a tremendous learning experience. I asked him a lot about acting. It was actually very moving when I realized halfway through shooting that... Jack actually was quite ill when he shot that, so I think that's why the material spoke to him so much.
10(2011, on Herman's Head) I was very excited to get that when I got it. It was... fun. It was one of Witt-Thomas' last real big shows. [Paul Junger Witt and Tony Thomas] had an amazing run of really funny sitcoms in the '70s and '80s-Soap, The Golden Girls, Empty Nest, blah blah blah-and I was really psyched. I learned a lot. You know, there's nothing that replaces when, every week, you have to get out there and make shtick work, basically. I never really stayed with the stand-up thing. I think a lot of comedians find those kinds of chops out on the road and spend years doing stand-up and working audiences. The Simpsons meant a lot for me as far as learning to create characters, but there's no audience when we record The Simpsons, so it's a different thing. So to just get out there and make jokes work week after week after week... That's what I remember most about that show. Especially the times when the jokes were, y'know, maybe not that great, and you really have to make a purse out of a sow's ear, if you will. That becomes a skill that's even more valuable than making good material work, in some ways. For a comedian, anyway. Like they say, there's no unfunny material, only unfunny actors, which isn't quite true. I made really good friends doing that, but the truth is... I didn't really love that show...And the people who still come up to me and say, "Oh, Herman's Head, I used to love that show," it's... It's always an awkward moment when people come up to you and they like something you did that you don't like, 'cause you kind of want to go, "Well, then, you must be kind of an idiot." But you don't say that, of course. You say, "I'm glad you enjoyed it." But I was sort of happy when that show ended. I was kind of tired of doing that.
11(2011, on Godzilla) That was... Ultimately, you'd have to call it a tough experience. I remember I was with Helen Hunt at the time-we were together-and that movie was a big break for me as well. It was a big part in a big, big action film. I remember right before I went to shoot, Roland Emmerich met with me and said, "So, listen, I've decided all the exteriors are going to be in the rain. I think the creature's going to look much more excellent in the rain, so this is what we're going to do." I'm, like, "Okay, man!" I get home and tell Helen, and... It's going to be a five-month shoot, and I say, "Every exterior's going to be in the rain," and she said, "Oh, my God, you're kidding me. That's terrible!" And I had not worked enough... I don't think I'd ever shot in movie rain before, and I didn't know what that meant. And I learned very quickly that that was absolutely a disaster. I mean, you get soaked, and... I remember in particular that there was a stretch of three and a half weeks of night shooting in L.A., all in the rain. By 4 a.m., you're just permanently shivering. There's no getting around it. And talking about acting, the only usable takes were the ones that your teeth weren't actively chattering in. It was one of those things where you just kept telling yourself, "Look, I'm going to get through this, because it's going to be a huge film!" Again, like Mystery Men, it was still early enough in the days of CGI where it wasn't as seamless with what you were doing with these creatures that weren't there. Now it's much more actor-friendly, how you act like that, but back then, they were still sort of figuring it out, and it was hard and not very rewarding. But again, we all kept telling ourselves, "Well, it's all going to be worth it when the movie makes a gajillion dollars." I know it was perceived as a tremendous flop, so it was a tough experience. Tough to make, and very disappointing when it came out. It was one you definitely chalk up and say, "That was part of paying your dues, better luck next time."
12Godzilla's a monster for the 90s. He's been working out.
13Just watching Jack Lemmon made me want to get into this business.
#Fact
1Is playing a gay version of Sir Lancelot in the Broadway production of "Spamalot", the musical version of Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975), which opened on Broadway in January of 2005. [February 2005]
2Performing "Sexual Perversity In Chicago" alongside Matthew Perry, Minnie Driver, and Kelly Reilly in London's Comedy Theatre. [July 2003]
3Has been selected to play Sir Lancelot in the Broadway production of "Spamalot", the musical version of Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975), scheduled to open on Broadway in February, 2005. [July 2004]
4Good friends with Ben Stiller and Woody Harrelson.
5He has estimated that he has done "literally 100, 150 different characters' voices" on The Simpsons (1989) (TV).
6Paid exactly $10 million to purchase a seven-bedroom, ten-bath, 8434-square-foot house in Los Angeles's Bel-Air area. He also owns a 1108-square-foot house in the Hollywood Dell area of Los Angeles's Hollywood Hills and a 3320-square-foot house in Beverly Hills. [2009]
7Was a camper at the real life Camp Towanda, where the movie Wet Hot American Summer (2001) was filmed.
8Has a son named Hal Azaria (b. June 6, 2009) with girlfriend Katie Wright.
9He is close friends with actor Matthew Perry.
10Attended college with Oliver Platt; attended acting school with Sharon Stone.
11He and his ex-wife Helen Hunt have both guest-starred on the TV show Friends (1994), though not in the same episode. Paget Brewster, who plays his wife on Huff (2004), also had a recurring role on Friends (1994).
12Based the voice of quack Dr. Nick Rivera (in The Simpsons (1989)) on actor Desi Arnaz.
13Appeared in two films in 1999 with the word "Mystery" in the title: Mystery, Alaska (1999) and Mystery Men (1999).
14Based the voice of Comic Book Guy (in The Simpsons (1989)) on his college roommate.
15Based the voice of Apu (in The Simpsons (1989)) on the "standard" 7-11 employee and on Peter Sellers's character Hrundi V. Bakshi in The Party (1968).
16Based the voice of Chief Wiggum (in The Simpsons (1989)) on actor Edward G. Robinson.
17Based the voice of Lou the Cop (in The Simpsons (1989)) on actor Sylvester Stallone.
18Spent over $300,000 of his own money to make his short film Nobody's Perfect (2004).
19He based his character in The Birdcage (1996) (a flamboyantly, almost over-exaggeratedly feminine homosexual house servant) on his grandmother, in particular his character's speech.
20His family is of Sephardic Jewish background.
21Based the voice of Moe the bartender (The Simpsons (1989)) on actor Al Pacino.
22Both sets of his grandparents came from Salonika in northern Greece.
23A favorite of playwright Jenelle Riley; characters in her shows are frequently hybrids of his name with his The Simpsons (1989) characters (e.g. Hank Wiggum). The lead character in her award-winning film The Perfect Candidate (2004) is named Frank Grimes, after "Homer's Enemy".
24Attended Tufts University in Medford, Massachusetts, from 1981-1985, but did not receive his B.A. until he completed two courses in L.A. in 1987. Tufts awarded him its Light on the Hill Award in 1999.
25Was a bartender in New York at the Arcadia.
26Was trained at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York.
27Engaged to Helen Hunt in 1997.

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Smurfs: The Legend of Smurfy Hollow2013TV ShortGargamel (voice)
Lovelace2013Gerry Damiano
Free Agents2011-2012TV SeriesAlex
The Simpsons: Tapped Out2012Video GameMoe Szyslak Chief Wiggum Apu Nahasapeemapetilon ... (voice, uncredited)
Happy Feet Two2011The Mighty Sven (voice)
The Smurfs: A Christmas Carol2011ShortGargamel (voice)
Starz on the Set: A Look Behind the Smurfs 3D2011TV ShortGargamel
The Smurfs2011Gargamel
The Cleveland Show2011TV SeriesComic Book Guy
Hop2011Carlos Phil (voice)
Love & Other Drugs2010Dr. Stan Knight
Gamechangers Ep. 3: A Legend in the Booth2010Video shortJim Brockmire
Year One2009Abraham
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian2009Kahmunrah The Thinker Abe Lincoln (voice)
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian2009Video GameKahmunra the Thinker Abraham Lincoln (voice)
Immigrants (L.A. Dolce Vita)2008Jóska (English version, voice)
The Simpsons Ride2008ShortChief Wiggum Apu Nahasapeemapetilon Moe Szyslak ... (voice)
The Simpsons Game2007Video GameMoe Szyslak Chief Wiggum Professor Frink ... (voice)
Run, Fatboy, Run2007Whit
The Simpsons Movie2007Professor Frink Comic Book Guy Moe Szyslak ... (voice)
The Grand2007Mike 'The Bike' Heslov
Chicago 102007DocumentaryAbbie Hoffman Allen Ginsberg (voice)
Huff2004-2006TV SeriesDr. Craig 'Huff' Huffstodt
Eulogy2004Daniel Collins
Catwoman: The Game2004Video GameThugs (voice)
Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story2004Young Patches O'Houlihan
Along Came Polly2004Claude
Nobody's Perfect2004ShortRay
The Simpsons: Hit & Run2003Video GameMoe Szyslak Chief Wiggum Apu ... (voice)
Shattered Glass2003Michael Kelly
Friends1994-2003TV SeriesDavid
The Simpsons: Skateboarding2002Video GameProfessor John Frink Chief Clancy Wiggum (voice)
Bark!2002Sam
Imagine That2002TV SeriesJohn Miller
The Simpsons: Road Rage2001Video GameApu Nahasapeemapetilon Chief Wiggum Snake Jailbird ... (voice)
Uprising2001TV MovieMordechai Anielewicz
America's Sweethearts2001Hector Gorgonzolas
The Simpsons: Wrestling2001Video GameAdditional Voices (voice)
Futurama2001TV SeriesHarold Zoid
C-Scam2000
Fail Safe2000TV MovieProf. Groeteschele
Tuesdays with Morrie1999TV MovieMitch Albom
Simpsons Bowling1999Video GameApu Nahasapeemapetilon (voice)
Mystery, Alaska1999Charles Danner
Bartok the Magnificent1999VideoBartok (voice)
Mystery Men1999Blue Raja
Mad About You1995-1999TV SeriesNat Ostertag
Cradle Will Rock1999Marc Blitzstein
Celebrity1998David
Stressed Eric1998TV SeriesEric Feeble
Godzilla1998/IVictor 'Animal' Palotti
Homegrown1998Carter
Great Expectations1998Walter Plane
Chicken Little1998Short voice
Anastasia1997Bartok (voice)
Grosse Pointe Blank1997Steven Lardner
Anastasia: Adventures with Pooka and Bartok1997Video GameBartok (voice)
The Simpsons: Virtual Springfield1997Video GameMoe Szyslak Apu Nahasapeemapetilon Chief Wiggum ... (voice)
Spider-Man1994-1996TV SeriesEddie Brock Venom Young Man ...
The Simpsons: Cartoon Studio1996Video GameApu Nahasapeemapetilon Chief Wiggum Dr. Nick Riviera ... (voice)
The Birdcage1996Agador
Heat1995Alan Marciano
If Not for You1995TV SeriesCraig Schaeffer
Now and Then1995Bud Kent
The Cartoon Cartoon Show1995TV SeriesElmo
Tales from the Crypt1995TV SeriesRichard
Beethoven1994TV SeriesKiller / Harv / Ex-Con / ...
Quiz Show1994Albert Freedman
Herman's Head1991-1994TV SeriesJay Nichols
Babes1990TV SeriesTony
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air1990TV SeriesPoliceman
Hollywood Dog1990TV MovieHollywood Dog (voice)
Pretty Woman1990Detective
Cool Blue1990VideoBuzz
The Rock1990TV SeriesTony Solomon
Growing Pains1989TV SeriesSteve Stevenson
Family Ties1988TV SeriesJoe
Frank Nitti: The Enforcer1988TV Movie
Morning Maggie1987TV MoviePhilly McAllister
The Simpsons1989-2018TV SeriesMoe Szyslak Chief Wiggum Carl ...
The Wizard of Lies2017TV MovieFrank Dipascali
Brockmire2017TV SeriesJim Brockmire
Planet of the Couches2016TV MovieMoe Szyslak Comic Book Guy (voice)
Norman2016Srul Katz
Ray Donovan2014-2016TV SeriesEd Cochran
Mack & Moxy2016TV SeriesShelfish Sheldon
Bordertown2016TV SeriesBud Buckwald
Family Guy2013-2015TV SeriesNigel Harpington Moe Szyslak Apu Nahasapeemapetilon ...
The Simpsons Take the Bowl2014VideoApu / Himself
Timms Valley2013TV MovieChaz Babcock
The Smurfs 22013Gargamel

Soundtrack

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The SimpsonsTV Series 1 episode, 1997 performer - 73 episodes, 1991 - 2017
Ray Donovan2016TV Series performer - 1 episode
Too Young to Die2012TV Series documentary performer - 1 episode
Happy Feet Two2011performer: "The Mighty Sven", "Dragostea Din Tei"
The 59th Annual Tony Awards2005TV Special performer: "Find Your Grail"
America's Sweethearts2001performer: "You Do Something to Me"
The Birdcage1996performer: "She Works Hard for the Money", "I Could Have Danced All Night"

Producer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Brockmire2017TV Series executive producer - 8 episodes
Free Agents2011TV Series producer - 1 episode
HuffTV Series producer - 17 episodes, 2004 - 2006 executive producer - 1 episode, 2006
Nobody's Perfect2004Short executive producer
Imagine That2002TV Series executive producer
Bartok the Magnificent1999Video co-producer
Stressed Eric1998TV Series producer - US version

Writer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Brockmire2017TV Series based on the character created by - 8 episodes
Gamechangers Ep. 3: A Legend in the Booth2010Video short
Nobody's Perfect2004Short

Director

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Nobody's Perfect2004Short

Thanks

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Happy Feet Two2011thanks: for the song
Single Dads2009TV Series special thanks - 2 episodes
If You Could Say It in Words2008special thanks
Friz on Film2006Video documentary special thanks

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Chew2017TV SeriesHimself
Late Night with Seth Meyers2014-2017TV SeriesHimself / Himself - Guest
Mike & Mike2017TV SeriesHimself - Actor
Last Call with Carson Daly2017TV SeriesHimself
The Talk2017TV SeriesHimself
Conan2014-2017TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Ok! TV2017TV SeriesHimself
Today2016-2017TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Live with Kelly and Ryan2004-2017TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Good Morning America2017TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert2016-2017TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Off Camera with Sam Jones2017TV SeriesHimself
The 68th Primetime Emmy Awards2016TV SpecialHimself - Presenter
The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore2016TV SeriesHimself - Panelist
The Late Late Show with James Corden2015TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Ellen: The Ellen DeGeneres Show2014TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Stand Up to Cancer2014TV SpecialHimself
CBS This Morning2014TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Fatherhood2014TV Series documentary shortHimself - Host
Katie2014TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Wonderview2014TV SeriesHimself
Smurfs 2: Inside the Magic!2013Video shortHimself
I Know That Voice2013DocumentaryHimself
Watch What Happens: Live2013TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Larry King Now2013TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Newsround2013TV SeriesHimself - Interviewee (Gargamel)
The Daily Show2001-2013TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Made in Hollywood2011-2013TV SeriesHimself
Stand Up to Cancer2012TV SpecialMoe Szyslak Apu Raphael (voice)
1st Look2011TV SeriesHimself - Interviewee
Janela Indiscreta2011TV SeriesHimself
Lopez Tonight2011TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Jimmy Kimmel Live!2004-2011TV SeriesHimself - Guest
2011 Writers Guild Awards2011TV SpecialHimself - Presenter
16th Annual Critics' Choice Movie Awards2011TV Special documentaryHimself - Presenter
Backwash2010TV SeriesHimself - Host
Under the Boardwalk: The Monopoly Story2010DocumentaryHimself
2010 World Series of Poker2010TV SeriesHimself
Celebrity Liar2010TV SeriesHimself
The Simpsons: Access All Areas2010TV Movie documentaryHimself
The Simpsons 20th Anniversary Special: In 3-D! On Ice!2010TV Special documentaryHimself
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian - Phinding Pharaoh2009Video shortHimself
The Curators of Comedy: Behind-the-Scenes of 'Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian'2009Video documentary shortHimself
Kevin Pollak's Chat Show2009TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien2009TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Bonnie Hunt Show2009TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Troldspejlet2009TV SeriesHimself - Actor / Kah-Mun-Rah
The Justin Lee Collins Show2009TV SeriesHimself - Guest
American Idol2009TV SeriesHimself
Xposé2009TV SeriesHimself
Free Radio2009TV SeriesHimself
Independent Lens2008TV Series documentaryAbbie Hoffman Allen Ginsberg
Mel Blanc: The Man of a Thousand Voices2008Video documentaryHimself
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno1998-2007TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Behind the Tunes: One Hit Wonders2006Video documentary shortHimself
Behind the Tunes: Sing-a-Song of Looney Tunes2006Video documentary shortHimself
Behind the Tunes: The Art of the Gag2006Video documentary shortHimself
Behind the Tunes: Wild Lines - The Art of Voice Acting2006Video documentary shortHimself
The 58th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards2006TV SpecialHimself
The 60th Annual Tony Awards2006TV SpecialHimself - Presenter: Best Direction of a Musical
Late Night with Conan O'Brien1998-2006TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The Making of 'Anastasia'2006Video documentaryHimself
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson2005TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 59th Annual Tony Awards2005TV SpecialHimself - Nominee & Performer
50th Annual Drama Desk Awards2005TV SpecialHimself - Presenter & Nominated: Outstanding Actor in a Musical
The Tony Danza Show2005TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The View2005TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Late Show with David Letterman1996-2005TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Special Thanks to Roy London2005DocumentaryHimself
11th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards2005TV SpecialHimself - Nominee
Unscripted2005TV SeriesHimself
The Aristocrats2005DocumentaryHimself
Bar Mitzvah Bash!2004TV MovieHimself
'Huff': Around the Edges2004TV Short documentaryHimself
Celebrity Poker Showdown2003-2004TV SeriesHimself
The Sharon Osbourne Show2004TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Heroes of Jewish Comedy2003TV Mini-Series documentaryHimself
Richard & Judy2003TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Inside the Actors Studio2003TV SeriesHimself - Guest
Secrets of Superstar Fitness2002TV SeriesHimself
Breaking Down the Walls: The Road to Recreating the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising2002Video documentary shortHimself
Resistance2001Video documentary shortHimself
2001 Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards2001TV MovieHimself - Winner: Outstanding Voice-Over Performance
The 52nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards2000TV SpecialHimself - Winner: Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie
'The Simpsons': America's First Family2000TV Special documentaryHimself
6th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards2000TV SpecialHimself
Spotlight on Location: Mystery Men2000Video documentary shortHimself
The 51st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards1999TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
Sidewalks Entertainment1999TV SeriesHimself
The Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn1999TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 50th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards1998TV SpecialHimself - Winner & Nominee
Godzilla: On Assignment with Charles Caiman1998Video documentary shortHimself
The Rosie O'Donnell Show1998TV SeriesHimself - Guest
The 70th Annual Academy Awards1998TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member (uncredited)
4th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards1998TV SpecialHimself
The 55th Annual Golden Globe Awards1998TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
The 69th Annual Academy Awards1997TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
3rd Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards1997TV SpecialHimself - Winner: Outstanding Performance by a Cast and Nominated: Oustanding Performance by Male Actor in Supporting Role
The 54th Annual Golden Globe Awards1997TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
The Magical Journey of 'Anastasia'1997Video documentary shortHimself
The 48th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards1996TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
Showbiz Today1996TV SeriesHimself
The 53rd Annual Golden Globe Awards1996TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
The 47th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards1995TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
The 52nd Annual Golden Globe Awards1995TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member
The 44th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards1992TV SpecialHimself - Audience Member

Archive Footage

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Troldspejlet2013TV SeriesHimself - Actor / Gargamel
Movie Guide2013TV SeriesGargamel
A Football Life2012TV SeriesHimself
The Simpsons: Celebrity Friends2010TV Movie documentaryMoe Szyslak Chief Clancy Wiggum (uncredited)
The Simpsons: Mischief & Mayhem2010TV Movie documentaryApu Nahasapeemapetilon Bumblebee Man (uncredited)
Cinemassacre's Monster Madness2008TV Series documentaryVictor 'Animal' Palotti
The Irate Gamer2007TV SeriesSea Captain
La mandrágora2005TV SeriesSir Lancelot
Broadway: The American Musical2004TV Mini-Series documentaryMarc Blitzstein
Twentieth Century Fox: The Blockbuster Years2000TV Movie documentaryHimself
CyberWorld2000ShortPolice Chief Clancy Wiggum Prof. John Frink
Mad About You1996TV SeriesNat Ostertag
The Simpsons1994-1995TV SeriesTV Announcer / Postal Worker / Race Banyon / ...

Won Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2016Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Guest Actor in a Drama SeriesRay Donovan (2013)
2015Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Character Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2009OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2005Best Narrative ShortOjai Film FestivalNobody's Perfect (2004)
2004OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2004Film Discovery Jury AwardUS Comedy Arts FestivalBest ShortNobody's Perfect (2004)
2003Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2003OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2002OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2001Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2000Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or a MovieTuesdays with Morrie (1999)
2000OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture or MiniseriesTuesdays with Morrie (1999)
1998Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
1998AnnieAnnie AwardsOutstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Male Performer in an Animated Feature ProductionAnastasia (1997)
1998OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
1998OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Guest Actor in a Comedy SeriesMad About You (1992)
1997ActorScreen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by a CastThe Birdcage (1996)

Nominated Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
2016OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Guest Actor in a Drama SeriesRay Donovan (2013)
2015BTVA Television Voice Acting AwardBehind the Voice Actors AwardsBest Vocal Ensemble in a Television Series - Comedy/MusicalThe Simpsons (1989)
2014BTVA Television Voice Acting AwardBehind the Voice Actors AwardsBest Vocal Ensemble in a Television Series - Comedy/MusicalThe Simpsons (1989)
2013BTVA Television Voice Acting AwardBehind the Voice Actors AwardsBest Male Vocal Performance in a Television Series in a Supporting Role - Comedy/MusicalThe Simpsons (1989)
2012Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2010Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2009Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2009Teen Choice AwardTeen Choice AwardsChoice Movie VillainNight at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009)
2005Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Lead Actor in a Drama SeriesHuff (2004)
2005OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2005ActorScreen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama SeriesHuff (2004)
2003Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy SeriesFriends (1994)
2002Critics Choice AwardBroadcast Film Critics Association AwardsBest Actor in a Picture Made for TelevisionUprising (2001)
2001OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2001Stinker AwardThe Stinkers Bad Movie AwardsMost Annoying Fake Accent: MaleAmerica's Sweethearts (2001)
2000American Comedy AwardAmerican Comedy Awards, USAFunniest Male Guest Appearance in a TV SeriesMad About You (1992)
2000OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
2000ActorScreen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Movie or MiniseriesTuesdays with Morrie (1999)
1999American Comedy AwardAmerican Comedy Awards, USAFunniest Male Guest Appearance in a TV SeriesMad About You (1992)
1999OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Guest Actor in a Comedy SeriesMad About You (1992)
1999OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceThe Simpsons (1989)
1998Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy SeriesMad About You (1992)
1998OFTA Film AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Voice-Over PerformanceAnastasia (1997)
1997OFTA Film AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Supporting ActorThe Birdcage (1996)
1997OFTA Television AwardOnline Film & Television AssociationBest Guest Actor in a Comedy SeriesMad About You (1992)
1997ActorScreen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting RoleThe Birdcage (1996)

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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