- Mark Linn-Baker
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Mark Linn-Baker (born June 17, 1954) is an American actor and director famous for his role as Larry Appleton on the television sitcom Perfect Strangers.
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Early life and career
Mark Linn-Baker graduated from Wethersfield High School in Wethersfield, Connecticut in 1972. Graduating from Yale University with an MFA in Drama in 1979, Linn-Baker found most of his early roles on stage. He appeared in the 1983 Broadway version of the Doonesbury comic strip. He appeared in Laughter on the 23rd Floor in 1993, the 1996 revival of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, the 1998 Roundabout Theatre Company production of A Flea in Her Ear, the 2003 musical A Year With Frog and Toad, and the 2006 comedy Losing Louie.
Linn-Baker's first movie role was a small part in Woody Allen's 1979 film Manhattan. Unfortunately for the young actor, most of his scenes were later cut from the film. Three years later, he would land a far more memorable film role as Benjy Stone in the 1982 comedy film, My Favorite Year, co-starring with Peter O'Toole. In a manner similar to his future role in Perfect Strangers, Linn-Baker played the straight man to O'Toole's outrageous character, Alan Swann.
Having attained success on stage and the big screen, Linn-Baker began to turn his sights toward television. In 1983, he appeared in an unsold detective show pilot called O'Malley. The following year saw a role on the television movie, The Ghost Writer, and in the summer series, The Comedy Zone. Soon Linn-Baker was appearing in several high-profile television shows. He guest-starred on a 1984 episode of Miami Vice as Bonzo Barry and portrayed hapless office worker Phil West on a 1985 episode of Moonlighting entitled "Atlas Belched". Between parts, he would also appear in television commercials pitching products ranging from Kellogg's Nutri-Grain to Kraft's Life Savers.
In 1986, Linn-Baker was paired with Bronson Pinchot on the ABC series Perfect Strangers. He played the role of Larry Appleton, a young man living on his own for the first time in Chicago. Larry's world was disrupted when a distant cousin from the (fictional) Mediterranean island of Mypos, Balki Bartokomous (Pinchot), showed up on his doorstep. Storylines revolved around Larry's attempts to show Balki the ways of American culture, although the neurotic Larry frequently proved to be just as naive as Balki. The show made Linn-Baker a star and ran for parts of eight seasons, ending in August 1993. During this period, he appeared in the film Noises Off.
In 2005, he was a regular cast member on the WB Network sitcom, Twins. The show was canceled after a single season. He also appeared in the 2010 movie How Do You Know as Ron.
In 2011 he starred in his sixth Broadway show "Relatively Speaking" in a one-act play by Woody Allen.
Guest appearances
On a 1992 episode of Full House, Linn-Baker played Dick Donaldson, the wealthy, snobbish cousin of Becky Donaldson Katsopolis (Lori Loughlin). In 1997, he guested on Family Matters as the abusive boss of Harriette Winslow (Jo Marie Payton). Linn-Baker guested three times on Hangin' With Mr. Cooper as Larry Weeks. Additionally, he appeared on an episode of Law & Order (as a girlie bar owner being muscled out by the mob).
On a 2003 episode of Law & Order: Criminal Intent, he guested as an insurance investigator who displays strong Asperger's Syndrome traits. He gets a degree of empathy from Det. Robert Goren and a number of behind-his-back snickers from Goren's partner Alexandra Eames. His character made a return cameo appearance in the season 6 episode "Endgame", where it was revealed Goren has kept in touch with the character through correspondence.[1]
He also appeared in a Christmas episode of Ally McBeal as a man fired for seeing a unicorn.
In 2009, he appeared in an episode of the U.S. version of Life On Mars, playing a character who collected women's underwear that he later used for masturbation. In 2010, he appeared in the episode of "Law & Order" "The Taxman Cometh" as Dr. Vincent Balicheck, a physician who used controversial therapies on cancer patients and that caused the patients to die in the year 2010, during a reprieve from the U.S. estate tax.[2]
Linn-Baker also directed numerous episodes of Family Matters, Hangin' With Mr. Cooper, Step By Step and The Trouble with Larry. He appeared as a spokesperson for Peter Pan peanut butter in a series of commercials in the late 1980s and 1990s.
He joined his friend, fellow Yale Drama School graduate and former sidekick, Lewis Black on the audiobook version of Black's second book Me of Little Faith where he and Black recreate The Laundry Hour, an act they did in New York City in the early 1980s. He guest-stars in several episodes of the children's TV show The Electric Company in February–March 2009 as "Uncle Sigmund Scrambler".[citation needed]
Linn-Baker provided the voice for one of a quartet of aardvarks in the Sandra Boynton album Philadelphia Chickens. The other three were voiced by Joe Grifasi, Michael Gross, and Devin McEwan.[3]
Personal life
In 1995, Mark Linn-Baker married Adrianne Lobel, the daughter of children's book author Arnold Lobel, best-known for his Frog and Toad series. Linn-Baker helped to adapt his father-in-law's stories into the Tony-nominated Broadway musical A Year with Frog and Toad, in which Linn-Baker played Toad and Jay Goede played Frog.
References
- ^ Law & Order: Criminal Intent: "Endgame" at TV.com
- ^ "The Taxman Cometh". http://www.tv.com/law-and-order/the-taxman-cometh/episode/1340447/summary.html. Retrieved June 1, 2010.
- ^ "Philadelphia Chickens". http://books.google.com/books?id=fP_D-tX9-dQC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false. Retrieved August 28, 2011.
External links
- Mark Linn-Baker at the Internet Movie Database
- Mark Linn-Baker at the Internet Broadway Database
- Mark Linn-Baker at AllRovi
Categories:- 1954 births
- Actors from Connecticut
- Actors from Missouri
- American film actors
- American stage actors
- American television actors
- American television directors
- Living people
- People from Hartford County, Connecticut
- People from St. Louis, Missouri
- Yale School of Drama alumni
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