Jack Do It Again Steely Dan
Chevy Chase | |
---|---|
Nascence proper name | Cornelius Crane Hunt |
Born | (1943-10-08) October 8, 1943 New York City, U.Southward. |
Medium | Stand-up, pic, boob tube |
Education | Bard College (BA) |
Years active | 1967–nowadays |
Genres |
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Spouse |
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Children | four |
Cornelius Crane "Chevy" Chase (; born October eight, 1943) is an American comedian, writer, and actor. Built-in into a prominent family, he had a variety of jobs before moving into comedy and started acting with National Lampoon. He became a key cast fellow member in the showtime flavour of Saturday Dark Alive, where his recurring Weekend Update segment became a staple of the show. Equally both a performer and a writer, he earned three Primetime Emmy Awards out of five nominations.[one]
Chase had his first leading film role in the one-act Foul Play (1978), earning 2 Golden Globe Accolade nominations.[2] He is further known for his portrayals of Clark W. Griswold in v National Lampoon's Vacation films and of Irwin "Fletch" Fletcher in Fletch (1985) and its sequel Fletch Lives (1989). Other prominent titles include Caddyshack (1980), Modernistic Problems (1981), Spies Like Us (1985), Three Amigos (1986), Man of the Firm (1995), and Hot Tub Time Motorcar (2010). He has hosted the Academy Awards twice (1987 and 1988) and briefly had his own late-night talk show, The Chevy Chase Show (1993). He also played the character Pierce Hawthorne on the NBC comedy serial Community from 2009 to 2014.[3] [4]
Early life [edit]
Cornelius Crane Chase was born in the Lower Manhattan area of New York Urban center on October 8, 1943.[v] He grew upwards in Woodstock, New York.[6] His begetter, Edward Tinsley "Ned" Chase (1919–2005),[seven] was a Princeton-educated Manhattan volume editor and magazine writer.[8] His mother, Cathalene Parker (née Browning; 1923–2005), was a concert pianist and librettist whose father, Rear Admiral Miles Browning, served as Admiral Raymond A. Spruance'southward Master of Staff on the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise (CV-6) at the Battle of Midway in World State of war II. He has an older brother, Ned Jr.[9] Cathalene was adopted as a child by her stepfather, Cornelius Vanderbilt Crane, heir to The Crane Visitor, and took the name Catherine Crane.[10] Hunt's paternal grandfather was artist and illustrator Edward Leigh Hunt, and his not bad-uncle was painter and teacher Frank Swift Chase. His maternal grandmother, Cathalene, was an opera singer who performed several times at Carnegie Hall.[eleven]
Chase was named for his adoptive gramps, Cornelius, while the nickname "Chevy" was bestowed by his grandmother from the medieval English language ballad "The Carol of Chevy Hunt". As a descendant of the Scottish Clan Douglas, she idea the name advisable.[12] He is a 14th-generation New Yorker, and was listed in the Social Register at an early age. His female parent's ancestors arrived in Manhattan starting in 1624—among his ancestors are New York Metropolis mayors Stephanus Van Cortlandt and John Johnstone; the Dutch Schuyler family, through his ancestor Gertrude Schuyler, the wife of Stephanus Van Cortlandt; John Morin Scott, General of the New York Militia during the American Revolution; Anne Hutchinson, dissident Puritan preacher and healer; and Mayflower passengers and signers of the Mayflower Compact from England, John Howland,[13] and the Pilgrim colonist leader and spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony, William Brewster. According to his step-blood brother John:
[Chevy] in one case told me that people who defined themselves in terms of their ancestry were similar potatoes—the all-time parts of them were underground. He disdained the pretension of his mother's side of the family, every bit embodied by her female parent, Cattie.[12]
Equally a child, Chase vacationed at Castle Hill, the Cranes' summer estate in Ipswich, Massachusetts.[14] Chase's parents divorced when he was four; his father remarried into the Folgers coffee family, and his female parent remarried twice. He has stated that he grew up in an upper heart class environment and that his adoptive maternal grandad did not bequeath whatever avails to Hunt'south mother when he died.[15] In a 2007 biography, Chase stated that he was physically and psychologically abused as a child by his mother and stepfather, John Cederquist.[sixteen] Both of his parents died in 2005.
Chase was educated at Riverdale Country School,[17] an independent twenty-four hours school in the Riverdale neighborhood of The Bronx, New York City, earlier beingness expelled. He ultimately graduated in 1962 from the Stockbridge School,[xviii] an contained boarding school in the town of Stockbridge, Massachusetts. At Stockbridge, he was known as a practical joker with an occasional hateful streak. He attended Haverford Higher during the 1962–1963 term, where he was noted for slapstick comedy and an absurd sense of physical humor, including his signature pratfalls and "sticking forks into his orifices".[19] During a 2009 interview on the Today show, he ostensibly verified the oft-publicized urban fable that he was expelled for harboring a moo-cow in his 4th flooring room,[20] although his old roommate David Felson asserted in a 2003 interview that Chase left for academic reasons.[19] Hunt transferred to Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, where he studied a pre-med curriculum and graduated in 1967 with a Available of Arts in English.
Chase did not enter medical school, which meant he was subject to the armed services typhoon. Chase was non drafted; when he appeared in January 1989 as the first guest of the simply-launched tardily-nighttime The Pat Sajak Show, he said he had convinced his draft board he deserved a four-F nomenclature by "falsely challenge, among other things, that he had homosexual tendencies".[21] Before fame, Chase worked as a cab driver, truck driver, motorcycle messenger, construction worker, waiter, busboy, fruit picker, produce director in a supermarket, audio engineer, salesman in a wine store, and theater conductor.[ citation needed ]
He played drums with the college band The Leather Canary, headed by schoolhouse friends Walter Becker and Donald Fagen. Chase has called the grouping "a bad jazz ring"; Becker and Fagen later founded the successful group Steely Dan. Chase has perfect pitch.[12] He played drums and keyboards for a rock band chosen Chamaeleon Church, which recorded 1 anthology for MGM Records before disbanding in 1969. To give the album a more soft-stone sound, producer Alan Lorber made several alterations in the mixing, including the muting of Chase's bass drum, and Chase was reportedly incensed when he heard the final mix.[22]
Career [edit]
Early career [edit]
Chase was a fellow member of an early secret comedy ensemble called Channel 1, which he co-founded in 1967. He also wrote a 1-folio spoof on Mission: Impossible for Mad magazine in 1970 and was a writer for the short-lived Smothers Brothers Idiot box bear witness improvement in the spring of 1975. Chase made the move to comedy as a full-fourth dimension career by 1973, when he became a writer and cast fellow member of The National Lampoon Radio Hour, a syndicated satirical radio series. The National Lampoon Radio Hour also featured John Belushi, Gilda Radner, Bill Murray, and Brian Doyle-Murray, all of whom later on became "Not-Ready-For-Prime Time Players" on NBC Saturday Night (later on re-titled NBC'due south Sat Dark and finally Sat Dark Live). Hunt and Belushi also appeared in National Lampoon'south off-Broadway revue Lemmings, a sketch and musical send-upwards of popular youth culture, in which Chase also played the drums and piano during the musical numbers. He appeared in the movie The Groove Tube, which was directed past another co-founder of Channel One, Ken Shapiro, featuring several Aqueduct One sketches.
Sabbatum Night Alive [edit]
Chase was one of the original cast members of Saturday Dark Live (SNL), NBC's tardily-night comedy television show, get-go in October 1975. During the starting time season, he introduced every show except two, with "Live from New York, it'southward Sabbatum Nighttime!" The remark was ofttimes preceded past a pratfall, known equally "The Fall of the Week". Chase became known for his skill at physical one-act. In one comedy sketch, he mimicked a real-life incident in which President Gerald Ford accidentally tripped while disembarking from Air Force One in Salzburg, Austria.[23] [24] This portrayal of President Ford as a bumbling klutz became a favorite device of Chase's, and helped class the pop concept of Ford equally being a clumsy man.[25] In after years, Chase met and became friendly with President Ford.[25] [26]
Hunt was the original ballast for the Weekend Update segment of SNL, and his catchphrase introduction, "I'm Chevy Chase… and you're not" became well known. His trademark conclusion, "Good night, and have a pleasant tomorrow" was later resurrected by Jane Curtin and Tina Fey. Chase as well wrote comedy material for Weekend Update. For case, he wrote and performed "The News for the Hard of Hearing". In this skit, Chase read the top story of the twenty-four hours, aided by Garrett Morris, who repeated the story by loudly shouting it. Chase claimed that his version of Weekend Update was the inspiration for afterwards news satire shows such as The Daily Show and The Colbert Study.[27] Weekend Update was later on revived as a segment on The Chevy Chase Show,[28] a short-lived late-night talk evidence produced past Chase and broadcast by Fob Broadcasting Company.
Chase was committed contractually to SNL for but one year as a writer and became a bandage member during rehearsals only earlier the evidence's premiere. He received 2 Emmy Awards and a Gilt Globe Laurels for his comedy writing and live comic acting on the testify. In Rolling Stone 's February 2015 appraisal of all 141 SNL cast members to date, Chase was ranked tenth in overall importance. "Strange as information technology sounds, Chase might be the nearly under-rated SNL player," they wrote. "It took him only ane flavor to define the franchise…without that deadpan arrogance, the whole SNL way of humor would fall flat."[29]
In a 1975 New York magazine cover story, which chosen him "The funniest man in America", NBC executives referred to Chase as "The first real potential successor to Johnny Carson" and claimed he would begin guest-hosting The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson within six months of the article. Hunt dismissed rumors that he could be the next Carson by telling New York, "I'd never exist tied downwardly for five years interviewing TV personalities." Hunt did not appear on the plan until May 4, 1977, when he was promoting a prime-time special for NBC. Carson later on said of Chase: "He couldn't ad-lib a fart after a baked edible bean dinner."[30]
Chase acknowledged Ernie Kovacs's influence on his piece of work in Sat Night Live,[31] and he thanked Kovacs during his acceptance speech for his Emmy Award.[32] In addition, Hunt spoke of Kovacs's influence on his work in an appearance in the 1982 documentary called Ernie Kovacs: Television'southward Original Genius.[33]
Leaving SNL [edit]
In tardily 1976, in the middle of the second season, Hunt became the outset member of the original bandage to leave the evidence. While he landed starring roles in several films on the strength of his SNL fame, he asserted that the principal reason for his departure was the reluctance of his girlfriend, Jacqueline Carlin, to movement to New York.[34] Hunt moved to Los Angeles, married Carlin, and was replaced by Bill Murray, although he made a few cameo appearances on the evidence during the second season.
Hunt hosted SNL viii times until 1997 when he was reportedly banned after striking Cheri Oteri on the dorsum of the head and harassing female writers.[35] However, SNL creator and show runner Lorne Michaels has since disputed reports that he was shocked by Chevy's behavior or had banned him every bit a result, claims which he calls "idiotic".[36] While Chase has non returned to SNL to host since 1997, he appeared on the evidence's 25th anniversary special in 1999 and was interviewed for a 2005 NBC special on the first v years of SNL. Later appearances included a Caddyshack skit featuring Bill Murray, a 1997 episode with guest host Chris Farley, as the Land Shark in a Weekend Update segment in 2001, another Weekend Update segment in 2007, and in Justin Timberlake's monologue in 2013 as a member of the Five-Timers Club, where he was reunited with his Three Amigos co-stars Steve Martin and Martin Short. He as well participated in the 40th anniversary special in Feb 2015.[37]
Pic success [edit]
Chase's early film roles included Tunnel Vision, the box office hit Foul Play, and Oh! Heavenly Canis familiaris. The role of Eric "Otter" Stratton in National Lampoon's Animal Firm was originally written with Chase in heed, but he turned the function downwardly to piece of work on Foul Play.[fifteen] The role went to Tim Matheson instead. Chase said in an interview that he chose to do Foul Play so he could do "real interim" for the first time in his career instead of just doing "schtick".[38] Chase followed Foul Play with the successful Harold Ramis comedy Caddyshack, in 1980. Caddyshack was a major box office success, pulling in $39 million off a $six one thousand thousand budget. Information technology has since became a archetype, currently sitting at a 73% approval charge per unit on Rotten Tomatoes, with critics saying "Though unabashedly crude and juvenile, Caddyshack nevertheless scores with its classic slapstick, unforgettable characters, and endlessly quotable dialogue". That same yr, he too reunited with Foul Play co-star Goldie Hawn for Neil Simon's Seems Like Sometime Times which was also successful at the box office, after this he released a cocky-titled record album, co-produced past Chase and Tom Scott, with novelty and encompass versions of songs past Randy Newman, Barry White, Bob Marley, the Beatles, Donna Summer, Tennessee Ernie Ford, The Troggs, and The Sugarhill Gang.
Chase narrowly escaped decease past electrocution during the filming of Modern Problems in 1980. During a sequence in which Chase'south graphic symbol wears "landing lights" as he dreams that he is an airplane, the lights malfunctioned and an electric current passed through Chase's arm, back, and neck muscles. The about-death experience caused Hunt to experience a catamenia of deep depression, as his marriage to Jacqueline had concluded simply prior to the start of filming. Chase continued his motion picture career in 1983's National Lampoon's Holiday, directed past Ramis and written by John Hughes. This one grossing $61 meg off a $15 million budget (his most successful movie at the time). He married Jayni Luke in 1982, and in 1985, he starred in Fletch, which grossed nigh $59 1000000 off an $8 million budget. This was the first of 2 films based on Gregory Mcdonald's Fletch books as well as Spies Like Us. Hunt joined SNL veterans Steve Martin and Martin Short in the Lorne Michaels–produced comedy Three Amigos in 1986, declaring in an interview that making 3 Amigos was the near fun he had making a film. This pic was also very successful, grossing $39 million off a $25 million budget with critics proverb "3 Amigos! stars a trio of gifted comedians and has an agreeably silly sense of humor". The trio later hosted SNL that year, the only time the show has had three hosts on ane show. In 1988, he starred alongside Madolyn Smith in Funny Farm which was a sizeable hit at $25 million and currently has a 65% approving charge per unit on rotten tomatoes.
At the peak of his career in the late 1980s, Chase earned effectually Us$seven million per motion picture and was a highly visible celebrity. He appeared alongside Paul Simon, one of his best friends, in Simon'due south 1986 second video for "Y'all Can Telephone call Me Al", in which he lip-syncs all of Simon's lyrics.[39] Chase hosted the University Awards in 1987 and 1988, opening the telecast in 1988 with the quip, "Good evening, Hollywood phonies!" Chase filmed a sequel to Vacation, 1985'south National Lampoon's European Vacation, this movie pulling in but shy of $fifty million at the box office, and then a third movie, National Lampoon'due south Christmas Vacation in 1989, which, thanks to its holiday theme, has go one of his more durable films, airing on NBC every December. This one pulling in an impressive $73 million. In 1987, his Cornelius Productions company had set upward a non-sectional, admitting get-go-refusal deal with Warner Bros., in order to develop 4 feature projects at the studio, and a fifth projection fix at Universal Pictures.[xl] He played saxophone onstage at Simon's free concert at the Bang-up Lawn in Central Park in the summer of 1991. Later in 1991, he helped tape and appeared in the music video "Voices That Care" to entertain and support U.Due south. troops involved in Performance Desert Storm, and supported the International Ruby Cross.
After work [edit]
Chase had three sequent motion-picture show flops—1991's Razzie Honour–nominated Naught but Problem, 1992's Memoirs of an Invisible Man, and 1994'due south Cops & Robbersons. The three releases had a combined gross of $34 million in the United States. 1997's Vegas Vacation was a box part success, grossing $36.4 meg.[41] [ circular reference ] Some of the more recent films starring Chase (due east.g., Vacuums, Rent-a-Husband, Goose!) have not been widely released in the United States. He returned to mainstream movie-making in 2006, co-starring with Tim Allen and Courteney Cox in the comedy Zoom, though it was both a critical and commercial failure.
In September 1993, Chase hosted The Chevy Hunt Show, a weeknight talk show, for the Fox Dissemination Company. Although information technology had high commercial expectations, the show was cancelled by Fox after five weeks. Chase afterward appeared in a commercial for Doritos, airing during the Super Bowl, in which he made humorous reference to the prove's failure.
Chase was Jerky Pudding'south 1993 Man of the Year, and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in that same twelvemonth.[42] Afterwards having starred with Farrah Fawcett in the relatively successful Man of the House in 1995, he received The Harvard Lampoon's Lifetime Accomplishment Award in 1996.
In 1998, a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs, California, Walk of Stars was dedicated to him.[43] He was roasted by the New York Friars Club for a Comedy Primal television special in 2002. This roast was noted for being unusually vitriolic, even past the standards of a roast.[44] In 2015, Chase reprised his role equally Clark Griswold in the fifth Vacation installment, titled Vacation. Dissimilar the previous iv films in which Clark is the main protagonist, he only has a brief though pivotal cameo appearance. In spite of largely negative critical reception, the film itself has proven to be a fiscal success grossing over $104 meg worldwide, making it the highest-grossing entry to engagement.
Hunt guest-starred every bit an anti-Semitic murder suspect in "In Vino Veritas", the Nov 3, 2006, episode of Police & Society. He also invitee-starred in the ABC drama series Brothers & Sisters in 2 episodes as a erstwhile love interest of Sally Field'southward grapheme. Chase appeared in a prominent recurring role as villainous software magnate Ted Roark on the NBC spy-comedy Chuck. In 2009, Chase and Dan Aykroyd voiced themselves in the Family Guy episode "Spies Reminiscent of Us".
In 2010, he appeared in the pic Hot Tub Time Machine which received some praise, likewise as a short online film featuring the Griswold Family, and in the Funny or Dice original one-act sketch "Presidential Reunion", where he played President Ford alongside other current and former SNL president impersonators. 2019 saw him in the Netflix movie The Final Laugh where he starred alongside Richard Dreyfuss.
[edit]
Starting in 2009, Chase returned to NBC in the sitcom Customs, every bit aging moist-towelette tycoon Pierce Hawthorne. The series received critical acclaim for its acting and writing, appeared on numerous critics' year-terminate "best-of" lists and developed a cult following.[45] [46] This was considered somewhat of a improvement for Hunt, not having been in a successful project since the 80s. Chase starred in the first four seasons, leaving the show in 2012, afterward frequent conflicts with creator Dan Harmon over the direction of his grapheme.[47] He returned for a cameo appearance in the season-v premiere.
Personal life [edit]
Hunt married Susan Hewitt in New York Metropolis on February 23, 1973. They divorced on Feb 1, 1976. His second marriage, to Jacqueline Carlin, was formalized on Dec 4, 1976, and ended in divorce on November 14, 1980.[48] He married his tertiary wife, Jayni Luke, in Pacific Palisades on June xix, 1982.[49] He has three daughters with Luke.[50] The couple resides in Bedford, New York.[51]
In 1986, Chase was admitted to the Betty Ford Heart for treatment of a prescription painkiller addiction. His employ began after he experienced ongoing back pain related to the pratfalls he took during his Saturday Dark Alive appearances.[52] In 2010, he said that his drug abuse had been "depression level."[53] He entered the Hazelden Clinic in September 2016 to receive treatment for alcoholism.[54]
An active environmentalist and philanthropist, Hunt is known for his agog liberal political views. He raised money for Bill Clinton in the 1990s and John Kerry in the 2004 presidential ballot. He mocked President George West. Bush during a speech communication at a People for the American Way do good at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, where he referred to President Bush-league every bit an "uneducated, existent lying schmuck" and a "dumb fuck," which stunned the organizers and the crowd and which Norman Lear categorized as "utterly untoward."[55]
Feud with Beak Murray [edit]
While filming an episode of Saturday Night Live in 1978, Chase got into a fistfight with Pecker Murray in John Belushi'south dressing room. Murray and Chase's backstage brawl took identify when Chase returned to host the show afterwards his go out every bit a full-time cast fellow member in 1976. Murray had reportedly fabricated a derogatory comment about Hunt's troubled union to Jacqueline Carlin, leading Chase to mock Murray's physical appearance. SNL cast members Jane Curtin, Laraine Newman, and Gilda Radner witnessed the incident. In a talk show appearance in 2021, Laraine Newman noted of the atmospherics, "it was very sad and painful and atrocious." Newman went on to say "I call up they both knew the ane affair that they could say to 1 some other that would hurt the well-nigh and that's what I call back incited information technology." Chase and Murray would after reconcile to star together in Caddyshack in 1980.[56]
Filmography [edit]
Film [edit]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1968 | Walk... Don't Walk | Pedestrian | Short moving-picture show |
1974 | The Groove Tube | The Fingers/Geritan/Four Leaf Clover | |
1976 | Tunnel Vision | Himself | |
1978 | Foul Play | Tony Carlson | |
1980 | Oh! Heavenly Dog | Browning | |
Caddyshack | Ty Webb | ||
Seems Like Onetime Times | Nicholas Gardenia | ||
1981 | Under the Rainbow | Bruce Thorpe | |
Modern Problems | Max Fiedler | ||
1983 | National Lampoon'south Holiday | Clark Griswold | |
Deal of the Century | Eddie Muntz | ||
1985 | Fletch | Irwin 'Fletch' Fletcher | |
National Lampoon's European Vacation | Clark Griswold | ||
Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird | Newscaster | Cameo | |
Spies Like Us | Emmett Fitz-Hume | ||
1986 | Three Amigos | Dusty Bottoms | |
1988 | The Burrow Trip | Condom Father | Cameo |
Funny Subcontract | Andy Farmer | ||
Caddyshack II | Ty Webb | ||
1989 | Fletch Lives | Irwin 'Fletch' Fletcher | |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation | Clark "Sparky" Griswold | ||
1991 | Nil simply Trouble | Chris Thorne | |
50.A. Story | Carlo Christopher | Cameo | |
1992 | Memoirs of an Invisible Man | Nick Halloway | |
Hero | Deke | Uncredited[57] | |
1993 | Last Activeness Hero | Himself | Cameo |
1994 | A Century of Cinema | Himself | Documentary |
Cops & Robbersons | Norman Robberson | ||
1995 | Homo of the House | Jack Sturgess | |
1997 | Vegas Vacation | Clark Griswold | |
1998 | Muddied Work | Dr. Farthing | |
2000 | Snow Twenty-four hours | Tom Brandston | |
Pete's Pizza | Narrator | Voice Short motion picture | |
The I Armed Brigand | Cop | Curt film | |
2002 | Orangish County | Principal Harbert | |
2003 | Vacuums | Mr. Punch | |
Bitter Jester | Himself | Documentary | |
2004 | Our Italian Husband | Paul Parmesan | |
Bad Meat | Congressman Bernard P. Greely | Direct-to-DVD | |
2005 | Ellie Parker | Dennis Swartzbaum | |
2006 | Funny Money | Henry Perkins | |
Doogal | Railroad train | Vocalization | |
Goose on the Loose | Congreve Maddox | Directly-to-DVD | |
Zoom | Dr. Grant | ||
2009 | Stay Cool | Main Marshall | |
Jack and the Beanstalk | Antipode | ||
2010 | Hot Tub Time Car | Repairman | |
Hotel Hell Vacation | Clark Griswold | Short film | |
2011 | Non Another Not Another Pic | Max Storm | |
2013 | Before I Sleep | Gravedigger | |
2014 | Lovesick | Lester | |
Shelby | Grandpa Geoffrey | Directly-to-DVD | |
2015 | Hot Tub Time Machine two | Repairman | |
Vacation | Clark Griswold | ||
2017 | The Last Movie Star | Sonny | |
Hedgehogs | ThinkMan | Vocalism Directly-to-DVD | |
2019 | The Last Express joy | Al Hart | |
2020 | The Very First-class Mr. Dundee | Chevy | |
2021 | Panda vs. Aliens | King Karoth | Phonation Direct-to-DVD |
Television [edit]
Yr | Title | Part | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1975 | The Smothers Brothers Evidence | Writer | |
1975–2015 | Sat Night Live | Various characters/ Himself (host) | 38 episodes; too writer 8 episodes |
1977 | The Chevy Hunt Bear witness | Himself | Tv special; as well writer |
The Paul Simon Special | Himself | Television special; too writer | |
1979 | The Chevy Chase National Sense of humour Test | Himself | Television special; also writer |
1988 | 60th Academy Awards | Himself (host) | Boob tube special |
1990 | The Earth Day Special | Vic's Buddy | Tv special |
1993 | The Chevy Hunt Show | Himself (host) | 25 episodes; also author and producer |
1995 | The Larry Sanders Prove | Himself | Episode: "Roseanne'south Render" |
1997 | The Nanny | Himself | Episode: "A Decent Proposal" |
2002 | America'south Most Terrible Things | Andy Potts | Airplane pilot |
2003 | Freedom: A History of US | Various characters | 5 episodes |
2004 | The Karate Domestic dog | Cho-Cho | Voice Telly moving-picture show |
2006 | The Hugger-mugger Policeman's Ball | General Nuisance | Television special |
Constabulary & Gild | Mitch Carroll | Episode: "In Vino Veritas" | |
2007, 2009 | Family unit Guy | Clark Griswold / Himself (voices) | Episodes: "Blue Harvest" "Spies Reminiscent of Us" |
2007 | Brothers & Sisters | Stan Harris | 2 episodes |
2009 | Hjälp! | Dan Carter | eight episodes |
Chuck | Ted Roark | 3 episodes | |
2009–2014 | Customs | Pierce Hawthorne | 83 episodes |
2014 | Hot in Cleveland | Ross | Episode: "People Feeding People" |
Wishin' and Hopin' | Developed Felix (vox) | Boob tube pic | |
2015 | Chevy | Chase | Pilot |
2016 | A Christmas in Vermont | Preston Bullock | Tv motion picture |
Radio [edit]
Year | Championship | Function | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1973–1974 | The National Lampoon Radio Hour | Various roles | Also writer |
Awards and nominations [edit]
Twelvemonth | Association | Category | Title | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1976 | Writers Club of America | Writing for a Variety Series | The Smothers Brothers Show | Nominated | [58] |
1976 | Primetime Emmy Accolade | Individual Functioning in a Variety Program | Saturday Night Alive | Won | |
Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series | Won | ||||
1977 | Individual Performance in a Variety Program | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Writing for a Variety Series | Nominated | ||||
1978 | Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special | The Paul Simon Special | Won | ||
1978 | Golden Earth Laurels | Best Actor – Motion Moving-picture show Musical or One-act | Foul Play | Nominated | |
New Star of the Twelvemonth | N/A | Nominated | |||
1992 | Saturn Honor | Best Actor | Memoirs of an Invisible Homo | Nominated |
On September 23, 1993, Chase received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7021 Hollywood Blvd.[42]
References [edit]
- ^ "Chevy Hunt". Emmys.com. Retrieved June 21, 2017.
- ^ "Golden Globe Awards for 'Chevy Chase'". Goldenglobes.com. Retrieved June 21, 2017.
- ^ Guerrero, Danger (November 21, 2012). "Chevy Chase is leaving "Community"". Uproxx.com . Retrieved November 21, 2012.
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie (Nov 21, 2012). "Chevy Chase Leaving NBC's "Community"". Deadline . Retrieved November 21, 2012.
- ^ "Chevy Chase biography". Biography.com. Retrieved October 17, 2013.
- ^ "Is Chevy Chase a Potential Successor to Johnny Carson?". New York Magazine . Retrieved December 30, 2020.
- ^ "Edward Chase, 86, Longtime Book Editor, Is Expressionless (Published 2005)". The New York Times. June 17, 2005. Retrieved December thirty, 2020.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 27, 2020. Retrieved September 20, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy every bit title (link) - ^ "Chevy Hunt is 74, sober and ready to work. The problem? Nobody wants to piece of work with him". Washington Post . Retrieved Feb 12, 2022.
- ^ "Explorer's Survivor Omitted". The New York Times. July 11, 1962.
- ^ Martha Burgin; Maureen Holtz (2009). Robert Allerton: the private man & the public gifts. The News-Gazette. p. 132. ISBN978-0-9798420-7-eight.
- ^ a b c Fruchter, Rena. I'1000 Chevy Chase...and You're Not. Virgin Books, 2007.
- ^ Cornelius Crane "Chevy" Hunt, Edward Tinsley "Ned" Chase, Edward Leigh Chase, Charles Dennison Hunt, Henry Seymour Chase, Jarvis Brown Chase, Paul Hunt m. Betty Kinnicutt, John Kinnicutt one thousand. Hannah Gorham, Jabez Gorham, Jr., Jabez Gorham, Sr., John Gorham k. Desire Howland, daughter of John Howland & Elizabeth Tilley.
- ^ New York Magazine. Newyorkmetro.com. Baronial 23, 1993. p. 32. ISSN 0028-7369.
- ^ a b Chase, Chevy, interview on Howard Stern Prove, Sirius Satellite Radio, September 18, 2008.
- ^ "Chevy Hunt says in volume he was beaten by mother". Reuters. Apr 24, 2007. Archived from the original on Oct two, 2012. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
- ^ Jarvis, Jeff (September 12, 1983). "Chevy Hunt's New High: Fatherhood". People . Retrieved Oct 22, 2019.
- ^ "The Milwaukee Picket — Google News Archive Search". News.google.com . Retrieved December thirty, 2020.
- ^ a b "Prankly Speaking". The Bi-College News. Oct 28, 2003. Archived from the original on April 21, 2015. Retrieved February 26, 2015.
- ^ "blogs.haverford.edu". blogs.haverford.edu. October eight, 2009. Retrieved February 26, 2015.
- ^ Belatedly-Night Chitchat Additions: Pat Sajak and Arsenio Hall, a January 11, 1989, review from The New York Times
- ^ Joynson, Vernon (1995). Fuzz, Acrid, & Flowers Archived Baronial 25, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. London: Borderline Books. Come across entry on Chamaeleon Church building.
- ^ Cannon, Lou (December 27, 2006). "Gerald R. Ford" (Obituary). The Washington Mail service . Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ Chawkins, Steve (Oct 25, 2005). "Bush's Tribute to a Lofty Symbol". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ a b "Chevy Chase recalls Ford as 'a terrific guy': 'SNL' comedian became famous in the '70s portraying president as klutz". Today.com. December 27, 2006. Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ Chase, Chevy (Jan six, 2007). "Mr. Ford Gets the Last Laugh". The New York Times . Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ Keller, Joel (April xvi, 2007). "A delusional Chevy Chase says he created The Daily Show". AOL TV. Archived from the original on May 18, 2015.
[...] asked what he thought of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, [Chase] took credit for their success. "[I] think that, you lot know, I started it with my Weekend Update," he responds, implying that the ideas for both The Daily Prove and The Colbert Written report came directly from WU.
- ^ Carter, Pecker (July 13, 1993). "With Pratfalls, Chevy Chase's Plans For Tardily-Nighttime TV". The New York Times . Retrieved September 16, 2008.
- ^ Rolling Stone, upshot 1229, February 26, 2015, p. 32.
- ^ "The 25 Meanest Things Always Said past Men". Menshealth.com. June 25, 2011. Archived from the original on August 10, 2011. Retrieved August viii, 2011.
- ^ Chevy Hunt, "The Unique One-act of Ernie Kovacs", TV Guide, Apr ix, 1977, p. 39–40.
- ^ Hofer, Stephen F.(2006). Tv set Guide: the official collector'due south guide, Bangzoom Publishers.
- ^ "Ernie Kovacs: Television's Original Genius". IMDb. November 17, 1982.
- ^ "Live From New York: The First 5 Years of Saturday Night Live". Saturday Night Live. February xx, 2005. NBC.
- ^ Princeton, Harvey (September eleven, 2019). "Chevy Chase Isn't The Funny Guy You Think He Is". Retrieved Dec 28, 2020.
- ^ The Washington Mail service https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2018/lifestyle/chevy-chase-cant-change/.
- ^ McCoy, Terrence (Feb 17, 2015). "Chevy Chase, Too Mean To Succeed". The Washington Post . Retrieved February 26, 2015.
- ^ Shales, Tom. Live From New York: An Uncensored History of Sat Nighttime Live. Back Bay Books, 2003.
- ^ "Paul Simon - Yous Tin Call Me al (Official Video)". YouTube.
- ^ Tusher, Will (May 27, 1987). "Chevy Chase's Cornelius Prods. Lines Up Projects With WB, U". Variety. p. 28.
- ^ Vegas Vacation
- ^ a b "Chevy Chase". Hollywood Walk of Fame. Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. October 25, 2019. Retrieved May xv, 2021.
- ^ "Palm Springs Walk of Stars by date dedicated" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October xiii, 2012. Retrieved February 26, 2015.
- ^ Heffernan, Virginia (December 2, 2002). "Chevy Chase, Humiliated Again". Slate Magazine . Retrieved October 19, 2019.
- ^ "Community was ane of the most inventive shows in TV history". Vox. September 20, 2019. Retrieved April two, 2020.
- ^ "The Meta, Innovative Genius of Community". The Atlantic. May 12, 2011. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
- ^ Rose, Lacey (July 17, 2013). "'Community's' Dan Harmon Reveals the Wild Story Behind His Firing and Rehiring". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on May 12, 2020. Retrieved May 25, 2020.
- ^ Chevy Chase: Fast Facts CNN
- ^ Gelder, Lawrence Van (October fifteen, 1982). "AT THE MOVIES (Published 1982)". The New York Times . Retrieved Dec 30, 2020.
- ^ "Chevy Chase is 74, sober and ready to work. The problem? Nobody wants to work with him". Washington Post . Retrieved June thirty, 2021.
- ^ "Hermit Hell! Chevy Chase Living Like A Loner: 'He's Alienated Himself From Anybody'". RadarOnline. February fifteen, 2018. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
- ^ "Chevy Chase Being Treated For Addiction to Painkillers". The New York Times. October 12, 1986. Retrieved Baronial 31, 2013.
- ^ Fussman, Cal (September 23, 2010). "Chevy Chase: What I've Learned". Esquire . Retrieved August 31, 2013.
- ^ France, Lisa Respers (September vi, 2016). "Chevy Chase enters rehab". CNN.
- ^ Leiby, Richard (Dec 16, 2004). "It'due south the F-Time Prove With Chevy Chase". Washington Post . Retrieved Baronial viii, 2011.
- ^ Roberto, Melissa (June 18, 2021). "Neb Murray and Chevy Hunt'southward backstage fight at 'SNL' was 'painful' to watch, testify alums say". Fox News . Retrieved June 18, 2021.
- ^ "Chevy Hunt". IMDb . Retrieved April ii, 2020.
- ^ "Chevy Chase – Awards". IMDb . Retrieved April 2, 2020.
Farther reading [edit]
- I'm Chevy Chase...and You're Not (The Authorized Biography) by Rena Fruchter. Virgin Books, 2007. ISBN one-85227-346-1.
- Who's Who in Comedy past Ronald L. Smith. Pp. 102–103. New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0-8160-2338-seven.
- Live from New York: An Uncensored History of Saturday Dark Alive by Tom Shales and James Andrew Miller. Back Bay Books.
External links [edit]
- Chevy Hunt at IMDb
- Chevy Chase at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chevy_Chase
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