| Steven Wright | |
|---|---|
| Wright at Tufts University, 1994 | |
| Birth name | Steven Alexander Wright |
| Born | December 6, 1955 (1955-12-06) (age 53) Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. |
| Medium | stand-up, film, television |
| Nationality | American |
| Years active | 1979 - present |
| Genres | Surreal humor, post-modernism, Wit/Word play, Observational comedy, Musical comedy, Deadpan |
| Influences | Woody Allen, George Carlin[1] |
| Influenced | Mitch Hedberg, Demetri Martin, Jimmy Carr |
| Notable works and roles | I Have a Pony K-Billy DJ in Reservoir Dogs Speed in The Swan Princess Guy on the Couch in Half Baked I Still Have a Pony |
| Website | StevenWright.com |
| Academy Awards | |
| Best Short Film, Live Action 1988 The Appointments of Dennis Jennings |
|
Steven Alexander Wright (born December 6, 1955) is an Academy Award-winning American comedian, actor and writer. He is known for his distinctly lethargic voice and slow, deadpan delivery of ironic, witty, philosophical and sometimes confusing or nonsensical jokes and one-liners with intentionally contrived situations.
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Steven Wright was born in Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, Massachusetts,[2] and raised in Burlington, Massachusetts,[2] one of four children of Dolly and Alexander Wright.[2] His father, an electronics engineer who "tested a lot of stuff for the Apollo space program", became a truck driver after that program ended.[2]
Wright spent two years obtaining an associate's degree from Middlesex Community College in Bedford, Massachusetts, before enrolling at Emerson College.[3] He graduated from the latter in 1978[3] and began performing stand-up comedy in 1979[2][4] at the Boston comedy club the Comedy Connection.[2][3] He cites George Carlin and Woody Allen among his influences.[5]
In 1982, Peter Lassally, executive producer of the influential late-night television talk show The Tonight Show, noticed Wright performing on a bill with other local comics at the comedy club Ding Ho,[6] in Boston's Inman Square,[7] a venue Wright described as "half Chinese restaurant and half comedy club. It was a pretty weird place".[2] Lassally booked Wright on The Tonight Show, where the comic so impressed host Johnny Carson and the studio audience that Wright was brought back less than a week later.[5] In May 2007, Wright and other Ding Ho alumni, including Lenny Clarke, Barry Crimmins, Steve Sweeney, and Jimmy Tingle, appeared at a reunion benefit for fellow comic Bob Lazarus, suffering from leukemia.[7]
Wright's 1985 comedy album entitled I Have a Pony, released on Warner Bros. Records, received critical acclaim and was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album. In 1989, he and fellow producer Dean Parisot won an Academy Award for their 30-minute short film The Appointments of Dennis Jennings, directed by Parisot, written by Mike Armstrong and Wright, and starring Wright and Rowan Atkinson. In 1992, Wright had a recurring role on the television sitcom Mad About You. He also supplied the voice of the radio DJ in writer-director Quentin Tarantino's film Reservoir Dogs that year. "Dean Parisot's wife Sally Menke is Quentin Tarantino's [film] editor, so when she was editing the movie and it was getting down toward the end where they didn't have the radio DJ yet, she thought of me and told Quentin and he liked the idea", Wright explained in 2009.[2]
Numerous lists of jokes attributed to Wright circulate on the Internet, sometimes of dubious origin. Wright has stated, "Someone showed me a site, and half of it that said I wrote it, I didn't write. Recently, I saw one, and I didn't write any of it. What's disturbing is that with a few of these jokes, I wish I had thought of them. A giant amount of them, I'm embarrassed that people think I thought of them, because some are really bad".[8]
After his 1990 comedy special Wicker Chairs and Gravity, Wright continued to do stand-up performances, but was largely absent from television, only doing occasional guest spots on late-night talk shows. In 1999, he wrote and directed the 30-minute short "One Soldier", "about a soldier who was in the Civil War, right after the war, with all these existentialist thoughts and wondering if there is a God and all that stuff".[2]
In 2006, Wright produced his first stand-up special in 16 years, Steven Wright: When the Leaves Blow Away, originally airing on Comedy Central on October 21, 2006. Its DVD was released April 23, 2007.[citation needed]
On September 25, 2007, Wright released a follow-up to I Have a Pony, titled I Still Have a Pony (a CD release of the material from When the Leaves Blow Away). It was also nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album.
On December 15, 2008, Wright became the first inductee to the Boston Comedy Hall of Fame.[6][9]
In a 2005 poll to find The Comedian's Comedian, he was voted amongst the top 50 comedy acts by fellow comedians and comedy insiders. He was named #23 on Comedy Central's list of the 100 greatest stand-up comics.
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