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Lewis Black
Born
in the U.S. capital and raised in Silver Spring, MD, Black attended
UNC Chapel Hill as an undergrad and earned an MFA from Yale School
of Drama in 1977. He recognized his own inherent gift for storytelling
as an adolescent, and thus began to pursue work across the country
as a playwright and actor after graduate school. A long string of
theatrical gigs followed, (many certifiably eccentric, such as a
directorial assignment in the Coloradoan wilderness).
Black's growing
desire for mainstream theatrical involvement eventually carried
him to Manhattan's Hell's Kitchen, where he took a full-timer as
Associate Artistic Director and Resident Playwright at Steve Olsen's
West Bank Café Downstairs Theatre Bar from 1981 through 1989.
During this eight-year stint (and shortly thereafter), Black and
the late Rusty McGee teamed to author hundreds of one-act musicals,
including -- most famously -- the high-profile Czar of Rock and
Roll, which premiered in Houston in 1990.
Black also
became a comedic fixture on the university circuit throughout the
'80s. In the mid- to late '80s, Black segued into bit parts in movies
and television. He made his cinematic debut when fellow New Yorker
Woody Allen cast him as Paul in the 1986 Hannah and Her Sisters.
When Black
left the West Bank in 1989, he focused more heavily on film roles,
but for a decade or so, the parts he landed were somewhat scattered;
he adorned the cast of a feature or cropped up on a small-screen
episode every two or three years, and thus derived the majority
of his income from a recurring summer stint, when he taught acting
to students at the Williamstown Theater Festival.
Key roles during
this period included: Jacob Singer's unnamed physician in Jacob's
Ladder, Franklin Frome in the 1991 "Aria" episode of Law
& Order, Marty Holder in Warren Leight's The Night We Never
Met (1993), and Lazlo "Punchy" de Leon in the "Deception"
episode of Homicide: Life on the Street (1997), directed by the
legendary Peter Medak (The Changeling, The Krays). In 1998, Black's
friend and fellow character actor Don Scardino (He Knows You're
Alone) directed a 20-minute film adaptation of Black's play {+The
Deal. Black authored the script.
After a couple of well-received concert films in 2003 and 2004 (Lewis
Black: Unleashed and Lewis Black: Black on Broadway, respectively),
the comedian found more consistent work -- and concomitant success
-- in front of the camera, with offers pouring in.
He contributed a sketch to the infamous 2005 Provenza/Jillette documentary
The Aristocrats, voiced fellow Aristocrat Bob Saget's 2006 spoof
Farce of the Penguins, and headlined a third standup film for HBO,
Lewis Black: Red White & Screwed. 2006 was indeed Black's year:
that summer, his new book, the Al Franken-like politically tinged
Nothing's Sacred hit stores, and he contributed to two mainstream
features: Barry Levinson's "unofficial" Good Morning,
Vietnam follow-up Man of the Year (as Eddie Langston), and director
Steve Pink's Accepted. The latter concerns a bunch of teenage burnouts
-- with no college prospects -- who wish to placate their parents
by creating a fake university and announcing their acceptance to
it. Black plays Uncle Ben, the guileless adult schemer who assists
them by feigning a position as dean of the "College."
In addition to Black's performance roles and standup, he is a fervent
social activist and spends much of his time working for charity;
recent contributions include teaching impoverished Hell's Kitchen
children to author and act in plays, as well as donating to -- and
spreading awareness of -- the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. In 2006,
Black continued his Daily Show appearances but launched a spin-off,
produced by Comedy Central and Castle Rock Entertainment and entitled
The Red State Diaries. The program features Black traveling around
the country and investigating, first-hand, the subjects he rants
about on the Jon Stewart program. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
Content provided by All-Music Guide. ©1999 - 2007
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