Basic Information About Hank Azaria
Category | Celebrities βΊ Actors |
---|---|
Professions | Comedian, Actor, Voice Actor, Television producer, Writer, Film director |
Net worth | $90,000,000 |
Date of birth | 1964-04-25 (60 years old) |
Place of birth | Forest Hills |
Nationality | United States of America |
Spouse | Helen Hunt - (17 JulyΒ 1999 - 18 DecemberΒ 2000)Β (divorced) |
Gender | Male |
Height | 5 ft 11 in (1.82 m) |
Social Media | βοΈ Wikipedia βοΈ IMDb |
Famous Network of Actors with Similar Net Worth
What Movie Awards did Hank Azaria win?
Oscar |
Golden Globe |
Golder Raspberry |
BAFTA |
Other |
---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 15 |
Hank Azaria awards
Award Name | State | Movie / Series Name | Year |
---|---|---|---|
Annie - Outstanding Individual Achievement for Voice Acting by a Male Performer in an Animated Feature Production | Winner | Anastasia | 1998 |
Actor - Outstanding Performance by a Cast | Winner | The Birdcage | 1997 |
OFTA Film Award - Best Supporting Actor | Nominee | The Birdcage | 1997 |
Stinker Award - Most Annoying Fake Accent: Male | Nominee | America's Sweethearts | 2001 |
Primetime Emmy - Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series | Winner | Ray Donovan | 2016 |
OFTA Television Award - Best Guest Actor in a Drama Series | Nominee | Ray Donovan | 2017 |
Primetime Emmy - Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance | Nominee | The Simpsons | 2020 |
Primetime Emmy - Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance | Winner | The Simpsons | 2015 |
Primetime Emmy - Outstanding Voice-Over Performance | Nominee | The Simpsons | 2012 |
OFTA Television Award - Best Voice-Over Performance | Nominee | The Simpsons | 2000 |
Critics Choice Award - Best Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominee | Brockmire | 2021 |
Critics Choice Award - Best Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominee | Brockmire | 2019 |
Critics Choice Award - Best Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominee | Brockmire | 2018 |
OFTA Television Award - Best Guest Actor in a Comedy Series | Winner | Mad About You | 1998 |
Actor - Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series | Nominee | Huff | 2005 |
Hank Azaria roles
Movie / Series | Role |
---|---|
Godzilla | Victor 'Animal' Palotti |
Anastasia | Bartok (voice) |
Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story | Young Patches O'Houlihan |
Year One | Abraham |
Heat | Alan Marciano |
Mystery Men | Blue Raja / Jeff |
The Birdcage | Agador |
Pretty Woman | Detective |
Love & Other Drugs | Dr. Stan Knight |
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian | Kahmunrah / The Thinker / Abe Lincoln (voice) |
Grosse Pointe Blank | Steven Lardner |
Along Came Polly | Claude |
Lovelace | Gerry Damiano |
Now and Then | Bud Kent |
The Simpsons Movie | Professor Frink / Comic Book Guy / Moe Szyslak / Chief Wiggum / Lou / Carl / Cletus / Bumblebee Man / Male EPA Worker / Dome Depot Announcer / Kissing Cop / Carnival Barker / Counter Man / Apu / Drederick Tatum / Sea Captain / EPA Passenger / Robot / Dr. Nick Riviera / Wise Guy (voice) |
Hop | Carlos / Phil (voice) |
Great Expectations | Walter Plane |
The Smurfs | Gargamel |
The Smurfs 2 | Gargamel |
America's Sweethearts | Hector |
Shattered Glass | Michael Kelly |
Quiz Show | Albert Freedman |
Mystery, Alaska | Charles Danner |
Celebrity | David |
Happy Feet Two | The Mighty Sven (voice) |
Run Fatboy Run | Whit |
Eulogy | Daniel Collins |
Friends | David 5 episodes, 1994-2003 |
Family Guy | Apu Nahasapeemapetilon / ... 4 episodes, 2013-2019 |
Tales from the Crypt | Richard 1 episode, 1995 |
Futurama | Harold Zoid 1 episode, 2001 |
Made in Hollywood | Self 3 episodes, 2011-2013 |
Growing Pains | Steve Stevenson 1 episode, 1989 |
The Simpsons | Moe Szyslak / ... 720 episodes, 1989-2022 |
Ray Donovan | Ed Cochran 14 episodes, 2014-2016 |
Ellen: The Ellen DeGeneres Show | Self - Guest 1 episode, 2014 |
The Cleveland Show | Comic Book Guy 1 episode, 2011 |
Spider-Man | Eddie Brock / ... 8 episodes, 1994-1996 |
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air | Policeman 1 episode, 1990 |
Family Ties | Joe 1 episode, 1988 |
The Talk | Self 2 episodes, 2017-2018 |
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert | Self / ... 6 episodes, 2016-2021 |
The Late Late Show with James Corden | Self / ... 2 episodes, 2015-2018 |
Watch What Happens: Live | Self - Guest 1 episode, 2013 |
Babes | Tony 1 episode, 1990 |
Brockmire | Writer |
Brockmire | Jim Brockmire 32 episodes, 2017-2020 |
The Daily Show | Self - Guest 2 episodes, 2001-2013 |
Mad About You | Nat Ostertag 15 episodes, 1995-1999 |
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno | Self - Guest 6 episodes, 1998-2007 |
Hank Azaria's Movie/Shows Salary
Movie / Series | Salary |
---|---|
The SimpsonsΒ (1989) | $300,000 per episode (2011-) |
Hank Azaria's Quotes
- Just watching Jack Lemmon made me want to get into this business.
- Godzilla's a monster for the 90s. He's been working out.
- (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."
- (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.
- (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.
Interesting Facts about Hank Azaria
- Was a bartender in New York at the Arcadia.
- Attended 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.
- A 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".
- Both sets of his grandparents came from Salonika in northern Greece.
- Based the voice of Moe the bartender (The Simpsons (1989)) on actor Al Pacino.
- His family is of Sephardic Jewish background.
- He 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.
- Spent over $300,000 of his own money to make his short film Nobody's Perfect (2004).
- Based the voice of Lou the Cop (in The Simpsons (1989)) on actor Sylvester Stallone.
- Based the voice of Chief Wiggum (in The Simpsons (1989)) on actor Edward G. Robinson.
- Based 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).
- Based the voice of Comic Book Guy (in The Simpsons (1989)) on his college roommate.
- Appeared in two films in 1999 with the word "Mystery" in the title: Mystery, Alaska (1999) and Mystery Men (1999).
- Based the voice of quack Dr. Nick Rivera (in The Simpsons (1989)) on actor Desi Arnaz.
- He 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).
- Attended college with Oliver Platt; attended acting school with Sharon Stone.
- He is close friends with actor Matthew Perry.
- Has a son named Hal Azaria (b. June 6, 2009) with girlfriend Katie Wright.
- Was a camper at the real life Camp Towanda, where the movie Wet Hot American Summer (2001) was filmed.
- Paid 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]
References & Fact Checks β
- 1/ Filename: hank-azaria-25729757142-cropped-771Cqfoa.jpg
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- Checked: β Yes (2023-07-02 04:01:23)
- Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hank_Azaria_(25729757142)_(cropped).jpg
- Original Source:
Hank Azaria - Author: Greg2600
- Licence: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.
- Date taken: 5 March 2016, 17:06
- 2/ Filename: azariaspamalot-38237412.jpg
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- Checked: β Yes (2023-07-02 04:01:24)
- Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Azariaspamalot.jpg
- Original Source:
Hank Azaria was a knight - Author: Roxanne
- Licence: Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
- Date taken: 23 December 2005, 16:00