Mel Brooks - Famous Voice Actor

Mel Brooks Net Worth

$100,000,000

Mel Brooks is an American comedian, producer, director, composer, and writer with a net worth of $100 million. Mel Brooks is one of the most-beloved comedic actors of the last century, famous for movies like Blazing Saddles, Spaceballs, and Robinhood: Men in Tights. He has also achieved great success as the creator of the musical adaptation of his first film, The Producers, generating over $200 million in ticket sales alone during its Broadway run from 2001 to 2007. As a member of the exclusive EGOT club, Brooks has won an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony award.

Key facts:

  • Mel Brooks is an American comedian, producer, director, composer, and writer.
  • He is known for movies like Blazing Saddles, Spaceballs, and Robinhood: Men in Tights.
  • Brooks is the creator of the musical adaptation of his first film, The Producers, which ran on Broadway from 2001 to 2007 and generated over $200 million in ticket sales.
  • He has won an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony award, making him part of the exclusive EGOT club.
  • Brooks wrote and directed other notable films such as History of the World: Part I, Spaceballs, and Young Frankenstein.

Basic Information About Mel Brooks

CategoryCelebrities β€Ί Comedians
ProfessionsActor, Comedian, Film director, Composer, Lyricist, Theatrical producer, Film Producer, Television producer, Screenwriter, Voice Actor
Net worth$100,000,000
Date of birth1926-06-28 (98 years old)
Place of birthBrooklyn
NationalityUnited States of America
Curiosities and TrademarksHas frequently cast himself, Gene Wilder, Harvey Korman, Rudy De Luca, Madeline Kahn, Cloris Leachman, Dom DeLuise, Ron Carey, Marty Feldman and Kenneth Mars.
Almost always uses music by John Morris
Frequently uses the line: "We have much to do and less time to do it in."
His films usually contain many Jewish references and jokes
Always features one scene in his movies in which the main character is seated and staring blankly, wondering what went wrong, while friends console him.
The main villain wears a moustache or a beard
Always features a scene where one character is explaining a plan to another, and the latter character repeats everything the former says, including something outrageous. After realizing this, the latter exclaims "what?"
The lead character in his films is always a male
[Parody] Nearly all of Brooks' films parody a genre or a single film
His films often contain references to the film's sequel, which never come to pass. Good examples of this are History of the World: Part I (1981), Spaceballs (1987) and Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993)
["Walk this way" gag] One character says "Walk this way!" (as in "Follow me!"), and another character(s) copies the way he/she is walking (History of the World: Part I (1981), Young Frankenstein (1974) and Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993)).
Frequently has a bust of his head on the poster of video/DVD cover of his movies
All of his movies feature a wacky song-and-dance number
Frequently makes fun of Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany
Visual or verbal gags where the characters break the fourth wall and reference the fact that they're in a movie.
His main characters often stop and sarcastically direct a line to the camera/audience
His films often make numerous references to previous films whether a poster or cassette or an actual line spoken
Despite being known for directing comedies, many of the films he acts as a producer on are heavy, serious dramas
References to Franz Kafka's "The Metamorphosis"
Energetic raspy voice with Brooklyn accent
Over the top acting style
Name Correction: Frequently has a character whose name is continuously mispronounced by others and a correction has to be issued.
SpouseAnne Bancroft - (5 AugustΒ 1964 - 6 JuneΒ 2005)Β (her death)Β (1 child)
26 November - Florence Baum (Β 1953 - 20 JanuaryΒ 1962)Β (divorced)Β (3 children)
GenderMale
Height5 ft 4 in (1.65 m)
Social Mediaβ†—οΈŽ Wikipedia β†—οΈŽ IMDb

What Movie Awards did Mel Brooks win?


Oscar

Golden Globe

Golder Raspberry

BAFTA

Other
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Mel Brooks awards

Award Name State Movie / Series Name Year
Stinker Award - Worst PictureWinnerSpaceballs1987
Oscar - Best Writing, Screenplay Adapted From Other MaterialNomineeYoung Frankenstein1975
Hugo - Best Dramatic PresentationWinnerYoung Frankenstein1975
Nebula Award - Best Dramatic WritingWinnerYoung Frankenstein1976
WGA Award (Screen) - Best Comedy Adapted from Another MediumNomineeYoung Frankenstein1975
WGA Award (Screen) - Best Comedy Written Directly for the ScreenWinnerBlazing Saddles1975
Oscar - Best Writing, Story and Screenplay - Written Directly for the ScreenWinnerThe Producers1969
WGA Award (Screen) - Best Written American Original ScreenplayWinnerThe Producers1969
BTVA Feature Film Voice Acting Award - Best Male Vocal Performance in a Feature Film in a Supporting RoleNomineeHotel Transylvania 22016
Gold Derby Award - Original SongNomineeThe Producers2006
Grammy - Best Song Written for Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual MediaNomineeThe Producers2007
WGA Award (Screen) - Best Comedy Written Directly for the ScreenNomineeSilent Movie1977
Grammy - Best Long Form Music VideoWinnerGreat Performances2002
Primetime Emmy - Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy SeriesWinnerMad About You1997
American Comedy Award - Funniest Male Guest Appearance in a TV SeriesWinnerMad About You2000

Mel Brooks roles

Movie / Series Role
The Little RascalsMr. Welling
SpaceballsDirector
SpaceballsWriter
SpaceballsPresident Skroob / Yogurt
The Prince of Egypt(voice) (uncredited)
Young FrankensteinDirector
Young FrankensteinWriter
Young FrankensteinWerewolf / Cat Hit by Dart / Victor Frankenstein (voice) (uncredited)
Blazing SaddlesDirector
Blazing SaddlesWriter
Blazing SaddlesGovernor Lepetomane / Indian Chief
Toy Story 4Melephant Brooks (voice)
Robin Hood: Men in TightsDirector
Robin Hood: Men in TightsWriter
Robin Hood: Men in TightsRabbi Tuckman
Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer VacationVlad (voice)
Hotel Transylvania 2Vlad (voice)
RobotsBigweld (voice)
The ProducersDirector
The ProducersWriter
The ProducersSinger in 'Springtime for Hitler' (voice) (uncredited)
Get SmartWriter
The ProducersWriter
The ProducersWriter
The ProducersWriter
The ProducersWriter
The ProducersHilda the Pigeon / Tom the Cat (voice)
BallerinaLuteau (voice)
History of the World: Part IDirector
History of the World: Part IWriter
History of the World: Part IMoses / Comicus / Torquemada / Jacques / King Louis XVI
The Muppet MovieProfessor Max Krassman
Mr. Peabody & ShermanAlbert Einstein (voice)
High AnxietyDirector
High AnxietyWriter
High AnxietyRichard H. Thorndyke
Dracula: Dead and Loving ItDirector
Dracula: Dead and Loving ItWriter
Dracula: Dead and Loving ItProfessor Van Helsing
Blazing SamuraiShogun (voice)
Il silenzio dei prosciuttiCheckout Guest (uncredited)
Silent MovieDirector
Silent MovieWriter
Silent MovieMel Funn
Look Who's Talking TooMr. Toilet Man (voice)
The SimpsonsMel Brooks 1 episode, 1995
Comedians in Cars Getting CoffeeSelf 1 episode, 2012
Dora the ExplorerMad Hatter 1 episode, 2014
Curb Your EnthusiasmMel Brooks 4 episodes, 2004
FrasierTom 1 episode, 1993

Mel Brooks's Quotes

  • Why should I indulge myself and do a David Lean-ish kind of film? I could do my little Jewish Brief Encounter (1945) and disguise it - shorten the noses. But it wouldn't be as much fun as delivering my dish of insanity.
  • I cut my finger. That's tragedy. A man walks into an open sewer and dies. That's comedy.
  • My movies rise below vulgarity.
  • Critics can't even make music by rubbing their back legs together.
  • Oh, I'm not a true genius. I'm a near genius. I would say I'm a short genius. I'd rather be tall and normal than a short genius.

Mel Brooks's photos

Interesting Facts about Mel Brooks

  1. Served as a corporal with the United States Army in North Africa during World War II, where one of his duties was defusing land mines before the infantry moved in.
  2. His stage name is an adaptation of his mother's maiden name, Brookman.
  3. His film The Producers (1967) was the inspiration for the title of the album "Achtung Baby" (1991) by the rock band U2.
  4. He produced and wrote the music, lyrics, and book for the Broadway musical "The Producers" (2001), the musical version of his earlier movie The Producers (1967). The Broadway hit musical then lead to the musical movie The Producers (2005).
  5. Brooks won an Oscar for the screenplay of The Producers (1967); three Emmys in a row (1997-1999) for his guest appearance as Uncle Phil in Mad About You (1992); three Tonys for "The Producers" - Best Musical, Original Music Score and Book (musical); and three Grammys - Best Spoken Comedy Album for "The 2000 Year Old Man in the Year 2000" (1998, with Carl Reiner) and two for "The Producers" (2001): Best Musical Show Album (as composer/lyricist) and Best Long Form Music Video (as artist).Thus he is one of only 15 "EGOT"s, meaning those who have received at least one of all of the four major entertainment awards: an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony, competitively. The other recipients are Richard Rodgers, Helen Hayes, Rita Moreno, John Gielgud, Audrey Hepburn, Marvin Hamlisch, Jonathan Tunick, Mike Nichols, Whoopi Goldberg, Scott Rudin, Robert Lopez, John Legend, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice.
  6. Son Eddie Brooks manages a band called "Early Edison".
  7. Named one of E!'s "Top 20 entertainers of 2001".
  8. Called his late wife, Anne Bancroft, his Obi-Wan Kenobi as she had encouraged him to turn his movie The Producers (1967) into a Broadway musical.
  9. Named one of People Magazine's "25 Most Intriguing People of 2001".
  10. At the opening of the Broadway version of "The Producers", he was asked by a reporter if he was nervous about the play's reception, since it cost $40 million to produce. Brooks joked, "If it flops, I'll take the other sixty million and fly to Rio." He did not have to worry, since the play was both a critical and financial success.
  11. Brooks introduced himself to Anne Bancroft in 1961 while she was making her first appearance on The Perry Como Show (1948) (she would later return to appear on that show on various occasions over several years). Brooks bribed a woman who worked on the show to tell him at which restaurant Bancroft was going to dine so he could "accidentally" bump into her again and strike up a conversation. It worked. The two fell in love and eventually married at New York City's municipal Marriage Bureau in Lower Manhattan, where a passerby served as witness.
  12. Children from his first marriage: Stefanie Brooks (born 1956), Nicky Brooks (born 1957) and Eddie Brooks (born 1959). Has one son with Anne Bancroft: Max Brooks (born 1972).
  13. In 1966, he was about to co-star in a movie called "Easy Come, Easy Go" with Jan Berry and Dean Torrence in the leading roles. What would have been his on-screen debut, was canceled due to a car wreck during shooting, in which Berry suffered a severe brain damage and paralysis. On the casting list was also British comedy star Terry-Thomas.
  14. Has performed a rap song for the soundtrack of History of the World: Part I (1981) called "It's Good to Be the King". It was a surprisingly successful hip-hop/dance hit in 1981. He followed it up with "Hitler Rap" for To Be or Not to Be (1983). The song was not as successful. But the lyric "Don't be stupid, be a smarty/Come and join the Nazi Party" was originally used in the original movie version of The Producers (1967), then later reused in Brooks' Broadway version of "The Producers".
  15. The 1944 edition of the Eastern District High School (Brooklyn, N.Y.) yearbook featured the future Mel Brooks (born Melvin Kaminsky) stating that his goal was to become President of the United States; forty-three years later, in 1987, his ambition was to be fulfilled, if only in fiction and in part -- in the movie Spaceballs (1987), he portrayed Spaceball leader "President Skroob" (an anagram of "Brooks").
  16. His favorite song is "Yankee Doodle Dandy" by George M. Cohan.
  17. Biography in: "Who's Who in Comedy", by Ronald L. Smith, pg. 63-66. New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0816023387
  18. Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945-1985." Pages 162-167. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.
  19. Is close friends with Italian television star Ezio Greggio, whose movies he inspired. Brooks is often a guest on Greggio's shows, and offered Greggio a small role in his movie Dracula: Dead and Loving It (1995), due to this friendship.
  20. In 2001, he won three Tony Awards for "The Producers": as a co-producer of the Best Musical winner; as Best Book (Musical), with collaborator Thomas Meehan; and as Best Original Musical Score, both lyrics and music.

References & Fact Checks βœ…

1/ Filename: mel-brooks-641e383r.jpg
  • Checked: βœ… Yes (2023-07-02 00:37:41)
  • Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mel_Brooks.jpg
  • Original Source: Own work
  • Author: Towpilot
  • Date taken: February 1984
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  • Checked: βœ… Yes (2023-07-02 00:37:42)
  • Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Theatre_Royal_Drury_Lane_-_The_Producers_1.jpg
  • Original Source: No machine-readable source provided. Own work assumed (based on copyright claims).
  • Author: No machine-readable author provided. Edward assumed (based on copyright claims).
  • Date taken: 19 March 2006Β (according to Exif data)
3/ Filename: mel-brooks-anne-bancroft-1991-sX4F6390.jpg
  • Checked: βœ… Yes (2023-07-02 00:37:43)
  • Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Mel_Brooks_Anne_Bancroft_1991.jpg
  • Original Source: Own work
  • Author: Georges Biard
  • Licence: Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
  • Date taken: 1991
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Mel Brooks Famous Network

Male Celebrities ♂️ With Net Worth Closest To $100,000,000

Female Celebrities ♀️ With Net Worth Closest To $100,000,000

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