Bio

A well-respected acting teacher who initially made his mark in regional theater, this balding everyman came to prominence on television playing pompous, pent-up and occasionally goofy characters. A recurring role on Three's Company led to a series-regular gig on the sitcom's short-lived spin-off, The Ropers, as the title characters' snotty neighbor. Once that series folded, the producers of Three's Company invited Tambor back for a variety of guest spots. From the 1980s on, this consummate character actor (and Dr. Phil doppelgänger) never lacked for small-screen work, alternating between dramas and comedies, but making his biggest impression in the latter. After a series of flop sitcoms (9 to 5, Mr. Sunshine, Max Headroom), Tambor finally struck comedic gold in 1992, when he signed on as Garry Shandling's hilariously bombastic sidekick on the late-night talk-show spoof The Larry Sanders Show. During that series' six seasons, Tambor racked up four Emmy nods and parlayed his newfound fame into small but memorable feature-film roles (Girl, Interrupted, Malibu's Most Wanted) that capitalized on his stock-in-trade. In 2003, he won a plum dual role on the cult hit Arrested Development. Although initially only slated to appear in the pilot, Tambor so impressed creator Mitch Hurwitz (who had previously worked with the actor on the short-lived sitcom Everything's Relative) that he was promoted to series regular, essaying an imprisoned millionaire and his hippie twin brother, a pair of tour de force turns that earned him two more Emmy nominations. That series folded in the spring of 2006, but Tambor was back on the tube by fall in the retirement-aged buddy comedy Twenty Good Years; reviews and ratings were disappointing, and the series lasted just over half a season. Undeterred, Tambor took another shot at sitcom success in 2008 with Welcome to the Captain. But when CBS pulled the plug on Captain after just a handful of episodes, the actor turned back to the big screen, putting in appearances in comedies like The Hangover and The Invention of Lying, and lending his voice to the animated hit Monsters vs. Aliens.
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Jeffrey Tambor
July 8, 1944 (age 80)
San Francisco, California, USA

Bio

A well-respected acting teacher who initially made his mark in regional theater, this balding everyman came to prominence on television playing pompous, pent-up and occasionally goofy characters. A recurring role on Three's Company led to a series-regular gig on the sitcom's short-lived spin-off, The Ropers, as the title characters' snotty neighbor. Once that series folded, the producers of Three's Company invited Tambor back for a variety of guest spots. From the 1980s on, this consummate character actor (and Dr. Phil doppelgänger) never lacked for small-screen work, alternating between dramas and comedies, but making his biggest impression in the latter. After a series of flop sitcoms (9 to 5, Mr. Sunshine, Max Headroom), Tambor finally struck comedic gold in 1992, when he signed on as Garry Shandling's hilariously bombastic sidekick on the late-night talk-show spoof The Larry Sanders Show. During that series' six seasons, Tambor racked up four Emmy nods and parlayed his newfound fame into small but memorable feature-film roles (Girl, Interrupted, Malibu's Most Wanted) that capitalized on his stock-in-trade. In 2003, he won a plum dual role on the cult hit Arrested Development. Although initially only slated to appear in the pilot, Tambor so impressed creator Mitch Hurwitz (who had previously worked with the actor on the short-lived sitcom Everything's Relative) that he was promoted to series regular, essaying an imprisoned millionaire and his hippie twin brother, a pair of tour de force turns that earned him two more Emmy nominations. That series folded in the spring of 2006, but Tambor was back on the tube by fall in the retirement-aged buddy comedy Twenty Good Years; reviews and ratings were disappointing, and the series lasted just over half a season. Undeterred, Tambor took another shot at sitcom success in 2008 with Welcome to the Captain. But when CBS pulled the plug on Captain after just a handful of episodes, the actor turned back to the big screen, putting in appearances in comedies like The Hangover and The Invention of Lying, and lending his voice to the animated hit Monsters vs. Aliens.
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