Bio

Seth Green was just 7 years old when he began appearing in commercials. At 10 he graduated to film and TV, and quickly racked up an impressive array of credits, including a plum part as Woody Allen's adolescent alter ego in the auteur's 1987 film Radio Days. Although Green was capable of tackling dramatic roles (It and a slew of other TV-movies), he proved to be particularly adept at comedy and made frequent guest spots on sitcoms. But 1997 was his breakthrough year---he was hilarious in a small part as Dr. Evil's surly son in Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery and landed a recurring role as a lovesick werewolf on the series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Both gigs upped his profile, and soon he was stealing scenes in a string of supporting turns: a drugged-out club kid in Party Monster, a goofy tech geek in The Italian Job and a canoer in over his head in Without a Paddle. He also lent his distinctive timbre to a number of animated series, including Family Guy and Robot Chicken, which he also cocreated, cowrote, directed and produced. In 2009, he proved his fondness for professional wresting by becoming an unlikely host for an episode of WWE Raw and even competed in a six-man tag team match for the show. He also turned his not-so-secret passion for the Star Wars universe into a development deal with Lucasfilm Animation to create a sitcom based on the franchise. In his spare time, Green is an avid movie watcher and lives in Los Angeles.
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Seth Green
February 8, 1974 (age 50)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

Bio

Seth Green was just 7 years old when he began appearing in commercials. At 10 he graduated to film and TV, and quickly racked up an impressive array of credits, including a plum part as Woody Allen's adolescent alter ego in the auteur's 1987 film Radio Days. Although Green was capable of tackling dramatic roles (It and a slew of other TV-movies), he proved to be particularly adept at comedy and made frequent guest spots on sitcoms. But 1997 was his breakthrough year---he was hilarious in a small part as Dr. Evil's surly son in Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery and landed a recurring role as a lovesick werewolf on the series Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Both gigs upped his profile, and soon he was stealing scenes in a string of supporting turns: a drugged-out club kid in Party Monster, a goofy tech geek in The Italian Job and a canoer in over his head in Without a Paddle. He also lent his distinctive timbre to a number of animated series, including Family Guy and Robot Chicken, which he also cocreated, cowrote, directed and produced. In 2009, he proved his fondness for professional wresting by becoming an unlikely host for an episode of WWE Raw and even competed in a six-man tag team match for the show. He also turned his not-so-secret passion for the Star Wars universe into a development deal with Lucasfilm Animation to create a sitcom based on the franchise. In his spare time, Green is an avid movie watcher and lives in Los Angeles.
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