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Garry Marshall
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Garry Kent Marshall (born November 13, 1934) is an American actor/director/writer/producer.
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Early life
- 1.2 Career
- 2 Footnotes
- 3 External links
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Biography
Early life
Marshall was born in New York City to Anthony Wallace Marshall, a director of industrial films and later a producer, and Marjorie Irene Ward, a tap dance teacher who ran a tap dance school.[1] He is the brother of actress/director Penny Marshall and Ronny Hallin, a TV producer. His father was of Italian descent, his family having come from Abruzzo,[2] and his mother was of English and Scottish descent;[3][4] his father changed his last name from "Marsciarelli" to "Marshall" before Garry was born.[5] Marshall was baptized Presbyterian and also raised in the Lutheran religion for a time.[6] He attended Northwestern University and is a member of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity, where he wrote a sports column for the college newspaper.
Career
Marshall began his career as a joke writer for such
comedians as
Joey Bishop and
Phil Foster, and then became a writer for the
Tonight Show with
Jack Paar. In
1961 he moved to
Hollywood, where he teamed up with
Jerry Belson as a writer for
television. The pair worked on
The Dick Van Dyke Show,
The Danny Thomas Show, and
The Lucy Show. They then adapted
Neil Simon's play
The Odd Couple for television. On his own, Marshall created
Happy Days,
Laverne and Shirley (starring his sister Penny), and
Mork & Mindy. He was also a co-creator of the short-lived sitcom
Makin' It.
[7]
In 1984, Marshall had a movie hit as the writer of The Flamingo Kid. He went on to direct Nothing in Common, Overboard, Beaches, Pretty Woman, Frankie and Johnny, Exit to Eden, The Princess Diaries and The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement, Raising Helen and most recently Georgia Rule.
Marshall is also a comic actor who often plays wisecracking guys who tell it like it is[citation needed], and has appeared in the television series Murphy Brown and in such movies as Goldfinger (in an uncredited role), Grand Theft Auto, Hocus Pocus, Lost in America, Jumpin' Jack Flash, Runaway Bride, Orange County, and A League of Their Own, directed by his sister. His most recent acting gig was as the father of the title character in Chicken Little. He also acts in stage productions.
Marshall has a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame. His son,
Scott Marshall, is also a director.
Footnotes