Michael Ian Black

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Michael Ian Black

Michael Ian Black
Background information
Date of birth: August 12, 1971 (1971-08-12) (age 36)
Birth location: Chicago, Illinois, United States
Genre(s): Comedy
Spouse(s): Martha Hagen

Michael Ian Black (born Michael Schwartz on August 12, 1971) is an American comedian, actor and writer.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Black was born in Chicago, Illinois to Jill and Robert Schwartz, and grew up in Hillsborough Township, New Jersey[1], where he attended Hillsborough High School. His parents divorced when he was three years old. When he was seven, his father died during neurological surgery following a mysterious assault. Black is Jewish.[2]

As a teenager, Schwartz attended Stagedoor Manor Performing Arts Training Center in New York.

[edit] Career

Black is known for appearing on VH1's I Love the... series, his Stella comedy troupe, and a variety of other TV series and films. He was also the voice actor behind the Pets.com sock puppet, is the main subject in the current Sierra Mist commercials, hosted the first season of NBC's hidden-camera show Spy TV, and had a supporting role on the NBC dramedy Ed.

He began his career as a member of the comedy group The State and was featured on the television show by the same name on MTV. He continued working with members of that group on the show Viva Variety in the role of "Johnny Bluejeans", and in the film Wet Hot American Summer. His dry, sarcastically irreverent commentary on pop culture artifacts on VH1's "I Love the 70s/80s/90s" series has added to his and the shows' popularity. Black has stated several times on the show that he feels as if he is "doomed to an eternity of doing the 'I Love the...' series". He also makes fun of himself for being a Jewish-American and sarcastically enforcing the Jewish stereotypes.

Black performing stand-up comedy.
Black performing stand-up comedy.

In the latter part of 2004, he acted as guest-host of CBS's The Late Late Show while auditioning for the permanent hosting role. He was a finalist for the position, although the job eventually went to Craig Ferguson. He is also an occasional contributor to the online edition of McSweeney's, where he writes a column entitled "Michael Ian Black Is a Very Famous Celebrity".

Black, along with fellow State-rs Michael Showalter and David Wain, co-starred in and co-wrote the Comedy Central series Stella, a television adaptation of their popular stage show. The ten-episode first season debuted in June 2005 and was not renewed for a second season.

Black wrote the screenplays for two feature film comedies —Wedding Daze (aka The Pleasure of Your Company and The Next Girl I See, 2006) and Run, Fat Boy, Run (2007, co-written with leading actor Simon Pegg).[3] Black also directed Wedding Daze which stars Jason Biggs, Joe Pantoliano, and Isla Fisher.[4] Black also has some minor screen credits. He appeared twice on the Adult Swim show, Tom Goes to the Mayor, and was a guest voice on Seth Green's stop-motion show Robot Chicken. He appeared on the Comedy Central shows Crank Yankers and Reno 911!. He had a cameo in David Wain's 2007 film, The Ten as a prison guard. In September of 2007, he released his first stand-up comedy album, I Am a Wonderful Man. Black also maintains a humorous blog at michaelianblack.typepad.com. In addition, Black has written a book entitled My Custom Van: And 50 Other Mind-Blowing Essays that Will Blow Your Mind All Over Your Face which is due to be released July 15, 2008. Most recently he starred on the TV series Reaper (2008) as a gay demon trying to destroy the devil through acts of kindness.[5]

Preceded by
None
Host of Spy TV
2001
Succeeded by
Ali Landry

[edit] Personal life

Black married Martha Hagen on October 17, 1998[6], and they have two children. He resides in Redding, Connecticut. He is also very closely related to Smashing Pumpkins singer Billy Corgan.

[edit] Poker

Black has been an amateur poker enthusiast for several years, and is a regular player or "famous face" [7] on the online poker website, Hollywood Poker, which is run in conjunction with Ongame Network. He has appeared on a number of episodes of Celebrity Poker Showdown as a celebrity competitor — he has appeared in five episodes, more than any other player. He first appeared in the third game of the first season (2003), playing to earn money for the Endeavor House charity. He lost to Nicole Sullivan, who would go on to win the entire tournament. His performance improved in the third game of the second season (2004), where he played for the charity "MAZON: A Jewish Response to Hunger" and won a game with Star Jones, Norm Macdonald, Adam Rodriguez and Jeremy Sisto, earning the silver chip after a lengthy "see-saw" battle with MacDonald and proceeding to the final table. However, he was knocked out early in the finals.

After being absent for several years, Black returned to the show in 2006, appearing in the second episode of the eighth season and playing for MAZON again. There, Black defeated Greg Behrendt, Jorge Garcia, Kim Coles, and Andrea Martin, and made Celebrity Poker Showdown history by knocking out three players (Martin, Coles and Garcia) in three consecutive hands. In the final table, he came in third (receiving $100,000 for his charity), with Jason Alexander winning the tournament (receiving $500,000 for his). His loss was remarkable in that he for a time held nearly 80% of all the chips on the table while playing against Alexander and Robin Tunney. However, he lost several hands in a row, mostly to Tunney, as he received a number of fairly good hands like Ace-4 only to be raised out of the pot by superior hands like Ace-7. Black's implosion was the biggest fall from the top in the history of the show.

Black has made a mark in his appearances both for his jokes and antics and for his skilled, aggressive-but-controlled poker play. Black has been repeatedly praised by Dave Foley, host of Celebrity Poker Showdown, and by the two poker experts who have commented on the show, Phil Gordon and Phil Hellmuth. Gordon has listed Black among eight of the best celebrities he's ever seen on the show,[8] and Hellmuth considered him one of the best players in the eighth tournament[9] and a favorite to win after Jennifer Tilly's elimination. He and Foley argued over who would get to pick him to win in his two appearances.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Meoli, Daria. "That’s Entertainment", New Jersey Monthly, October 2005. Accessed December 26, 2007. "Add Stella, the strange Comedy Network brainchild of Princeton native Michael Showalter and Hillsborough native Michael Ian Black—he played wacky bowling-alley employee Phil in Ed, filmed all over the state—and Ohioan David Wain."
  2. ^ Rabin, Nathan (2003-07-30). Stella. The Onion A.V. Club. Retrieved on 2006-12-13.
  3. ^ BBC Movies Review of Run, Fatboy, Run[1]. Retrieved on September 14, 2007.
  4. ^ The Internet ,Movie Database, The Pleasure of Your Company[2] retrieved on September 14, 2007
  5. ^ Happy Reaper: Michael Ian Black
  6. ^ WEDDINGS; Martha Hagen, Michael Black
  7. ^ Michael Ian Black Biography. Retrieved on July 3, 2007.
  8. ^ HoboTrashcan - Phil Gordon interview
  9. ^ Phil Hellmuth - Businessman, Host, and Poker Legend | Poker News

[edit] External links

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