Danny Devito


Danny Devito

Danny Devito (Max Medici) is one of the entertainment industry's most versatile players, excelling as actor, producer and director.

His award-winning performance as Louie De Palma on the television show "Taxi" was what propelled DeVito to national prominence. He won both an Emmy® and a Golden Globe®. In a 1999 readers' poll conducted by TV Guide, DeVito's Louie De Palma was voted number one among "TV's Fifty Greatest Characters Ever."

On television, he was recently seen in a guest role in the Netflix series "The Kominsky Method." In 2018, he returned as Frank Reynolds in FXX's acclaimed cult comedy "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia," for its 13th season. It will film season 14 this year.

In 2016, DeVito was seen in Sony Classics' "The Comedian" with Robert De Niro and Leslie Mann, directed by Taylor Hackford. DeVito directed, starred in and co-produced the short film "Curmudgeons," which premiered at the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival, and was later seen at the 2016 Seattle International Film Festival and 2016 London Film Festival. The same year, DeVito co-starred in Todd Solondz's dark comedy "Wiener-Dog."

In 2018, DeVito was heard voicing Dorgle in Warner Bros.' animated "Smallfoot." Currently, he is recording a character for Disney's "The One and Only Ivan." In 2012, DeVito voiced the Lorax in Universal Pictures' animated feature "The Lorax," based on the book of the same name by Dr. Seuss. His voice was also heard in the German, Russian, Spanish and Italian versions of the film.

In 2012, DeVito and Richard Griffiths received rave reviews in the London stage revival of Neil Simon's comedy "The Sunshine Boys." The following year, DeVito reprised his critically acclaimed role together with former "Taxi" co-star Judd Hirsch in Los Angeles.

DeVito made his Broadway debut in 2017 in Arthur Miller's "The Price" as Gregory Solomon, earning him his first Tony Award® nomination. He won a Drama Desk Award, Outer Critics Circle Award and Broadway.com Audience Choice Award for the role.

In 2015, DeVito was executive producer on the biographical documentary "Harold and Lillian: A Hollywood Love Story." In 2014, he co-produced Universal Pictures' crime drama "A Walk Among the Tombstones" and starred in "All the Wilderness." In 2012, DeVito starred in Sebastian Gutierrez's black-and-white crime drama, "Hotel Noir."

Throughout his career, DeVito has directed more than 25 projects, including "Matilda," "Death to Smoochy," "The War of the Roses," "Hoffa," "Throw Momma from the Train," "The Ratings Game" and numerous short films, TV movies and episodes of television, including "Taxi."

DeVito runs TheBloodFactory.com, an online collaboration with screenwriter John Albo of horror shorts he affectionately refers to as "splatter cuts." He is also the principal of Jersey Films' 2nd Avenue, a successor company of Jersey Films. Jersey Films has produced more than 20 motion pictures, including "Freedom Writers," "Be Cool," "Garden State," "Along Came Polly," "Man on the Moon," "Pulp Fiction," "Out of Sight," "Get Shorty," "Hoffa," "Matilda," "Living Out Loud" and "Erin Brockovich," which was nominated for an Academy Award®.

Apart from his work with Jersey Films, DeVito has starred in such films as "The War of the Roses," "Junior," "Batman Returns," "Twins," "Romancing the Stone," "Jewel of the Nile," "Ruthless People," "Throw Momma from the Train," "Tin Men," "Anything Else," "Big Fish," "Renaissance Man," "The Big Kahuna" and "Heist." He also starred in "The Good Night," "Deck the Halls," "Relative Strangers," "The Oh in Ohio," "Be Cool," "Nobel Son" and "Even Money."

DeVito attended Our Lady of Mt. Carmel grammar school and Oratory Prep School in Summit, N.J., but appeared in only one school play, as St. Francis of Assisi. After graduation, he pursued several odd jobs, always with the idea of acting in the back of his mind. He finally entered the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York. "They had fencing and a speech class," he said mockingly, "so you don't talk funny." Unable to get work, DeVito bought a round-trip ticket and headed to Hollywood. After years of unemployment, he returned to New York. He called an old friend and former American Academy professor who, coincidentally, had been seeking him out for a starring role in one of three one-act plays presented together under the title of "The Man with the Flower in His Mouth." Soon DeVito was into big money ($60 a week), and other stage performances followed. Among his credits were "Down the Morning Line," "The Line of Least Existence," "The Shrinking Bride" and "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest."

In 1975, under a grant from the American Film Institute, DeVito and his then-future-wife, actress Rhea Perlman, wrote and produced "Minestrone," which has been shown twice at the Cannes Film Festival and has been translated into five languages. Later they wrote and produced a 16-millimeter black-and-white short subject, "The Sound Sleeper," which won first prize at the Brooklyn Arts and Cultural Association competition.

In 2018, the mayor of Asbury Park, N.J."the town in which DeVito was raised"declared November 17 (DeVito's birthday) as Danny DeVito Day in the city of Asbury Park, in perpetuity.

DeVito carries his success well. Never forgetting that there were more difficult times, he maintains a healthy sense of perspective. As "Taxi" character Louie De Palma would say, "If you don't do good today, you'll be eatin' dirt tomorrow."

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