Drake Bell Movies
A performer who carries equal weight in the twin arenas of pop recording and film and television acting,
Drake Bell first staked out a career as an actor, signing for his premiere small-screen commercial at age five, in the early '90s.
Bell commenced A-list film roles by 1996, when he made a memorable impression as a sports figure's son who bitterly curses agent
Tom Cruise in
Cameron Crowe's drama
Jerry Maguire. Following small guest turns on such blockbuster series as
The Drew Carey Show (1997) and
Seinfeld (1998),
Bell joined the cast of the Nickelodeon variety series
The Amanda Show (1999-2002), as a regular member of the program's resident sketch comedy ensemble. In 2002, the show took its final bow, but
Bell and co-star
Josh Peck received their own spin-off sitcom, also on Nickelodeon:
Drake & Josh (2004).
Meanwhile,
Bell began to pursue musical interests, and established himself as a pop-rock star, thanks in no small part to the tutelage of
the Who's
Roger Daltrey, whom he met on the set of the 2001 telemovie
Chasing Destiny, and who reportedly gave
Drake his first music lessons. As a performer,
Drake bore self-professed (and unmissable) stylistic ties to
the Beatles, as well as echoes of
the Beach Boys and
Elvis Presley.
Bell's recording career in fact neatly dovetailed with the debut of
Drake & Josh on two levels: he both recorded the theme song and played a slightly exaggerated version of his guitarist self on the program. The up-and-comer self-produced his first album, Telegraph, in 2005, and its success prompted Universal Records to sign him for a sophomore release, the 2006 It's Only Time.
Alongside these efforts,
Bell's acting efforts continued unabated, and he geared up for big-screen leads in the 2008 comedies
College and
Superhero -- the latter an
Airplane!-style farce skewering the clichés of superhero movies. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi