Jim Gaffigan Movies
Born July 7th, 1966, Indiana native and standup comic
Jim Gaffigan cultivated a reputation during the late '90s and early 2000s as a low-key, witty, and inventive comic with mildly self-deprecative routines. He then branched out into television and film roles, finding mixed (if not unqualified) success in those venues. Launched during the early '90s,
Gaffigan's original standup act sparked the attention of such after-hours talk programs as
Late Night with David Letterman (on CBS) and
Late Night with Conan O'Brien (on NBC). Both shows booked the comic for repeated spots to tremendous audience enthusiasm.
Letterman was reportedly so wowed by
Gaffigan's material, delivery, and presence, in fact, that he commissioned his company, Worldwide Pants Incorporated, to produce a sitcom for
Gaffigan,
Welcome to New York. The series cast
Gaffigan as a character named Jim Gaffigan, a former weatherman from Indiana who moves to New York and takes a job on a
Good Morning America-like local talk show called "AM New York."
Christine Baranski co-starred as
Gaffigan's caustic producer, Marsha Bickner,
Roseanne's
Sara Gilbert as Marsha's assistant, Amy, and
Rocky Carroll as Adrian Spencer, the program's smarmy, artificial host. Many of the initial gags and bits revolved around the "fish out of water" concept of a Hoosier thrust into the Big Apple, and Gaffigan's co-workers' cutting objections to his presence in the newsroom. Unfortunately,
Welcome to New York folded a few months in, thanks to markedly poor ratings and viewership. The comic continued his television work unabated, however, with a recurring role on the equally short-lived
Ellen DeGeneres starrer
The Ellen Show.
Beginning in 1999,
Gaffigan began signing for supporting roles, typically comic turns, in feature films, starting with
David O. Russell's
Three Kings. He played Larry Johnson, the highway pullover dumbfounded by a "meow"-spouting cop, in
Broken Lizard's
Super Troopers (2001), then a hotel manager in the eccentric dramedy
Igby Goes Down (2002).
Gaffigan also landed a bit part as Chris Grandy in
Gary Winick's
Big update
13 Going on 30 (2004).
In mid-2005,
Gaffigan issued his premier comedy video,
Jim Gaffigan: Beyond the Pale -- an hour-long special in which the comic delivers a number of riffs on the subjects of food, holidays, gift giving, and religion. (The title refers to the fair-haired
Gaffigan's ghostly white complexion, one of the recurring subjects of his shtick.)
Gaffigan then essayed a supporting role in
Hilary Brougher's 2006 psychodrama
Stephanie Daley, starring
Tilda Swinton,
Amber Tamblyn and
Timothy Hutton. 2008 found the actor co-starring alongside Justin Timberlake and Verne Troyer in the Love Guru, which won the dubious honor of three Raspberry Awards. Gaffigan would have better luck in 2009, when he joined the cast of Sam Mendes’ comedy Away We Go, and again in 2010 for the films Going the Distance and It’s Kind of a Funny Story. He also worked in the television sitcom My Boys from 2006-2009. ‘ ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi