Dan Lauria Movies
Best known as Jack Arnold, the husband and father with one of the world's softest hearts, on the period comedy drama
The Wonder Years (1988-1993), burly actor
Dan Lauria's accomplishments as an actor far outstripped that single characterization.
Lauria sustained an impressive and versatile career that encompassed soap operas, situation comedies, long-form features and miniseries, and theatrical work, to name only a few arenas. As a young man, the Brooklyn-born
Lauria attended Southern Connecticut State University, where he played collegiate football, then enlisted in the Marines. He received formal dramatic training under coaches Constance Welch (at Yale) and
Davey Marlin-Jones (at the Washington Theatre Club) -- both of whom tutored him with an approach resolutely opposed to that of the classic "Method."
Lauria then debuted onscreen in the early '80s largely with telemovies, such as the 1983
Without a Trace and the 1985
Brass, and with occasional appearances on sitcoms such as
Growing Pains.
The Wonder Years, of course, represented one of
Lauria's most significant breaks, and he later reflected that it would remain his chief legacy as an actor.
After
Years wrapped in 1993,
Lauria continued his small-screen work. He appeared on such programs as
ER,
Law & Order,
Smallville, and
Boy Meets World; played legendary network head
Fred Silverman in
Behind the Camera: The Unauthorized Story of Charlie's Angels; and played Crawford in the
Martin Lawrence comedy vehicle
Big Momma's House 2 (2006). He also maintained a busy theatrical schedule, with a particularly strong presence at L.A.'s Coronet Theater. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide