Robin Williams

American comedian and actor
Also known as: Robin McLaurin Williams
Quick Facts
In full:
Robin McLaurin Williams
Born:
July 21, 1951, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Died:
August 11, 2014, Tiburon, California (aged 63)
Awards And Honors:
Grammy Award (2002)
Academy Award (1998)
Grammy Award (1988)
Grammy Award (1987)
Grammy Award (1979)
Academy Award (1998): Actor in a Supporting Role
Cecil B. DeMille Award (2005)
Emmy Award (1988): Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program
Emmy Award (1987): Outstanding Individual Performance in a Variety or Music Program
Golden Globe Award (1994): Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy
Golden Globe Award (1993): Special Achievement Award
Golden Globe Award (1992): Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy
Golden Globe Award (1988): Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy
Golden Globe Award (1979): Best Actor in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy
Grammy Award (2003): Best Spoken Comedy Album
Grammy Award (1989): Best Recording for Children
Grammy Award (1989): Best Comedy Recording
Grammy Award (1988): Best Comedy Recording
Grammy Award (1980): Best Comedy Recording
Married To:
Marsha Garces Williams (1989–2010)
Valerie Velardi (1978–1988)
Susan Schneider (married 2011)
Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
"The World According to Garp" (1982)
"Being Human" (1994)
"Shrink" (2009)
"FernGully: The Last Rainforest" (1992)
"Death to Smoochy" (2002)
"Homicide: Life on the Street" (1994)
"Flubber" (1997)
"The Richard Pryor Show" (1977)
"SpongeBob SquarePants" (2009)
"The Face of Love" (2013)
"L.A. Doctors" (1999)
"The Big White" (2005)
"Louie" (2012)
"The Birdcage" (1996)
"Jakob the Liar" (1999)
"Good Morning, Vietnam" (1987)
"Old Dogs" (2009)
"The Survivors" (1983)
"Happy Feet" (2006)
"Robots" (2005)
"Faerie Tale Theatre" (1982)
"SCTV Network 90" (1982)
"Night at the Museum" (2006)
"Wilfred" (2012)
"What Dreams May Come" (1998)
"The Larry Sanders Show" (1992–1994)
"Life with Bonnie" (2003)
"Mork & Mindy" (1978–1982)
"Pryor's Place" (1984)
"Out of the Blue" (1979)
"License to Wed" (2007)
"One Saturday Morning" (1998)
"Happy Days" (1978–1979)
"Club Paradise" (1986)
"Jumanji" (1995)
"One Hour Photo" (2002)
"Absolutely Anything" (2015)
"The Night Listener" (2006)
"Freedom: A History of US" (2003)
"Patch Adams" (1998)
"A Merry Friggin' Christmas" (2014)
"Cadillac Man" (1990)
"Can I Do It 'Till I Need Glasses?" (1977)
"The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" (1988)
"RV" (2006)
"Nine Months" (1995)
"Jack" (1996)
"The Angriest Man in Brooklyn" (2014)
"Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb" (2014)
"Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian" (2009)
"Awakenings" (1990)
"Bicentennial Man" (1999)
"World's Greatest Dad" (2009)
"Mork & Mindy/Laverne & Shirley/Fonz Hour" (1982)
"August Rush" (2007)
"Happy Feet Two" (2011)
"American Idol: The Search for a Superstar" (2008)
"Man of the Year" (2006)
"The Fisher King" (1991)
"Seize the Day" (1986)
"Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" (2008)
"Eight Is Enough" (1977)
"Laugh-In" (1977–1978)
"The Crazy Ones" (2013–2014)
"America 2-Night" (1978)
"Dead Again" (1991)
"Hook" (1991)
"The Final Cut" (2004)
"Boulevard" (2014)
"Toys" (1992)
"Popeye" (1980)
"Shakes the Clown" (1991)
"Deconstructing Harry" (1997)
"The Big Wedding" (2013)
"Insomnia" (2002)
"Moscow on the Hudson" (1984)
"House of D" (2004)
"Mrs. Doubtfire" (1993)
"Aladdin" (1992)
"The Best of Times" (1986)
"Fathers' Day" (1997)
"A.I. Artificial Intelligence" (2001)
"Dead Poets Society" (1989)
"Good Will Hunting" (1997)
"Hamlet" (1996)
"The Butler" (2013)
Movies/Tv Shows (Directed):
"Mork & Mindy" (1982)
Movies/Tv Shows (Writing/Creator):
"An Evening at the Improv" (1982)

Robin Williams (born July 21, 1951, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.—died August 11, 2014, Tiburon, California) was an American comedian and actor known for his manic stand-up routines and his diverse film performances. He won an Academy Award for his role in Good Will Hunting (1997).

Williams’s father, Robert, was an executive for the Ford Motor Company, and his mother was a former fashion model. He early learned to use humour to entertain classmates and was a fan of comedian Jonathan Winters. When he was 16, his father retired, and the family moved to the San Francisco area. Williams studied political science at Claremont Men’s College (now Claremont McKenna College), where he began taking courses in improvisation. He then attended the College of Marin to study acting but later received a scholarship to study at the Juilliard School in New York City. Williams eventually moved back to California, where he began appearing in comedy clubs in the early 1970s.

By the mid-1970s Williams was guest starring on several television shows, including The Richard Pryor Show and Laugh-In. After guest appearances as the alien Mork on Happy Days, Williams was given his own show, Mork & Mindy (1978–82). The series offered Williams the opportunity to transfer the enthusiasm of his stand-up performances to the small screen and provided an outlet for his prolific improvisational talents. Mork & Mindy proved an immense success and was instrumental in launching Williams’s film career.

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Williams’s early movie appearances included leads in Popeye (1980) and The World According to Garp (1982), but his first major role came with Good Morning, Vietnam (1987), in which he portrayed the irreverent military disc jockey Adrian Cronauer. The role earned Williams his first Academy Award nomination. His second came soon after for his performance as an inspirational English teacher at a preparatory school in Dead Poets Society (1989). In the early 1990s he lent his talents to a number of successful family-oriented films, including Mrs. Doubtfire (1993), in which he played a divorced man who impersonates a female nanny in order to be close to his children, and the animated feature Aladdin (1992), in which he voiced a frenetic genie.

While undoubtedly a successful comedic actor, Williams was equally adept at more-sober roles. He played a distressed former professor in The Fisher King (1991) and a psychiatrist who mentors a troubled but mathematically gifted young man (played by Matt Damon) in Good Will Hunting (1997). Both films earned Williams Academy Award nominations, and for Good Will Hunting he finally received an Oscar.

As his career progressed, Williams continued to take both comedic and serious roles. He starred as a doctor who attempts to heal his patients with laughter in Patch Adams (1998) and portrayed a psychotic photo-lab technician who stalks a suburban family in One Hour Photo (2002). A 2002 stand-up performance led to the hugely successful Robin Williams: Live on Broadway (2002), which was released as both an album and a video. He later portrayed Teddy Roosevelt in the comedy Night at the Museum (2006) and two sequels (2009, 2014). He provided voices for the animated films Happy Feet (2006) and Happy Feet Two (2011). Williams was sidelined with heart problems in early 2009, but he returned to work shortly thereafter, promoting his films and resuming his Weapons of Self-Destruction comedy tour. Later that year he starred in the family comedy Old Dogs.

In 2011 Williams—who had appeared in a 1988 Off-Broadway production of Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot—made his Broadway acting debut in Bengal Tiger at the Baghdad Zoo, a surreal comic drama set during the Iraq War. In 2013 he returned to movies, portraying a priest in the star-studded farce The Big Wedding and U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower in Lee Daniels’ The Butler. The TV series The Crazy Ones, in which he played the head of an ad agency, premiered later that year; it was canceled in 2014. In the comedy The Angriest Man in Brooklyn (2014), Williams portrayed a man who attempts to reconcile with friends and family following a terminal diagnosis. Boulevard (2014), in which he played a closeted gay man who befriends a male prostitute, was released after his death.

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Williams was active with a number of charities, including Comic Relief and the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation, an organization founded by the late Superman star that is dedicated to curing spinal cord injury. Through his work with the United Service Organizations, Inc. (USO), he was also a frequent performer for American troops stationed abroad. In 2014 Williams died by suicide.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.

stand-up comedy, comedy that generally is delivered by a solo performer speaking directly to the audience in some semblance of a spontaneous manner.

Origins

Stand-up, at least in the form it is known today, is a fairly recent entertainment phenomenon. In the United States, where it developed first and reached its greatest popularity, it had its origins in the comic lecturers, such as Mark Twain, who toured the country in the 19th century. It began to emerge as populist entertainment in vaudeville in the early decades of the 20th century. While comedy was a staple of every vaudeville bill, it most often took the form of packaged routines delivered by comedy teams (who spoke to each other, not to the audience). But a few performers, such as Frank Fay, became known for their facility at off-the-cuff patter while serving as emcees in vaudeville houses such as the famed Palace Theatre in New York City. This solo style was honed further in the resorts of the Catskill Mountains region of New York in the 1930s and ’40s. The predominantly Jewish comedians of the so-called Borscht Belt developed a brash gag-filled monologue style that played on familiar comic tropes—the bossy mother-in-law, the henpecked husband—exemplified by Henny Youngman’s famous line “Take my wife—please.”

Yet the comedian who probably did the most to make stand-up comedy a staple of American popular entertainment was Bob Hope, a British-born former vaudeville song-and-dance man. Hope, an admirer of Fay, developed an engaging rapid-fire style as an vaudeville emcee and, beginning in 1938, as host of his own top-rated radio program. Forced to come up with fresh material for his weekly radio monologues—and for the military audiences that he frequently traveled to entertain—Hope hired a team of writers who came up with jokes that played off the day’s news, local gossip in the towns and military bases he visited, and the offstage doings of Hope and his show business friends. This was a significant departure from the vaudeville and Borscht Belt comics, whose gags were generic, were largely interchangeable, and could be repeated almost endlessly.

The new wave

Hope and the Borscht Belt comics established the classic stand-up style that dominated popular entertainment well into the television era, when it became a staple of television variety programs such as The Ed Sullivan Show. But in the 1950s a new wave of stand-up comics emerged who rejected the detached mechanical style of the old joke tellers. The groundbreaker was Mort Sahl, who appeared onstage sitting on a stool with a rolled-up newspaper in his hand and talked in normal conversational tones—delivering not gag lines but caustic commentary on the political leaders, popular culture, and pillars of respectability of American society during the conservative 1950s. (“Are there any groups here I haven’t offended?” he would typically crack.) Sahl’s brainy politically dissenting comedy became a hit in the hip night spots of the Beat era and inspired a spate of new comedians who showed that stand-up could be smart, personal, and socially engaged.

Bob Newhart, Shelley Berman, and the comedy team of Mike Nichols and Elaine May created extended improv-style bits—one-sided phone conversations, people talking to their psychiatrists—that satirized various aspects of an uptight conformist era. Jonathan Winters blew apart the set-up/punch-line structure of traditional stand-up, pummeling the audience with a wild stream-of-consciousness barrage of characters, jokes, fragmented scenes, and physical bits. African American comedians such as Dick Gregory used stand-up as a vehicle for acerbic commentary on the racial tensions of the period of the civil rights movement, while Woody Allen turned himself into the butt of his own comic confessionals: the neurotic, sexually insecure New York Jewish nebbish.

The most influential comedian of this group, however, was Lenny Bruce, who spent much of his early career entertaining in strip clubs and other small-time venues and developed a cult following as the most audacious provocateur of stand-up’s new wave. Bruce attacked America’s most sacred cows—from organized religion to moralistic attitudes toward sex and drugs—and exposed himself more nakedly than any comedian had before. His renegade, free-form, often X-rated comedy made him a pariah for most of mainstream show business (Bruce was almost totally shunned by television); after numerous arrests for his performing allegedly obscene material in nightclubs, it also thrust him into a series of legal battles that virtually destroyed his career. Bruce’s death from a drug overdose in 1966 solidified his legend and made him an inspiration for a new generation just coming of age in the turbulent late 1960s.