Albert Brooks (born July 22, 1947, Beverly Hills, California, U.S.) is an American actor, comedian, writer, and director who was best known for his comedies.
Brooks was the son of a radio comedian and grew up in Beverly Hills, where his childhood friends included Rob Reiner, son of comedy icon Carl Reiner. He studied drama at Carnegie Tech (now Carnegie Mellon University) in Pittsburgh but dropped out to pursue a career in stand-up comedy. He was first introduced to television audiences on variety shows and late-night programs such as The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson in the early 1970s. Brooks’s distinctly off-the-wall bits were grounded in improvisation and often satirized show business—none more than “Danny and Dave,” in which Brooks presented himself as a hopelessly inept ventriloquist. His directing debut also came on the small screen. He adapted a 1971 article he wrote for Esquire magazine called “Albert Brooks’ Famous School for Comedians” as a short television film in which he starred as the proprietor of a school that taught comedic techniques such as spitting out coffee as a reaction to the unexpected. It appeared on the Public Broadcasting Service’s Great American Dream Machine in 1972. Brooks also created short films for the first season (1975–76) of the television comedy show Saturday Night Live. His first major screen role came as a political operative in Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver (1976).
Brooks then wrote and directed Real Life (1979), a satire about a documentary filmmaker recording the life of a family while trying, and failing miserably, to remain inconspicuous. He next directed and starred in the comedies Modern Romance (1981) and Lost in America (1985), but it was his largely noncomedic performance in Broadcast News (1987) that brought him an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actor. Brooks later wrote, directed, and acted in Defending Your Life (1991); Mother (1996), which starred Debbie Reynolds in the title role; The Muse (1999); and Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World (2005). He also appeared in the crime dramas Drive (2011) and A Most Violent Year (2014) and portrayed a doctor in Concussion (2015), about the discovery of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) among professional football players. Brooks’s other films included Private Benjamin (1980), Out of Sight (1998), and This Is 40 (2012).
Brooks also did voice work for various projects, including the television series The Simpsons and its film adaptation The Simpsons Movie (2007). However, his most memorable voice acting role was as a clown fish in search of his missing son in Pixar’s animated adventure Finding Nemo (2003). He reprised the role in the sequel Finding Dory (2016).