Wil Shriner

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Wil Shriner

Wil Shriner
Born (1953-12-06) December 6, 1953
New York City, New York, U.S.
New York United States
Occupation Comedian, actor, film director, screenwriter, game show host

Wil Shriner (born December 6, 1953) is an American actor, comedian, director and game show host.[1]

Life and career

Shriner was born in New York City, New York, the twin brother of soap opera actor Kin Shriner and the son of Eileen “Pixie” McDermott and Herb Shriner, a Hoosier humorist who had several shows in the early days of television, including Two for the Money and The Herb Shriner Show. Wil made his first appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson and then went on to be a regular on the NBC morning show The David Letterman Show. For one season in the 1980s (1987–88), he hosted The Wil Shriner Show, a nationally-syndicated Group W television talk show. TV Guide described the program as "a daily variety-talk show featuring celebrity guests, segments on health and fitness, and interviews with authors and experts."[2]

He also hosted two game shows, the American version of That's My Dog (replacing Steve Skrovan) from 1993 until its cancellation in 1995 and Small Talk. During the early 1990s, he also hosted a weekly syndicated series about amateur and well-known inventors called Why Didn't I Think of That?, which ran for two years. He also hosted the Miss Teen USA 1989 pageant. He spent four years as a correspondent and guest host on the ABC network morning show Home Show.

In a 1990 episode of the television show Designing Women, Suzanne Sugarbaker (Delta Burke) references Wil Shriner as being the emcee for the 1976 Miss Georgia pageant.

He began directing sitcoms in 2000 with his start at Frasier, and Becker to Everybody Loves Raymond. He also did episodes of Raising Dad, My Wife and Kids, Norm, Married to the Kellys, Luis, Ladies Man, Two Guys and A Girl, and Living With Fran.

In 2006, he wrote the screenplay for, and directed, the feature film Hoot, which was released by New Line Cinema on over 3000 screens. The family film came out on DVD in August 2006. Hoot was added to the film collection of the Museum of Modern Art in 2009.[3]

He now regularly appears in the Paul and Young Ron morning radio show on BIG105.9 FM.

References

  1. The New York Times
  2. TV Guide (San Francisco Metropolitan Edition), Sept. 12, 1987.
  3. Hoot's acquisition by MOMA Retrieved 09 May 2009.

External links

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