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Contact Kelsey Grammer |
| Full Name: | Kelsey Grammer |
Get that fuzzy feeling inside...

Title: Kelsey Grammer on Letterman (5 2 03)
Description: A short clip from the show during which Kelsey Grammer apparently receives a phone call in the middle of the interview and Dave is just being Dave ...

Title: Kelsey Grammer on Letterman (Full Clip)
Description: 5/2/03 Kelsey's Entertaining interview with David Letterman.

Title: Kelsey Grammer on David Letterman Show September 29, 09 part 1
Description: September 29, 09 Kelsey Grammer, Alyson Hannigan Kelsey Grammer (Hank), Alyson Hannigan (How I Met Your Mother), Miranda Lambert (CD, " ...

Title: The Today Show Kelsey Grammer
Description: Kelsey Grammer is on the Today Show to talk about the ending of Frasier.

Title: Kelsey Grammer & David Hyde Pierce moments in Frasier
Description: Some funny moments with Kelsey Grammer (Frasier Crane) and David Hyde Pierce (Niles Crane) from the show Frasier
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EOnline.com - Found Nov. 17, 2009 Clarkson','Kelly Hu','Kelly Lynch','Kelly Monaco','Kelly Osbourne','Kelly Preston','Kelly Ripa','Kelsey Grammer',' Wilkinson','Kenneth Branagh... |
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Gawker - Found Nov. 17, 2009 ... people are totally learning how to get their groove on with style, while black people feel free to become Kelsey Grammer fans and eat arugula! |
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Chicago Tribune - Found Nov. 16, 2009 "Hank," with Kelsey Grammer as a downsized corporate titan, has already been pulled. Network TV winners and losers - Los Angeles Times Network TV winners and losers - South Florida Sun-Sentinel Explore All |
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CBS News - Found Nov. 13, 2009 ABC's cancellation of the comedy "Hank" makes it two failures in three years for star Kelsey Grammer.Grammer, the multiple Emmy winner as the star of ... ABC shows `Hank' the door; another Grammer loss - Minneapolis Star Tribune Kelsey Grammer's "Hank" Shown The Door - CBS News ABC shows `Hank' the door; another Grammer loss - Seattle Times TV shows Dollhouse, Hank axed - stuff.co.nz Explore All |
Town Hall |
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Reuters - Found Nov. 11, 2009 ... road for Kelsey Grammer's "Hank" and Joss Whedon's "Dollhouse". ABC has canceled the new comedy series starring former "Frasier" star, Grammer. 'Dollhouse': Chronicle of a Cancellation Foretold - New York Times Joss Whedon's 'Dollhouse' canceled - Hollywood Reporter Whedon reacts to 'Dollhouse' cancellation - Hollywood Reporter Fox's sci-fi drama 'Dollhouse' is canceled - USA Today Explore All |
Cinema Blend |
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Macleans Online - Found Nov. 12, 2009 ABC's cancellation of the comedy "Hank" makes it two failures in three years for star Kelsey Grammer. Grammer, the multiple Emmy winner as... ABC Shows `Hank' the Door; Another Grammer Loss - ABC News ABC cancels 'Hank' and 'Eastwick' - Detroit News Wave bye to 'Dollhouse'... - Philadelphia Inquirer ABC shows `Hank' the door; another Grammer loss - Boston Globe Explore All |
My Eyewitness News |
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New York Times - Found Nov. 11, 2009 It?s not just Hank Pryor who?s out of a job ? Kelsey Grammer, who played that unemployed executive on the new sitcom ?Hank,? ABC yanks 'Hank' - Variety ABC cancels 'Hank' - Hollywood Reporter ABC Axes Hank - Seattle Post Intelligencer Grammer's new sit-com canceled - UPI Explore All |
Raleigh News & Observer |
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MSN Movies - Found Nov. 10, 2009 WENN Kelsey Grammer passed up the chance to become a porn star when he was a struggling teen actor -- after a producer offered him $10,000 to show Grammer turned down porn role - Jam! Showbiz Movies Explore All |
Jam! Showbiz Movies |
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Starpulse News Blog - Found Nov. 10, 2009 Kelsey Grammer passed up the chance to become a porn star when he was a struggling teen actor - after a producer offered him $10,000 to show off |
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Variety - Found Nov. 9, 2009 TV is stil l awaiting word from the net on its Kelsey Grammer comedy "Hank," which is looking like a long shot for a pickup. ABC picks up more 'Forgotten' - Hollywood Reporter ABC drops "Eastwick," dancing show - Reuters [Updated] ABC's 'Eastwick' gets the broom while 'The Forgotten' is ... - Los Angeles Times More 'Forgotten' ordered; 'Eastwick' axed - UPI Explore All |
Cinema Blend |
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Kelsey Grammer
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| Kelsey Grammer | |
|---|---|
during Fleet Week, New York 2006 |
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| Born | Allen Kelsey Grammer February 21, 1955 Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands |
| Occupation | Actor, Producer, Director, Writer, Voice artist |
| Years active | 1980 – present |
| Spouse(s) | Doreen Alderman (1982–1990) Leigh-Anne Csuhany (1992–1993) Camille Donatacci (1997–present) |
| Official website | |
Allen Kelsey Grammer (born February 21, 1955), best known as Kelsey Grammer, is an American actor best known for his two-decade portrayal of psychiatrist Dr. Frasier Crane in the NBC situation comedies Cheers (nine years) and Frasier (eleven years), and providing the voice of Sideshow Bob on the Fox animated series The Simpsons. He was nominated for numerous Emmys, including one for playing Frasier Crane on three different sitcoms (the third being a guest appearance on Wings). He has also worked as a television producer, director, writer, and a voice artist.
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Grammer was born in St. Thomas, U.S.V.I. to Sally (née Cranmer), a singer, and Frank Allen Grammer, Jr., a musician and owner of a coffee shop and a bar & grill.123 He is descended from Massachusetts Governor Thomas Dudley. His parents' marriage ended when he was young; his mother took him to live with her, and he was raised partly in New Jersey by his maternal grandparents, Evangeline Dimmock and Gordon Cranmer.
Grammer's family life has been plagued by tragedies. In 1968, when Grammer was thirteen years old, his father, whom he had seen only twice since his parents' divorce, was killed on the front lawn of his home in the U.S. Virgin Islands.2 In 1975, his sister, Karen, was raped and murdered4 after being abducted outside a Red Lobster restaurant in Colorado Springs, Colorado, where her boyfriend worked.5 Grammer has sworn to prevent his sister's murderer from being paroled6, and in July 2009, her convicted murderer was denied parole at least in part due to a written letter submitted to the parole board.78 In 1980, his paternal twin younger half-brothers were killed by a shark in a scuba diving accident.910
After leaving Juilliard, he had a three-year internship with the Old Globe Theatre, in San Diego, in the late 1970s, before a stint in 1980 at the Guthrie Theater, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He made his Broadway debut in 1981, as "Lennox," in Macbeth, taking the lead role when Philip Anglim withdrew after receiving negative reviews. In 1983, he performed on the demo of the Stephen Sondheim–James Lapine production Sunday in the Park with George, starring Mandy Patinkin. Also featured on the demo was Christine Baranski, who later starred as "Mrs. Lovett," to Grammer's "Sweeney," in the 1999 LA Reprise! production of Stephen Sondheim's Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. Grammer then played the featured role of "Cassio" in a Broadway revival of Othello, with James Earl Jones and Christopher Plummer.
His television career began in the early 1980s when he portrayed Stephen Smith in the NBC miniseries Kennedy. Grammer came to broader public attention as Dr. Frasier Crane in the NBC sitcom Cheers. Grammer's former Juilliard classmate and Broadway co-star Patinkin suggested Grammer to the New York casting director, and he got what was supposed to be a six-episode job but ended up as a regular cast member.11 The character became the center of the successful spin-off Frasier. Grammer recently reprised his role of Dr. Frasier Crane in a commercial for Dr Pepper.
In 2001, he negotiated a US$700,000-per-episode salary for Frasier, and his 20-year run playing Dr. Frasier Crane ties a length set by James Arness in playing Marshall Matt Dillon on Gunsmoke from 1955 to 1975.12
In 2005 on Fox, he attempted to create an American adaptation of The Sketch Show, a British sketch show. The main cast consisted of Malcolm Barrett, Kaitlin Olson, Mary Lynn Rajskub, and Paul F. Tompkins, as well as Lee Mack from the British version of the show. Grammer appeared in only short opening and closing segments in each episode. Many of the sketches from the British version were recreated, such as the "California Dreamin'," "English Course," and "Sign Language" sketches. Only six episodes of the show were made, and it was canceled after only four of them had aired.
In addition to being producer, he also starred as the Angel of Death on Medium.
In 2007, Grammer returned to the sitcom format as the central character in the American sitcom Back to You, co-starring with Patricia Heaton. It was canceled by Fox after its first season.
CBS, which has been wanting to have an extension night of comedies beyond its Monday Night line-up, has wanted to air Back to You for another season. However, with Grammer working on a new comedy to air in late 2009 on ABC, the future of Back to You looks bleak.citation needed
Grammer's ABC sitcom Hank was cancelled in its first season on Nov 11, 2009.
Grammer's smooth, deep voice and Mid-Atlantic accent make him popular for voiceover work. He has provided the voice of Sideshow Bob on The Simpsons, winning an Emmy for his work in the episode "The Italian Bob."13 He has appeared in eleven episodes since the show's inception in 1989, the most recent being "Wedding for Disaster" that aired in early 2009. Also, Grammer supplied the voices for "Stinky Pete the Prospector" in Toy Story 2, Vladimir in the Fox animated movie Anastasia, Zozi the Bear in the subsequently produced prequel Bartok the Magnificent, and the title character in the short-lived animated series Gary the Rat. Also, he provided the opening speech and piano in The Vandals' song "Phone Machine" from the album Fear of a Punk Planet, and sang a rewritten version of the "grinch" on an episode of Just Shoot Me!. He was also the voice of the mad scientist, Dr. Frankenollie, in the Mickey Mouse short Runaway Brain.
His production company, Grammnet Productions, produces the CW sitcoms Girlfriends and The Game, the CBS drama Medium, and is involved in many other projects.
He returned to series television on Fox's The Sketch Show. Prior to that, he guest-starred as The Angel of Death on Medium, which he also produces. In film, his recent work includes the role of Dr. Hank McCoy (also known as Beast) in X-Men: The Last Stand and the voice of Snowball in the live-action film adaptation of the George Orwell classic book Animal Farm. Kelsey also stars in the movie Swing Vote, a film whose plot is based in part on the recent tight races for President of the United States, in which the vote is so tight that it comes down to one man's vote to determine the winner. Kelsey plays the Republican incumbent, a role that aligns with his own views. He played another role as General George S. Patton in An American Carol.
As part of his voice-over work, Grammer's voice has also been featured in commercials. He was the voice of the original GEICO gecko, a talking reptile created by The Martin Agency in 1999. In the commercial, the gecko pleads for people to stop calling him in error, mistaking gecko for GEICO. Since 2006, Grammer has provided the voice for television commercials advertising the Hyundai Sonata, Hyundai Santa Fe, Hyundai Veracruz, and Hyundai Azera. He was chosen because his "refined and luxurious voice" would help build the up-and-coming car maker's new image as an affordable luxury automobile.
He won a number of Emmys, Screen Actors Guild Award, and Golden Globes for his work on Frasier. He was the first American actor ever to be nominated for multiple Emmy awards for portraying the same character on three different television shows (Cheers, Frasier, and Wings).
Grammer has received at least 45 nominations for major awards and has won on 18 occasions.14 He has received 14 individual Emmy Award nominations for 4 different television shows (plus an additional 2 as part of the Frasier ensemble) and has won on 5 occasions. At the Golden Globes, he has received eight nominations and twice been victorious. He has received two People's Choice Awards, and in 1999 his directorial skills were recognised with a nomination for a Directors Guild of America award for directing an episode of Frasier. He received a Saturn Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his role in X-Men: The Last Stand. On May 22, 2001, he was presented with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for television.
The following table gives a selection of the awards he has won.
| Year | Award | Category |
|---|---|---|
| 1994 | Emmy | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series (Frasier) |
| 1995 | Emmy | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series (Frasier) |
| 1995 | American Comedy Award | Funniest Male Performer in a TV Series (Frasier) |
| 1996 | Golden Globe | Best Performance by an Actor in a TV-Series Comedy/Musical (Frasier) |
| 1996 | American Comedy Award | Funniest Male Performer in a TV Series (Frasier) |
| 1998 | Emmy | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series (Frasier) |
| 2001 | Golden Globe | Best Performance by an Actor in a TV-Series Comedy/Musical (Frasier) |
| 2004 | Emmy | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series (Frasier) |
| 2006 | Emmy | Outstanding Voice-Over Performance (The Simpsons) |
Grammer has been married three times. His first marriage, to dance instructor Doreen Alderman, lasted from 1982 to 1990. They had one daughter, Spencer Grammer (born October 9, 1983), an actress on the CBS Daytime soap opera As the World Turns and the ABC Family show Greek.
His second marriage, to stripper Leigh-Anne Csuhany in 1992, lasted one year. Grammer says that she was abusive and that, after talk of divorce, she attempted suicide, which resulted in the miscarriage of their child.15 During this marriage, Grammer had a daughter out of wedlock, Greer Kandace (born February 15, 1992), with hair and makeup stylist Barrie Buckner.9
Grammer has been married since August 1997 to Camille Donatacci, a former Playboy model. They have a daughter, Mason Olivia (born October 24, 2001), and a son, Jude Gordon (born August 28, 2004), both born via surrogate mother.9 Grammer and Donatacci have homes in Malibu, California; Colorado; and New York. Also, they have a holiday home on Maui.
In 1995, Grammer was sued by ex-girlfriend Cerlette Lamme for defamation of character and invasion of privacy over content he included in his autobiography So Far.16
In 1998, Grammer filed a lawsuit against Internet Entertainment Group, which Grammer claimed had stolen from his home a videotape of him having sex with a woman. IEG countersued Grammer, denying they were in possession of such a tape, and Grammer's suit was eventually dropped.17 IEG President Seth Warshavsky told the New York Post, "We have been presented with another Kelsey Grammer tape. But we have no plans to air it. We are still evaluating it at this time."18 Grammer later told Maxim, "Whether or not you’re a celebrity—even if you’re just an old slob with a video camera—you don’t realize you shouldn’t do it. So you throw the tape in the back of a dark closet until your old girlfriend remembers it’s there because you’re famous now and she’s not. But if you’re not prepared to do the time, don’t do the crime."19
In August 2008, Bradley Blakeman, a former aide to George W. Bush, filed a copyright lawsuit in federal court on Long Island over Grammer's movie Swing Vote, claiming that parts of its plot and marketing had been stolen from him. The lawsuit claimed that Blakeman had given a copyrighted screenplay called Go November to Grammer in 2006, and that Grammer agreed to develop the project and star as a Republican president but instead ended up playing a similar role in Swing Vote, which was released on August 1, 2008. Grammer's spokesman dismissed the claims as "frivolous" and a "waste of time." The lawsuit claims that Blakeman's copyrighted screenplay had the same basic plot as Swing Vote.20
Grammer began drinking at age 921 and became a frequent abuser of alcohol. In 1988, he was sentenced to 30 days in jail for drunk driving and cocaine possession. He was again arrested for cocaine possession in August 1990 and was sentenced to three years' probation, fined $500, and given 300 hours of community service. In January 1991, he was given an additional two years' probation for violating his original probation through additional cocaine use. In September 1996, he flipped his Dodge Viper while intoxicated and subsequently checked in to the Betty Ford Center for 30 days.22
Grammer suffered a heart attack on May 31, 2008. He told Jay Leno on the July 24, 2008, airing of The Tonight Show that he had to wait one and a half hours for paramedics to arrive. He was hospitalized in Hawaii after he had symptoms while paddle-boating with his wife, Camille.23 He was released on June 4, 2008, and was listed as "resting comfortably" at his Hawaiian residence.24 Seven weeks after his attack, Grammer told Entertainment Tonight that, although at the time his spokesman described the attack as mild, it was in fact more severe, almost leading to his death, as his heart had stopped.25
Grammer blamed Fox's decision to cancel his TV sitcom Back to You for his health problems, stating that "It was a very stressful time for me, and a surprise that it was cancelled. But you know, everything that doesn't kill us—which it almost did—makes us stronger!"26
On June 28, 2008, Grammer checked into an undisclosed New York hospital after complaints of feeling faint. His publicist said that it may have been due to a reaction to medication.
Grammer is a member of the Republican Party and has expressed an interest in someday running for United States Congress.27
Grammer was a celebrity guest at President George W. Bush's first inauguration, along with Drew Carey, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, and Fred Thompson.
Grammer endorsed Rudy Giuliani in the 2008 presidential primary and later campaigned for John McCain in the general election.2829
When asked by Maxim magazine about his political ambitions, Grammer replied, "It's a notion I have about the future, to run for office, to do the world some good. Maybe in 15 years or so, there may be a run for office. But I don’t know what I’d run for."19
| Year | Film | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1992 | Galaxies Are Colliding | Peter | |
| 1995 | Runaway Brain | Dr. Frankenollie | Short film |
| 1996 | Down Periscope | Lieutenant Commander Thomas Dodge | |
| 1997 | Anastasia | Vladimir | |
| 1998 | The Real Howard Spitz | Howard Spitz | |
| 1999 | New Jersey Turnpikes | Unknown | |
| Standing on Fishes | Verk | ||
| Toy Story 2 | "Stinky Pete" the Prospector | ||
| Bartok the Magnificent | Zozi | Direct-to-video release | |
| Mickey's Once upon a Christmas | Narrator | Direct-to-video release | |
| 2001 | 15 Minutes | Robert Hawkins | |
| Just Visiting | Narrator | Uncredited | |
| 2003 | The Big Empty | Agent Banks | |
| Barbie of Swan Lake | Rothbart | Direct-to-video release | |
| 2004 | Teacher's Pet | Dr. Ivan Krank | |
| 2005 | The Good Humor Man | Mr. Skibness | Also executive producer |
| 2006 | X-Men: The Last Stand | Dr. Henry 'Hank' McCoy/Beast | |
| 2007 | Even Money | Detective Brunner | |
| 2008 | Swing Vote | President Andrew Boone | |
| An American Carol | General George S. Patton | ||
| 2009 | Fame | Joel Cranston | |
| 2010 | Crazy on the Outside | TBA | Post-production |
| Bunyan and Babe | Norm Blandsford | Post-production | |
| Middle Men | Frank Griffin | Post-production | |
| TBA | Alligator Point30 | TBA |
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1982 | Macbeth | Ross | TV film |
| 1983 | Kennedy | Stephen Smith | TV miniseries |
| 1984 | Kate & Allie | David Hamill | Episode 1.1: "Allie's First Date" |
| George Washington | Lt. Stewart | TV miniseries | |
| 1984-1985 | Another World | Dr. Canard | Recurring role |
| 1984-1993 | Cheers | Dr. Frasier Crane | Appeared in 201 episodes |
| 1986 | Crossings | Craig Lawson | TV miniseries |
| 1987 | Biography | George Washington | Episode: "Benedict Arnold" |
| J.J. Starbuck | Pierce Morgan | Episode 1.3: "Murder in E Minor" | |
| 1988 | Dance 'til Dawn | Ed Strull | TV film |
| 1989 | Top of the Hill | Unknown | TV film |
| 227 | Mr. Anderson | Episode 4.24: "For Sale" | |
| 1990 | The Tracey Ullman Show | Mr. Brenna | Episode 4.12: "Maria and the Mister" |
| 1990- | The Simpsons | Sideshow Bob | Has appeared in eleven episodes |
| 1991 | Baby Talk | Russell | Episode 1.7: "One Night with Elliot" |
| 1992 | Wings | Dr. Frasier Crane | Episode 3.16: "Planes, Trains and Visiting Cranes" |
| Star Trek: The Next Generation | Captain Bateson | Episode 5.18: "Cause and Effect" | |
| 1993 | Roc | Detective Rush | Episode 2.25: "To Love and Die on Emerson Street: Part 2" |
| Beyond Suspicion | Ron McNally | TV film | |
| 1993-2004 | Frasier | Dr. Frasier Crane | Appeared in all 264 episodes; also executive producer and director of 37 episodes |
| 1994 | The Innocent | Det. Frank Barlow | TV film |
| 1995 | The John Larroquette Show | Dr. Frasier Crane | Episode 3.1: "More Changes" |
| 1996 | London Suite | Sydney Nichols | TV film |
| 1997 | Fired Up | Tom Whitman | Episodes 1.3: "Who's the Boss" and 2.3: "You Don't Know Jack"; also executive producer |
| 1998 | The Pentagon Wars | Major General Partridge | TV film |
| Just Shoot Me! | Narrator | Episode 3.10: "How the Finch Stole Christmas" | |
| 1999 | Animal Farm | Snowball | TV film |
| 2000 | Stark Raving Mad | Professor Tuttle | 1.17: "The Grade" |
| 2001 | Neurotic Tendencies | N/A | TV film; executive producer, director and writer |
| 2000-2008 | Girlfriends | Executive producer | |
| 2001 | The Sports Pages | Howard Greene | TV film |
| 2002 | Mr. St. Nick | Nick St. Nicholas/Santa Claus the 21st | TV film |
| 2002-2003 | In-Laws | N/A | Executive producer |
| 2003 | Benedict Arnold: A Question of Honor | George Washington | TV film |
| Becker | Rick Cooper | Episode 5.13: "But I've Got Friends I Haven't Used Yet" | |
| Gary the Rat | Gary "The Rat" Andrews | Appeared in all 13 episodes; also executive producer |
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| 2004 | A Christmas Carol | Ebenezer Scrooge | TV film |
| The Soluna Project | N/A | TV film; executive producer | |
| 2005 | Kelsey Grammer Presents: The Sketch Show | Various characters | Appeared in all four aired episodes; also executive producer |
| Out of Practice | N/A | Directed episodes 1.1 and 1.18 | |
| 2006 | Medium | Angel of Death | Episode 2.21: "Death Takes a Policy" Also executive producer |
| My Ex Life | N/A | Director | |
| 2006-2009 | The Game | N/A | Executive producer |
| 2007 | Dash 4 Cash | N/A | TV film; executive producer |
| Everybody Hates Chris | N/A | Directed episode 2.22: "Everybody Hates the Last Day" | |
| 2007-2008 | Back to You | Chuck Darling | Appeared in all 17 episodes Also executive producer |
| 2009 | Hank | Lead role | Also executive producer31 |
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Kelsey Grammer |
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