Frederick Charles Willard was born inCleveland,Ohio, on September 18, 1933.[5] Willard's mother, Ruth (née Weinman) was a housewife.[1] Willard was raised inShaker Heights, Ohio.[5] In 1945, when Fred was 12 years old, his father, Frederick Charles Willard, died.[6]
Willard (front center) with cast members of the short-lived comedy seriesSirota's Court in 1976
Willard's stage career began when he moved to New York in the late 1950s. His initial work included a production ofDesperate Hours at a localYMCA where he worked with future comedy partner Vic Grecco. They later performed as Willard & Grecco in theGreenwich Village area, found some success touring, and appeared onThe Dean Martin Show,The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour andThe Tonight Show. They were offered roles in the television seriesGet Smart andThe Carol Burnett Show, but the offers fell through due to poor management. The two parted ways in 1968.[10]
Willard's film debut was in the 1967 exploitation filmTeenage Mother. He later reported that the audience at one screening booed when his character interrupted an attempted sexual assault of the female lead.[11]
In 1977-78, Willard achieved wider fame as Barth Gimble's (Martin Mull) obtuse sidekick and announcer Jerry Hubbard on theMary Hartman, Mary Hartman spinoffs,Fernwood 2 Night andAmerica 2-Night, which parodied television talk shows of the day.[13] He was an original cast member of the popular NBC seriesReal People in 1979, then again from 1981 to 1983. He played Tom Osbourne in the 1987Academy Award–winning short filmRay's Male Heterosexual Dance Hall. From 1987 to 1989 he starred as a bartender/straightman in Sid and Marty Krofft'sD.C. Follies, and was host to the Krofft puppets portraying political figures of the time.[14]
Willard hosted the talk showWhat's Hot, What's Not, which aired from 1985 to 1986 and earned him aDaytime Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Talk Show Host.[15]
In 1990, Willard hosted the cable TV showAccess America on theHa! Comedy Network. As part of that show, on September 21, 1990, he appeared in episode 7 of the cultpublic-access television showDecoupage with Summer Caprice.[16]
In 1995, Willard reunited with hisFernwood co-star, Martin Mull, playing Scott, the romantic partner of Mull's character Leon Carp, onRoseanne.[17] The couple married in the episode "December Bride", and Scott became a recurring character during the series' final two seasons.
That same year, Willard guest-starred in three episodes ofSister, Sister, starringTia andTamera Mowry; Willard played Carl Mitushka,[18] a teacher at Roosevelt High who often spoke popular teenage slang terms in order to sound cool to his students. Willard voiced travel agent Wally Kogen in the 1999 episode "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday" forThe Simpsons.
Willard had a recurring role as Hank MacDougall on the later seasons ofCBS'sEverybody Loves Raymond, which brought himEmmy Award nominations in 2003, 2004, and 2005.[21] He also hosted aVH1 documentary series,Totally Obsessed, about people obsessed with their hobbies. He appeared as Captain Ribmanman in Episode 21 ofChannel Frederator, a podcast fromKansas. He provided the voices of nudist family dad Dave Campbell inFamily Guy (first in the episode "From Method to Madness"), and of Officer Brown inKing of the Hill, and appeared onThat '70s Show. OnThe Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Willard appeared in 100 sketches as a government official, businessman, or other authority figure who was always drinking.[22] In 2006, he voiced Dad in theAcademy Award nominated animated filmMonster House. He also hostedSaturday Night Live in 1978 (with musical guestsDevo), and appeared twice onMADtv.
Willard was cast as a sportscaster in the television seriesBack to You, which premiered on theFox Network on September 19, 2007. He played Shelby Forthright, the CEO of the Buy 'n' Large Corporation, in the first ever live-action speaking segments byPixar in the animated filmWALL-E.[23]
Willard completed a sold-out run ofFred Willard: Alone At Last!, advertised as a "one-man show" but actually featuring a cast of twelve, and received Los Angeles Artistic Director Awards for Best Comedy and Best Production.[24] Willard had several stage roles to his credit, includingOff-Broadway performances inLittle Murders, directed byAlan Arkin, andArf, directed byRichard Benjamin. His regional roles includeCall Me Madam in Chicago and the musicalsPromises, Promises, withJason Alexander, andAnything Goes withRachel York, both in Los Angeles.[25][26] He starred inWendy Wasserstein'sIsn't It Romantic and off Broadway inElvis and Juliet.[20]
On October 5, 2008, he hosted theNickelodeon Fido Awards.[27]
On September 16, 2011, Willard was honored as aPioneer in Comedy atBurbank International Film Festival.[30] Also in 2011, Willard starred as "Santa Jack," a comical—and somewhat pervy—owner of a local Christmas carnival in episode 12 of the final season ofThe Closer.
In 2012, he played Al Kaiser inRob Reiner's filmThe Magic of Belle Isle. In 2013, he starred inThe Bird Men (originally calledThe Birder) alongsideTom Cavanagh, a film centered around a mild-mannered birder who seeks revenge on a younger rival, after losing the highly coveted Head of Ornithology position at the National Park.[31]
On August 10, 2018, Willard made a special guest appearance onJimmy Kimmel Live!, reprising his role from a 1970s television pilot for an unmade series calledSpace Force, in light of PresidentDonald Trump's announcement that he will create aspace force for the United States military.[33] Following the sketch, Willard made guest appearances on the show on a frequent basis, often portraying comedic, misguided characters parodying current news topics which Jimmy would interview "live via satellite". The characters included the ghosts ofFred Trump andGeorge Washington, a Trump-supportingSanta Claus, and Supreme Court JusticeRuth Bader Ginsburg.[34][35]
On October 23, 2019, it was announced that Willard was cast as Fred Naird in the 2020Netflix comedy series,Space Force.[36][37] This was Willard's final acting role, with the series being released two weeks after his death.
Willard's final voice-acting performance was in the 2017 Disney animated cartoonMickey and the Roadster Racers as the character Mr. Doozy.[38]
Willard's final role was in the 2021 television filmCaptain Daddy, where he played the role of Daddy, it was released in the summer a year after his death.
On July 18, 2012, Willard was arrested on suspicion of engaging in masturbation at anadult theater onSanta Monica Boulevard and was brought to theLos Angeles Police Department's Hollywood Station. However, there was no proof of any misconduct and no charges were filed.[40] Despite the outcomes,PBS fired Willard fromMarket Warriors immediately following his arrest, andMark L. Walberg replaced him on the show.[41] In an appearance onLate Night with Jimmy Fallon shortly thereafter, Willard stated that the incident was "very painful" and "very embarrassing", but that he "did nothing wrong". Willard was subsequently required to take a sex educationdiversion program.[42]
^In a 2012 interview with theTelevision Academy Foundation, Willard said he was born on September 18, 1939; that he was "pretty sure" it was inCleveland; that his birth name was Frederic Charles Willard (without specifying his first name's spelling), and that his father had the same given name, but spelled differently.[1] At the time of his death in 2020, Willard's daughter stated that he was 86, which also places his birth in 1933 or 1934 (1933 if born in September).[2] Some sources cite Willard's birthplace asShaker Heights, Ohio,[3][4] and Willard himself stated that he grew up there.[1]
^abc"Fred Willard Interview Part 1 of 4".The Interviews: An Oral History of Television.Television Academy Foundation. October 23, 2017. RetrievedMay 16, 2020.My name at birth: Frederic Charles Willard ... I was born in Cleveland, Ohio, I'm pretty sure it's Cleveland, Ohio, September 18th, 1939. [Q: And where did you grow up?] Shaker Heights, Ohio. ... My father's name was also Frederick Willard, spelled a little different than mine. My mother's name was Ruth; her maiden name was Weinman, W-e-i-n-m-a-n.
^abKreps, Daniel (May 17, 2020)."Fred Willard, 'Best in Show' and 'A Mighty Wind' Actor, Dead at 86".Rolling Stone. RetrievedMay 17, 2020.Willard's daughter Hope Mulbarger said in a statement, "My father passed away very peacefully last night at the fantastic age of 86 years old. He kept moving, working and making us happy until the very end. We loved him so very much! We will miss him forever."
^Nesteroff, Kliph (2015).The comedians: drunks, thieves, scoundrels, and the history of American comedy (First ed.). Grove Press.ISBN9780802123985.OCLC921844606.
^"Fred Willard on "DC Follies"".YouTube. Television Academy Foundation. August 8, 2017.Archived from the original on December 12, 2021. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
^"Fred Willard on "Roseanne"".YouTube. Television Academy Foundation. August 8, 2017.Archived from the original on December 12, 2021. RetrievedAugust 22, 2019.
^Pegg, Robert (October 5, 2015).Comical Co-Stars of Television: From Ed Norton to Kramer. McFarland. p. 373.ISBN978-1476610245.
^abcdefghijklmnopq"Fred Willard (visual voices guide)". Behind The Voice Actors. RetrievedOctober 26, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
^An Evening at the Improv. Season 1. Episode 2. January 9, 1981.