Dave Thomas (actor)
{{Short description|Canadian actor and comedian (born 1948)}}
{{about||the voice actor|David A. Thomas (voice actor)|the founder of Wendy's|Dave Thomas (businessman)}}
{{use mdy dates|date=November 2020}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Dave Thomas
{{Post-nominals|country=CAN|CM}}
| image = Dave thomas1.jpg
| caption = Thomas at the 34th Annie Awards, 2007
| birth_name = David William Thomas
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1949|5|20}}
| birth_place = St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada
| occupation = {{hlist | Actor | comedian | television writer}}
| years_active = 1974–present
| spouse = {{ubl
| {{marriage|Pam Thomas|reason=divorced}}
| {{marriage|Kimberly Ann|1994}}
}}
| children = 4
| father = John E. Thomas
| relatives = Ian Thomas (brother)
| education = McMaster University (B.A., English literature)
}}
David William Thomas {{Post-nominals|country=CAN|CM}} (born May 20, 1949) is a Canadian actor, comedian and television writer, known for being one half of the duo Bob and Doug McKenzie with Rick Moranis. He appeared as Doug McKenzie on SCTV, for which he won a Primetime Emmy Award out of two nominations, and in the film Strange Brew (1983), which he also co-directed. As a duo, they made two albums, The Great White North and Strange Brew, the former gaining them a Grammy Award nomination and a Juno Award.
His other notable acting credits include My Man Adam (1985), The Experts (1989), Coneheads (1993), Rat Race (2001), Beethoven's 5th (2003) and Santa's Slay (2005). He is also known for playing Russell Norton in the TV series Grace Under Fire (1993–1998) and provided the voice of Tuke in Brother Bear (2003), and Brother Bear 2 (2006).
Early life
David William Thomas was born May 20, 1949, in St. Catharines, Ontario. He is the eldest son of British parents, Moreen Duff Muir (May 4, 1928 – May 18, 2022), a church organist for thirty years originally from Glasgow, Scotland and composer of church music, and John E. Thomas (1926–1996), a medical ethicist from Merthyr Tydfil, Wales who was head of the Philosophy Department at McMaster University, and the author of several books. Dave's younger brother, Ian Thomas, is a Canadian singer-songwriter.
The family moved temporarily to Durham, North Carolina, where his father attended Duke University and earned a PhD in philosophy. The family moved back to Dundas, Ontario, in 1961, where Dave attended Dundas District high school, and later graduated with an honours Bachelor of Arts degree in English literature from McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.{{Cite press release |url=https://www.mcmaster.ca/opr/html/opr/media/main/NewsReleases/2009/FallConvocation.htm|title=Comedian Dave Thomas among honorary degree recipients at Fall convocation|date=November 12, 2009|website=McMaster University|location=Hamilton, Ont.|access-date=2018-11-30}}
Career
{{BLP sources section|date=October 2022}}
Starting his career as a copywriter at ad agency McCann Erickson in 1974, Thomas became the head writer of the Coca-Cola account in Canada within a year. After watching a Second City stage show in Toronto, and while suffering from self-described "boredom" in his advertising work, he auditioned for the Second City troupe and was chosen as a performer.{{cite web | last1 = Plume | first1 = Kenneth | author-link1 = Kenneth Plume | date = February 10, 2000 | url = http://movies.ign.com/articles/035/035845p1.html | title = Interview with Dave Thomas (Part 1 of 5) | work = IGN}} He was a cast member of the Toronto production of Godspell, along with Victor Garber, Martin Short, Eugene Levy, Gilda Radner, and Andrea Martin.{{Cite web|title=Mirvish {{!}} Godspell|url=https://www.mirvish.com/ticket-info/show-archives/godspell-1972|access-date=2020-10-18|website=Ed Mirvish Theatre|language=en|archive-date=October 19, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201019093036/https://www.mirvish.com/ticket-info/show-archives/godspell-1972|url-status=dead}} Paul Shaffer was the musical director.
He first achieved fame as a cast member of the Canadian TV comedy series SCTV, joining Godspell castmates Levy, Martin and later Short, plus Rick Moranis, John Candy, Harold Ramis, Catherine O'Hara and others. Notable characters on the show include Doug McKenzie of beer-swilling brothers Bob and Doug McKenzie, editorialist Bill Needle, Scottish scone-chef/bluesman Angus Crock, motor-mouthed TV ad announcer Harvey K-Tel, Lowery organist/curio pitchman Tex Boil and the "Cruising Gourmet".
Thomas's first film role was in Home to Stay, directed by Delbert Mann, in which Thomas played in a scene with Hollywood legend Henry Fonda. He then wrote, co-directed, and starred in the Bob & Doug McKenzie feature film Strange Brew. Soon after, he wrote for and acted in The New Show, produced by Lorne Michaels during his hiatus from Saturday Night Live. Short-lived, this show featured a powerhouse writing staff including Thomas along with Buck Henry, George Meyer, Jack Handey, Al Franken, Tom Davis, Valri Bromfield and Steve Martin. Thomas tried his hand at network television hour-long shows in 1986 when he wrote and co-executive produced Steel Collar Man for CBS. The pilot was produced but did not go to series.
He co-wrote Spies Like Us (1985) with Dan Aykroyd.
In 1988, Thomas wrote another hour long show for CBS, B Men, which was back ordered, but Thomas took a directing job at Paramount, which caused the network to drop the series. He reportedly introduced John Travolta and Kelly Preston while directing them in the Paramount film The Experts.
He wrote for, produced, and starred in The Dave Thomas Comedy Show (1990). In 1991, he starred in the Showtime comedy, Public Enemy #2. In 1992, he tried his hand at reality TV and co-executive produced ABC's America's Funniest People with Vin Di Bona, but left after thirteen weeks to appear in the film Coneheads.
In 1993, he co-starred in ABC's Grace Under Fire with Brett Butler and Tom Poston and continued with the show for 5 seasons. In 1995 Thomas starred in the ABC television film Picture Perfect with Mary Page Keller and Richard Karn. In 1995 Thomas produced a pilot of a game show called Family Challenge for ABC. When ABC did not pick up the series, Thomas sold Family Challenge to the Family Channel, where he produced 144 episodes of the show spread over 2 seasons. In 1996, Thomas played the title role in the Fox television film Mr. Foster's Field Trip aka Kidz in the Wood with Julia Duffy.
In 1996, he wrote the book SCTV: Behind the Scenes (McClelland & Stewart, publishers). From 1999–2002, he voiced various roles on the animated series Mission Hill.
Thomas co-starred in the Paramount feature Rat Race. As of 2001, Thomas has been the Executive Creative Director of Animax Entertainment, an animation studio based officially in Culver City, California. In 2001–2002 Thomas appeared with Eugene Levy and Martin Short on Short's show Primetime Glick as Bob Hope (an impression he had first developed for SCTV with great success). In 2002, he co-starred with Jason Priestley, Dave Foley, and Ewen Bremner in Fancy Dancing. The next year he played a lead role in Beethoven's 5th. In 2003, he directed a hospital comedy feature film entitled Whitecoats, which he also wrote. As of 2004, Thomas was on the official Advisory Committee for the Comedy program at Humber College, the only such diploma program in the world. In 2004, he and Moranis again worked together voicing Rutt and Tuke, two moose based on the McKenzie Brothers, in Disney's animated feature Brother Bear.{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/06/movies/these-two-talking-moose-let-their-antlers-down.html|title=These Two Talking Moose Let Their Antlers Down (Published 2004)|first=Neil|last=Genzlinger|author-link1=Neil Genzlinger|date=July 6, 2004|newspaper=The New York Times}}
Thomas has had a long career doing voices for animation including Animaniacs, Duckman, CatDog, The Adventures of Tarzan, Justice League and multiple roles on The Simpsons, King of the Hill and Family Guy. In 2005, he had a guest stint as Charlize Theron's "Uncle Trevor" on Fox's Arrested Development. In 2006, he reprised his voice role in Brother Bear 2 and appeared as himself in the feature film The Aristocrats. He began production on ArnoldSpeaks.com, a video blog, as the voice of Arnold Schwarzenegger; Animax Entertainment won an Emmy for a broadband animated series produced for ESPN, Off Mikes.
In 2007, Thomas and Rick Moranis reprised their roles as Bob and Doug McKenzie in a one-hour special, Bob & Doug McKenzie's Two-Four Anniversary, for CBC Television. The show featured cameos from McKenzie celeb fans like Ben Stiller, Dave Foley, Tom Green, Paul Shaffer, Andy Dick, Matt Groening, Barry Pepper, Martin Short, and Geddy Lee. Former Prime Minister of Canada Paul Martin was the host. In 2008, Thomas revived Bob and Doug McKenzie in a new animated series, Bob & Doug. While Thomas reprises the character of Doug in the new series, Moranis chose not to voice the character of Bob, which instead is voiced by Dave Coulier. Moranis is, however, involved in the series as an executive producer.Rob Salem, [https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/Television/article/620381 "Bob & Doug taking off again"]. Toronto Star, April 19, 2009.
In November 2009, Thomas received an Honorary Doctor of Letters from his alma mater McMaster University and gave the fall convocation speech. In 2010 Animax continued to produce branded entertainment, advertising and digital shorts for corporations like Disney, Warner Brothers, NBC Universal, and Kodak. In 2011, Thomas's company Animax produced another animated show for MTV entitled Big Box along with numerous Internet shorts such as Life With Dad.Pearce, Cameron (April 12, 2011). [http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/5e7d7c3cf7/life-with-dad-dog "Life With Dad 'Dog'"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140528020419/http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/5e7d7c3cf7/life-with-dad-dog |date=May 28, 2014 }}. Funny or Die.Pearce, Cameron (April 12, 2011). [http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/8b5772b036/life-with-dad-one-night-stand?playlist=329943 "Life With Dad 'One Night Stand'"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140528013507/http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/8b5772b036/life-with-dad-one-night-stand?playlist=329943 |date=May 28, 2014 }}. Funny or Die.
In 2012 and 2013 Thomas guest starred in the dramatic shows Perception and Bones as well as comedy shows Comedy Bang! Bang! and How I Met Your Mother. In addition in 2013 Thomas voiced the recurring role of Jeff Foxworthy's father Jesco in the CMT show Bounty Hunters.
Thomas joined the writing staff of the Fox crime drama television series Bones beginning in 2013. Thomas worked for two seasons on Bones, writing several episodes and working on staff as consulting producer for two seasons.{{cite web |url=http://ampia.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/2013-AFT-Finalist-Dave-Thomas-1-Sheet-FINAL.pdf |title=AMPIA's 2013 Special Achievement Award recipient |publisher=Alberta Media Production Industries Association |year=2013 |access-date=April 20, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130811170248/http://ampia.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/2013-AFT-Finalist-Dave-Thomas-1-Sheet-FINAL.pdf |archive-date=August 11, 2013 |url-status=dead }}
In 2015 Thomas joined the writing staff of NBC's The Blacklist as a consulting producer.
In 2020 life-sized statues of Thomas and Rick Moranis as their characters Bob and Doug McKenzie were put in place at the ICE District Sports Arena in Edmonton, Alberta.{{Cite web|url=https://edifyedmonton.com/urban/community/the-sctv-monument-is-a-reality/|title = The SCTV Monument is a Reality|date = March 25, 2020}}
Also in 2020, the Governor-General of Canada announced that Thomas was being appointed to the Order of Canada,{{cite web|url=https://www.gg.ca/en/activities/2020/governor-general-announces-114-new-appointments-order-canada|title=Governor General Announces 114 New Appointments to the Order of Canada|date=November 26, 2020}} Canada's highest civilian award.
In 2021, Thomas and Max Allan Collins teamed to write a sci-fi mystery novel, The Many Lives of Jimmy Leighton.{{cite web| url=https://edmontonjournal.com/entertainment/books/dave-thomas-and-max-allan-collins-take-mystery-to-the-multiverse | title= Dave Thomas and Max Allan Collins take mystery to the multiverse | work= edmontonjournal |access-date=November 30, 2021}}
Awards
- ACTRA AWARD for Best Variety Performer in 1978.
- Emmy Award in 1981 for Outstanding Writing in a Variety or Music Program.{{Cite web | title = Dave Thomas – Emmy Awards, Nominations and Wins | url = https://www.emmys.com/bios/dave-thomas | access-date = 2020-10-18 | website = Television Academy | language = en}}
- Juno Award for Best Canadian Comedy Album of the Year in 1981.
- Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album Nominated in 1983
- Juno Award in 1983–84 for Best Comedy Album of the Year.
- People's Choice Award with the cast of Grace Under Fire in 1994.
- Earl Grey Award in 1995 for his work on SCTV.
- In 2002, he and the cast of the SCTV received a star on Canada's Walk of Fame.{{Cite web|title=Canada's Walk of Fame|url=https://www.canadaswalkoffame.com/|access-date=2020-10-18|website=Canada's Walk of Fame|language=en-CA}}
- Emmy Award in 2006 – Outstanding Achievement in Content for Non-Traditional Delivery Platforms – Thomas and his company Animax won this award for ESPN's Off Mikes
- Lifetime Achievement Award from Humber College Toronto in November 2009.
- Honorary Doctor of Letters from McMaster University in 2009
- AMPIA Special Achievement Award from Alberta Media Production Industries Association in 2013
- Honoured at the 2013 AMPIA Awards for his contribution to film and television.{{cite web | last1 = Sandor | first1 = Steven | date = April 24, 2013 | url = http://avenueedmonton.com/blogs/sctvs-dave-thomas-to-be-honoured-at-ampia-awards | title = SCTV's Dave Thomas to be Honoured at AMPIA Awards | website = Avenue Edmonton | via = avenueedmonton.com | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130723112947/http://avenueedmonton.com/blogs/sctvs-dave-thomas-to-be-honoured-at-ampia-awards | archive-date = 2013-07-23 }}
- In 2020, Dave Thomas was appointed as a member of the Order of Canada.{{cite web|url=https://www.gg.ca/en/activities/2020/governor-general-announces-114-new-appointments-order-canada|title=Governor General Announces 114 New Appointments to the Order of Canada |date=November 26, 2020 }}
- In 2020, life-sized statues of Thomas and Rick Moranis as their characters Bob and Doug McKenzie were put in place at the ICE District Sports Arena in Edmonton, Alberta.
Filmography
= Television =
class="wikitable sortable"
!Year !Title !Role !Notes |
1976–1982
|Doug McKenzie, various characters |Main cast |
1978
|Home to Stay Television MOW |Petrie |Television film |
1979
|Riel |Militia Captain |Television film |
1984
|data-sort-value="Get Along Gang, The" | The Get Along Gang |Leland Lizard (voice) |Episode: "Pilot" |
1990
|data-sort-value="Dave Thomas Comedy Show, The" | The Dave Thomas Comedy Show |Himself |5 episodes; also writer, producer, and director |
1991
|Lionel Tower |Episode: "Tower of Power" |
1992
|Boris Badenov |Television film |
1993
|King Arthur (voice) |
1993–1998
|Russell Norton |Main cast |
1994
|data-sort-value="Larry Sanders Show, The" | The Larry Sanders Show |Himself |Episode: "Headwriter" |
1994–1996
|data-sort-value="Red Green Show, The" | The Red Green Show |Ben Franklin |3 episodes |
1995
|Ernie Barrett |Television film |
1996
|Tad Venom (voice) |Episode: "The Longest Weekend" |
1996
|Tom Foster |Television film |
1997
|Pig Dad (voice) |Episode: "Canadian Bacon" |
1997, 2006
|data-sort-value="Simpsons, The" | The Simpsons |Rex Banner, Bob Hope (voice) |2 episodes |
1998
|Mailman, Mean Bob (voice) |
1999–2005
|Lane Prately, various voices |9 episodes |
1999
|Tully |Episode: "Timerity" |
2001
|Chris |Episode: "Canadian Road Trip" |
2001
|Himself |Episode: "The Justice Hole" |
2001
|data-sort-value="Legend of Tarzan, The" | The Legend of Tarzan |Hugo (voice) |7 episodes |
2002
|Harv Hickman, Ernst (voice) |
2002
|New Beachcombers |Dave McGonigal |Television film |
2005
|Trevor |5 episodes |
2006
|Dr. Bertner |Episode: "Must Find Toes" |
2007
|Bob & Doug McKenzie's Two-Four Anniversary |Doug McKenzie |Television film; documentary |
2009–2011
|Doug McKenzie |Main cast (9 episodes); also creator and producer |
2009
|Various voices |Also producer and writer |
2011–2012
|Agent Todd (voice) |
2012
|Bill Duffy |Episode: "Shadow" |
2012–2015
|Burt Aukerman |4 episodes |
2013, 2017
|Andrew Jursic, Dick Scarn |2 episodes; also producer and writer |
2013
|Chuck Gerussi |Episode: "P.S. I Love You" |
2013
|Jesco |5 episodes |
2015–2016
|data-sort-value="Blacklist, The" | The Blacklist |N/A |Producer and writer (23 episodes) |
2019–2020
|Cleve Kelso (voice) |
= Film =
class="wikitable sortable"
!Year !Title !Role !Notes |
1980
|Howie | |
1981
|M.C. | |
1983
|Doug McKenzie |Also director |
1985
|Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird |Sam Sleaze | |
1986
|Jerry Swit | |
1987
|Bob Hope (voice) |Uncredited |
1987
|Mayor Upton | |
1988
|Gary Marcus | |
1989
|Rocket Boy |Rocket Boy |Television film |
1989
|data-sort-value="Experts, The" | The Experts |N/A |Director |
1993
|Larry | |
1993
|Highmaster | |
1993
|Ghost Mom |N/A |Director |
1997
|Thunder-Karlsson (voice) |
2000
|Willy Drucker | |
2001
|Harold Grisham | |
2002
|Fancy Dancing |Billy Gemmill | |
2002
|Carl Hughes | |
2003
|Tuke (voice) |
2003
|Fred Kablinski | |
2004
|Omar Olson |Also director and writer |
2004
|Red | |
2005
|Pastor Timmons | |
2005
|data-sort-value="Aristocrats, The" | The Aristocrats |Himself |Documentary |
2006
|Tuke (voice) |
= Video games =
Awards and nominations
class="wikitable" | ||||
Year | Association | Category | Work | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1981 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Writing in a Variety or Music Program | SCTV (shared with other writers) | {{Win}} |
1982 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Writing in a Variety or Music Program | SCTV (shared with other writers) | {{Nom}} |
1983 | Grammy Awards | Best Comedy Album | The Great White North – Bob and Doug McKenzie | {{Nom}} |
1983–84 | Juno Awards | Juno Award for Comedy Album of the Year | The Great White North – Bob and Doug McKenzie | {{Win}} |
1994 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite New TV Comedy | Grace Under Fire | {{Win}} |
1995 | Gemini Awards | Earle Grey Award for Best Cast | SCTV | {{Win}} |
2005 | 27th Sports Emmy Awards | Outstanding Achievement In Content For Non-Traditional Delivery Platforms | Off Mikes – Writer for Animax | {{Win}} |
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb name|0858686|Dave Thomas}}
- {{discogs artist|Dave Thomas (6)}}
- [https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/dave-thomas Entry at thecanadianencyclopedia.ca]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20051216011636/http://godspell.ca/dave/ Dave Thomas] page at [http://godspell.ca Godspell.ca] (archive)
- [http://www.animaxent.com Animax Entertainment] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040525163202/http://animaxent.com/ |date=May 25, 2004 }}
- [http://www.cbc.ca/thehour/video.php?id=1550 Dave Thomas on 'The Hour']
{{Dave Thomas}}
{{Bob & Doug McKenzie}}
{{EmmyAward ComedyVarietyMusicWriting 1980s}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Thomas, Dave}}
Category:20th-century Canadian comedians
Category:20th-century Canadian male actors
Category:21st-century Canadian comedians
Category:21st-century Canadian male actors
Category:Actors from St. Catharines
Category:Canadian emigrants to the United States
Category:Canadian male comedians
Category:Canadian male film actors
Category:Canadian male television actors
Category:Canadian male television writers
Category:Canadian television writers
Category:Canadian male voice actors
Category:Canadian people of Scottish descent
Category:Canadian people of Welsh descent
Category:Canadian sketch comedians
Category:Canadian television personalities
Category:Comedians from Ontario
Category:Film directors from Hamilton, Ontario
Category:Male actors from Ontario
Category:McMaster University alumni
Category:Members of the Order of Canada
Category:People from Dundas, Ontario