Alan Thicke
Alan Thicke was born in Kirkland Lake, Ontario, Canada on March 1st, 1947 and is the TV Actor. At the age of 69, Alan Thicke biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, TV shows, and networth are available.
At 69 years old, Alan Thicke has this physical status:
Alan Thicke (born Alan Willis Jeffrey, 1947-2016) was a Canadian actor, singer, comedian, game and talk show host.
Robin Thicke's father is the father of singer Robin Thicke.
Thicke was inducted into the Walk of Fame in Canada in 2013.
Thicke was best known for his role as Dr..
Growing Pains, Jason Seaver of the 1980s.
Thicke died in Burbank, California, United States, on December 13, 2016.
Early life
Thicke was born in Kirkland Lake, Ontario, the son of Shirley "Joan" Greer, a nurse, and William Jeffrey, a stockbroker. In 1953, the two married. Brian Thicke, a physician, remarried his mother, and they moved to Elliot Lake. Alan Thicke graduated from Elliot Lake Secondary School in 1965 and was crowned the homecoming king. He continued to attend the University of Western Ontario as a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity.
Personal life
Thicke's first marriage, to actress Gloria Loring's Days of Our Lives, lasted from 1970 to 1984; they had two sons, Brennan and Robin. Thicke began dating Kristy Swanson, a 17-year-old girl, in 1987 at the age of 40. They were engaged two years ago, but never married. He married Miss World 1990 Gina Tolleson on August 13, 1994, and had a child, Carter William Thicke, before his divorce was finalized on September 29, 1999. In 1999, he met Tanya Callau in Miami, where he was a celebrity host and she was a model. They were married from 2005 to his death.
Career
In 1975, Thicke hosted "Face The Music" on CHCH-TV in Niagara Television, which would not be related in any way to the Sandy Frank Productions' version in 1980-81, as well as a Canadian game show "First Impressions" in Montreal, which was not similar to the Sandy Frank Productions' version in 1980-81. In 1997, he hosted a television version of the board game Pictionary. On the Game Show Network in the early 2000s, he hosted the All New 3's a Crowd.
Norman Lear hired Thicke to produce and lead Fernwood 2 Night's writing crew, a tongue-in-cheek talk show based on Lear's earlier work, Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. He appeared on The Alan Hamel Show, a popular daytime talk show on Canadian television, mainly hosted by Alan Hamel in the 1970s. The Hamel series was discontinued in the early 1980s when it was replaced by the Alan Thicke Show. Prime Cuts, a prime-time spinoff that consisted of edited highlights from the talk show, was created at one point by the show. Thicke of the Night, an American syndicated late-night talk show, was later contracted by the artist to appear on Tinsel of the Night. Heavily promoted himself ahead of being on NBC's The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, Thicke of the Night, was short-lived.
Dancing Pros Live, a traveling dance performance on tour of the United States, appeared in 2014 and 2015.
Thicke had a fruitful career as a TV theme song composer, often working with his then-wife Gloria Loring on these projects, which included the themes from the famous sitcoms Diff'rent Strokes and The Facts of Life. He also wrote a number of television game show themes, including The Wizard of Odds (for which he also performed the vocal introduction), The Joker's Wild, Celebrity Sweepstakes, The Diamond Head Game, Animal Crack-Ups (which he co-wrote with his brother Todd Thicke and Gary Pickus), and Wheel of Fortune's original theme. Thicke was a well-known songwriter. He co-wrote "Sara," Bill Champlin's solo hit and also included on the latter's Runaway album (1981).
Starting in the late 1970s, Thicke produced a number of television programs, including Anne Murray Christmas specials for the CBC.
On the family sitcom Growing Pains, Thicke portrayed Jason Seaver, a psychiatrist and father. Jason was moving his psychiatry practice into the home to be closer to the family's children when the family's children were born, while family matriarch Maggie, played by Joanna Kerns, resumed her work as a reporter. Growing Pains first appeared on ABC in 1985 and continued until 1992.
Thicke appeared in two reunion TV films, The Growing Pains Movie (2000) and Growing Pains (2004).
When Joan Lunden was replaced by Regis Philbin in 1983, he co-hosted the Walt Disney World Very Merry Christmas Parade (now the Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade). From 1987 to 1988, Thicke hosted the Crystal Light National Aerobic Championship.
Thicke appeared as Dr. Jonas Carson, who designs an android that looks exactly like a human teenage boy (played by Jay Underwood), and he "adopts" him as his son in the Disney Channel film Not Quite Human in 1987. In two sequels, 1989's Not Quite Human II and 1992's Still Not Quite Human, Thicke will reprise his role as Jonas Carson.
He hosted the Miss USA Pageant in El Paso, Texas, in 1988, replacing Bob Barker (who resigned due to fur being involved in the pageants). In Taipei, Taiwan, Barker was revived as host of the 1988 Miss Universe Pageant (along with Tracy Scoggins). Dick Clark was named host of the 1989 Miss USA Pageant in Mobile, Alabama, and John Forsythe as host of the 1989 Miss Universe Pageant in Cancn, Mexico.
Thicke then went on to host a large number of television shows. In 1989, he co-hosted the TV special Opening of SkyDome in Toronto, which aired on CBC radios around Canada. In 2004, he hosted the Miss Universe Canada Pageant in Ontario.
Thicke appeared in the pilot episode of the sitcom Hangin' with Mr. Cooper in 1992. He appeared in the end-credits scene alongside series actor Mark Curry, casually referring to the pilot episode being shot on the same set used as the Seavers' home on Growing Pains.
Thicke appeared on the American television series Hope & Gloria, which lasted for 35 episodes. On NBC, he hosted Celebrity Cookdown in April 2006, in which celebrities were partnered with famous chefs in a cooking competition. In 2006, he appeared in La La Land as himself. Thicke appeared on the Bold and the Beautiful in August 2006 and 2007. In addition, Thicke appears in the 2007 film Alpha Dog as the father of the lead character's girlfriend.
In 2008, Thicke appeared as Jim Jarlewski in Douglas Coupland's television series version of his jPod. In Robin Scherbatsky's second "Robin Sparkles" music video, he appeared in "How I Met Your Mother" as the father in the How I Met Your Mother episode "Sandcastles in the Sand" in the same year. In the episodes "The Rough Patch," "Glitter," "P.S." He appeared as himself. "I Love You" and "The Rehearsal Dinner" are two of our "recieving dinner.
Thicke performed on Adult Swim's Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job. He made a guest appearance on the web series Star-ving in the same month. He appeared in The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard in 2009. Thicke appeared on the 1000th episode of Attack of the Show on July 10, 2009, and he performed a song with Kevin Pereira and Olivia Munn.
"The Boys in the Band" was the season six finale for Just Shoot Me. He appeared on a few episodes of Worst Handyman 5 in Canada. Thicke appeared on Tosh.0, a television show in 2010. In October 2010, he appeared on Don't Forget the Lyrics, where he worked with the charities ProCon.org and the Alan Thicke Center for diabetes research.
He appeared on ABC's Celebrity Wife Swap in March 2013. Gilbert Gottfried, a comedian, swapped wives with him.
Thicke appeared in the pilot episode of NBC's This Is Us in October 2016.
Thicke, a spokesman for the Canadian division of Woolco department stores from 1990 to 1994, was the spokesman for the department stores until its demise in 1994. Thicke debuted in a television commercial for Tahiti Village, a Las Vegas time-share resort. Thicke debuted in television advertisements in 2009 supporting CCS Medical, a manufacturer of home-deliverred diabetes supplies. Thicke first appeared in ad spots for Optima Tax Relief in 2014.
Thicke, a spokesperson for Cambridge Life Solutions, a Canadian company that promised to eliminate unsecured consumer debt by a means known as debt compromise, was outlawed in the United States by the Federal Trade Commission as a predatory activity in 2010 and was then barred in Ontario in 2015. According to Scott Hannah, founder and CEO of the Credit Counseling Society of Canada, the corporation, which was accused of "bilking thousands of homeless Canadians," has grown to dominate half of the Canadian market due to Thicke's selection "as a spokesman who was highly credible to Canadians."
Thicke lent his name and celebrity to support the Alan Thicke Center for diabetes research, as previously stated. Thicke and Gloria Loring, co-hosts of Telemiracle, an annual 20-hour telethon that alternated between Saskatoon and Regina, Saskatchewan, and the Kinsmen Club's programs.