Christopher Collins
Christopher Collins was born in Orange, New Jersey, United States on August 30th, 1949 and is the Voice Actor. At the age of 44, Christopher Collins biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Christopher Lawrence Latta (born Christopher Lawrence Latta, 1949 - June 12, 1994) was an American film actor, voice actor, and comedian.
In the United States, he is best known as the voice of Cobra Commanders.
In the first Transformers animated film, Joe animated sequence and Starscream.
He appeared in a few guest appearances on the Star Trek series The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine as well as numerous television series and films.
He had a fruitful stand-up comedy career.
Early life
Christopher Lawrence Latta was born in Orange, New Jersey, to Robert Latta, a New York stage actor, and Jane Morin, an advertising executive. He grew up in Manhattan, New York City,'s Morningside Heights (also known as "West Harlem") section. Since his stepfather adopted him, Christopher Collins Collins became his legal name. He grew up in Harlem and said that his ultra-liberal parents had relocated the family "so he could meet some Negroes."
After a year at New York University, he studied acting, dance, recording, and mime.
Personal life
Collins married twice and had three children. He divided his time between New York, Boston, and Los Angeles before settling in Los Angeles in 1983. He migrated to Ventura, California, in 1991.
In an interview, Flint Dille recalled:
In a 2021 podcast, comedian Marc Maron described Collins as "just like this guy, like he was a...drugs and booze, and just like...creepy."
Career
In the mid-1970s, he acted on the New York and Boston stage and did voice-over work for Boston radio station WBCN.
Collins's stand-up career peaked in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when he performed in most of the major comedy venues in the United States and Canada. In 1990, he won the San Francisco International Stand-Up Comedy Competition.
At the beginning of his act, he entered in a black trench coat and ordered the audience to applaud the person who introduced him. He picked an audience member who failed to applaud and told him he had to "clap alone". He told the audience he was not a comedian, but a "psychotic who learned to market his problem". His comic persona was a loud, angry, mentally unstable man who liked to intimidate the audience. He was a frequent featured performer on An Evening at the Improv and Caroline's Comedy Hour.
Collins made his animation voice acting debut as one of the English dubbers of the 1979 anime series Space Battleship Yamato (also called Star Blazers). He was most recognizable in that series as the voice of space marine Sgt. Knox during the Comet Empire installment.
When he began regular voice work, he adopted the stage name Chris Latta, as another Screen Actors Guild actor was performing as Chris Collins.
In 1983, Collins began voicing Cobra Commander for a five-part G.I. Joe animated mini-series. He continued voicing the role in a second five-part animated mini-series in 1984, a regular animated series beginning in 1985, a 1987 direct-to-video animated movie and a 1989 animated series. Starting in 1984, Collins voiced the Decepticon Starscream for the Transformers animated series. He voiced other G.I. Joe and Transformers characters in these series as well as in toy commercials. These included the Autobot scientist Wheeljack, the Autobots' human friend Sparkplug Witwicky, the G.I. Joe Marine Gung-Ho and the Dreadnok Ripper. In Inhumanoids, he voiced D'Compose and Tendril. In Visionaries: Knights of the Magical Light, he voiced Darkstorm and Cravex. He provided voices in The Real Ghostbusters, credited as Chris Collins. He played the live-action role of King Koopa in King Koopa's Kool Kartoons in 1989 before the role was taken over by Patrick Pinney.
In The Simpsons, Collins originated the voice of Mr. Burns in the first-season episodes "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", "The Telltale Head", and "Homer's Odyssey", and recorded lines as Moe Szyslak for "The Telltale Head" and "Some Enchanted Evening" (but was dubbed over in the latter). Along with several other early Simpsons voice actors, he left during the first season. Hank Azaria took over the voice of Moe, while Harry Shearer assumed the role of Mr. Burns. In a 2018 interview with GQ, Azaria commented on replacing Collins as Moe, saying that he did not find out until years later that he had replaced another actor. Azaria said that when he asked why he had replaced Collins, he was told by Matt Groening, "He (Collins) was great... He was just a dick. His voice was great, he was just kind of jerky to everyone." Azaria continued, "Think about how awful—that guy could have been on The Simpsons his whole life. Lesson to you kids: Always be nice!"
Later in the 1980s, he adopted the stage name of Christopher Collins and acted in many live-action television series and motion pictures. In Star Trek: The Next Generation, he played Klingon Captain Kargan in the episode "A Matter of Honor" and Pakled Captain Grebnedlog in the episode "Samaritan Snare". In Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, he portrayed two different Markalians: Durg in "The Passenger", and an unnamed assistant to The Albino in "Blood Oath". In Married... with Children, he played Roger, one of Al Bundy's bowling buddies and a member of NO MA'AM (National Organization of Men Against Amazonian Masterhood). He portrayed a mugger on an episode of Seinfeld titled "The Subway". He appears as Mr. Forbes in a first-season episode of NYPD Blue titled "Abandando Abandoned".
His first live-action feature film appearance is a bit part as the sharing husband in the film Road House. He appeared in True Identity, Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot, Blue Desert, and A Stranger Among Us.
On April 28, 2012, Collins was posthumously inducted into the Transformers Hall of Fame. His daughter Abigail accepted on his behalf.