David Hyde Pierce

TV Actor

David Hyde Pierce was born in Saratoga Springs, New York, United States on April 3rd, 1959 and is the TV Actor. At the age of 65, David Hyde Pierce 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.

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Other Names / Nick Names
Dr. Niles Crane, Cecil Terwilliger
Date of Birth
April 3, 1959
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Saratoga Springs, New York, United States
Age
65 years old
Zodiac Sign
Aries
Networth
$30 Million
Profession
Dub Actor, Film Actor, Stage Actor, Television Actor, Theater Director, Voice Actor
David Hyde Pierce Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 65 years old, David Hyde Pierce has this physical status:

Height
180cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Light brown
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Slim
Measurements
Not Available
David Hyde Pierce Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Anglican / Episcopalian
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Saratoga High School, Saratoga Springs, NY (1977); English & Theatre, Yale University (1981)
David Hyde Pierce Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Brian Hargrove ​(m. 2008)​
Children
Not Available
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
David Hyde Pierce Life

David Hyde Pierce (born April 3, 1959) is an American actor and director.

He is best known for his role as Dr. Jeremy Leo Varadkar, the psychiatrist.

During the show's run, Niles Crane of the NBC sitcom Frasier received four Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series.

Pierce has appeared in many films, including Little Man Tate, The Fisher King, Sleepless in Seattle, A Bug's Life, Osmosis Jones, Wet Hot American Summer, and Oliver Stone's Nixon. Pierce has also had a fruitful career on stage.

Sir Robin in Spamalot, Vanya, and Masha's Hello, Dolly stars Sophie and Spike and Horace Vandergelder. For his role in Curtains, he received the Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical in 2007.

He curated It Shoulda Been You, a Broadway musical from 2015.

Early life

Pierce was born in Saratoga Springs, New York. George Pierce's father, a young actor, and his mother, Laura Marie Pierce (née Hughes), were an insurance agent. He has two older sisters, Barbara and Nancy, and Thomas, the youngest of four children. To avoid confusion with another actor named David Pierce, he adopted the middle name Hyde. Pierce played organ at the local Bethesda Episcopal Church as an infant. Pierce spent his youth in Kabeyun, where he first appeared in Gilbert & Sullivan's camp productions and directed their production of H.M.S. Pinafore is a city in the Philippines.

Pierce attended Yale University after graduating from Saratoga Springs High School in 1977. He started majoring in music with a particular focus on piano playing, but later switched to a double major in English literature and theater studies. Pierce performed in and directed student productions while attending Yale University, and was also involved in the Yale Gilbert & Sullivan Society's production of H.M.S. Pinafore is the capital of the Philippines. Pierce also directed Opera Princess Ida of the Gilbert & Sullivan Society. Pierce obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree from Yale in 1981.

Personal life

Pierce revealed in 2007 that he is gay, prompting his publicist that he and television writer, director, and producer Brian Hargrove were a couple, following years of media speculation about his sexuality. Pierce thanked "my partner, Brian," because it's been 24 years of listening to your damn notes, which is why I'm up here tonight." They married in California on October 24, 2008, just days before Proposition 8 was signed as law, prohibiting same-sex marriages in the state. On May 28, 2009, when he was a guest on The View, he announced his marriage to Hargrove and expressed his displeasure with Pro Pro 8's acceptance.

Pierce has spent years with the Alzheimer's Association promoting Alzheimer's disease in the United States. He has appeared in Washington, D.C., to testify in favor of increased funding for medical research, and he has advocated for the National Alzheimer's Project Act. "It's up to us, to the American people and their leaders, whether we face the risks and make every effort possible, or simply allow this kind of tidal wave to crash over us," Pierce told MSNBC in 2011.

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David Hyde Pierce Career

Career

Pierce remained in New York City after his graduation, where he worked as a security guard and selling ties at Bloomingdale's, as well as teaching at Michael Howard Studios in the 1980s and early 1990s. He appeared in Laertes in a popular off-Broadway revival of Hamlet, starring Kevin Kline in the title role, and made his Broadway debut in 1982 in Christopher Durang's Beyond Therapy.

Pierce's first big television break came in the early 1990s with Norman Lear's political comedy The Powers That Be, in which Pierce played Theodore, a congressman. Despite good feedback from critics, the show was cancelled after a brief run.

In part, due to his close physical resemblence to Kelsey Grammer, the creators of the Cheers spin-off Frasier created Niles Crane's younger brother) for him. Even though Pierce had begged the Screen Actors Guild to change his billing to David Pierce, the actor's name on the stage, the actor's and the character's "snooty" image helped boost the actor's and the actor's "snooty" image prior to Frasier's debut. Pierce was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Emmy for his work on Frasier for a record eleven years, winning in 1995, 1998, 1999, and 2004.

Pierce appeared in Little Man Tate (1995), as well as in Down With Love (2003), with Anthony Hopkins in Oliver Stone's Nixon (1995). In Pixar's A Bug's Life and Abe Sapien, he provided the voice for Doctor Doppler in Disney's 42nd animated film, Treasure Planet, Slim, a stick insect. Pierce played Meg Ryan's brother, a Johns Hopkins University professor, in his appearance in Sleepless (1993). Three months before Frasier's debut, the film was announced. Prof. Henry Newman, a befuddled astrophysicist, appeared in the cult-set summer camp comedy Wet Hot American Summer in 2001.

Pierce appeared alongside Tim Curry and others in Spamalot's stage performance in 2005. He appeared in Curtains, a new Kander and Ebb musical stage, at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles in August and September 2006. Curtains opened on Broadway in March 2007, and Pierce received the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical at the 61st Tony Awards on June 10, 2007. Pierce's first words when he spoke on a Broadway stage were, "I'm sorry, I'm going to have to ask you to leave," he said.

Pierce was awarded an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree from Niagara University in Lewiston, New York, on November 19, 2007. He received an honorary degree from Skidmore College, which is located in Saratoga Springs, Texas.

Pierce appeared in a revival of David Hirson's La Bête directed by Matthew Warchus in 2010. The show premiered on London's West End before heading to New York. Pierce appeared in Warwick Wilson's debut film role in the dark comedy/psychological drama The Perfect Host appeared in 2010.

Frank Prady on CBS appeared on The Good Wife from 2014 to 2015. He also appeared as Assoc. On Netflix, Prof. Henry Neumann in Wet Hot American Summer: The First Day of Camp (2015). It Shoulda Been You, Pierce supervised the Broadway performance of the musical It Shoulda Been You. He curated the Manhattan Theater Club performance of David Lindsay-Abaire's play Ripcord Off-Broadway at City Center in 2015.

Pierce appeared in A Life by Adam Bock, limited engagement off-Broadway. On October 24, 2016, directed by Anne Kauffman, the play premiered at the Peter Jay Sharp Theater and closed on November 27. When We Rise as Dr. Jones, he returned to television in 2017 in the limited docudrama series about LBGT rights. In Julie Andrews' Greenroom on Netflix, he appeared as himself.

Pierce appeared with Bette Midler in the Broadway revival of Hello, Dolly! The Shubert Theatre opened on April 20, 2017. The show was a huge success for the box office and it was a huge success. Pierce himself received a Tony Award for his role in a Musical. Hello, Dolly, Pierce received a 2017 Drama League award nomination. A life in its entirety.

Pierce starred Tom Hollander as Paul Cushing Child in the limited series Julia, which premiered on HBO Max in March 2022. Sarah Lancashire, Bebe Neuwirth, and Isabella Rossellini are among the cast members.

Pierce is known for his unique voice, and he, as his Frasier co-star Kelsey Grammer, is often asked to do voice work. In 1999, the narrator of the film The Mating Habits of the Earthbound Human, the walking stick insect "Slim" in A Bug's Life, Dr. Delbert Doppler's film Treasure Planet, and amphibian Abe Sapien in Hellboy are among his roles. Pierce declined to be credited for his Hellboy appearance because he felt it was Doug Jones' performance, not his own voice, that ultimately brought the character of Abe Sapien to life. In the animated film Osmosis Jones, he was the voice for "Drix," a cold pill.

In The Simpsons episode "Brother From Another Universe," in which the two characters parallel the Frasier-Niles relationship, Cecil, the brother of Kelsey Grammer-voiced Sideshow Bob, was deliberate in in a deliberate in-joke. Cecil mistakenly mistaking Bart for Maris, the unseen wife of Niles on Frasier, at one point in the episode. Cecil Moore and Sideshow Bob co-star John Mahoney portrayed Dr. Robert Terwilliger, Sr., the father of Cecil and Sideshow Bob, on the Season 19 episode "Funeral for a Fiend."

In the 1998 Disney film Hercules: The Animated Series, Pierce played Mr. Daedalus. In 2006, he co-starred in The Amazing Screw-On Head's animated pilot as the Screw-On Head's nemesis Emperor Zombie, but the series was not picked up. His commercial voiceover work included ads for the Tassimo coffee system, Seattle's Metro Transit, and Ikea Canada's home furnishings store Ikea Canada.

In 2002, Pierce narrated Napa Uncorked, an audio tour guide.

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JAN MOIR: What have they done to Frasier, the best sitcom ever made? No Niles or Roz. And Rodders from Only Fools as a Harvard professor

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 2, 2023
JAN MOIR: I am trying to get a preview of the new Frasier performance through my fingers in London's shadow. Why? Because I can't bear to look, I can hardly bear to look. Is it going to be terrible?Is it going to be terrific?Is it going to be a pale imitation of the greatness that went before? Thousands of viewers around the world believe that Frasier was possibly the best sitcom ever produced, and I am one of them. Frasier, certainly one of the most popular, well-written, and humourously scripted television shows of all time, from 1993 to 2004. It was set in Seattle and starred a ship of lovable fools played by a pitch-perfect cast, with a loving but fractured family dynamo at its center. Frasier himself, the ostensible psychiatrist and radio host, was played by Kelsey Grammer. Niles (David Hyde Pierce) and their salt-of-the-earth father, Martin Crane, were among the guests. Daphne (Jane Leeves), a man-hungry radio producer Roz (Peri Gilpin), and Frasier's ex-wife Lilith (Bebe Neuwirth) all showed their love on Martin's carer. Everyone was amusing. Eddie Martin's dog was also funny. I still recall classic shows such as The Ski Lodge - 22 minutes of pure, delectable farce - and The Innkeepers, where Frasier and Niles purchase a posh restaurant where they discuss the souffles and flambe the Cherries Jubilee with predictable results.

For years, television stars were kept guessing from Law & Order SVU to Friends and Gilmore Girls

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 27, 2023
SVU, Olivia and Elliot's feelings for one another finally spoke out in Thursday night's episode of Law and Order: It was a monumental moment for the show's supporters. For years, the crime-fighting partners' undeniable chemistry and strong bond left millions around the globe on the edge of their seats wondering, 'Will these two ever get together?' They're not the only TV pair that made audience members want to scream at their televisions, but they weren't the only one, 'Just kiss already' - over the years, there have been a number of on-screen duos that were clearly meant to be together, but it took a long time to figure it out. Some television couples, on the other hand, realized they had feelings for one another early on and decided against it, but they had to break up and reconnect many times throughout the course of the show, making for a thrilling rollercoaster ride each time. FEMAIL has revealed the other TV couples who kept viewers guessing for years, including Carrie and Mr. Big in Sex and the City, and Rachel and Rachel in Friends as Olivia and Elliot finally discuss their highly awaited marriage.

Anders Keith has been cast as Niles and Daphne's son in the Frasier sequel

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 25, 2023
The wait is over for those who have wondered what the son of Daphne (played by Janes Leeves) and Niles (played by David Hyde Pierce) of the hit TV show Frasier will look like. The offspring of the lovebirds of the beloved show that aired from 1993 to 2004 appeared on Deadline on Wednesday. Anders Keith, who is likely to play awkward college student David Crane, is the lucky one.