Richard Dean Anderson
Richard Dean Anderson was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States on January 23rd, 1950 and is the TV Actor. At the age of 74, Richard Dean Anderson biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, TV shows, and networth are available.
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Richard Dean Anderson (born January 23, 1950) is an American actor and producer.
He started his television career in 1976, playing Dr. Stephen Sullivan.
Jeff Webber first appeared in the American soap opera series General Hospital before rising to prominence as the lead actor in the television series MacGyver (1985-1992).
He appeared in films including Through the Eyes of a Killer (1992), Pandora's Clock (1996), and Firehouse (1997). Anderson made his television debut in 1997 as the lead actor of the film Stargate SG-1, a spin-off of the 1994 film Stargate.
He appeared in many capacities from 1997 to 2005, and he had a recurring role from 2005 to 2007.
Since 1997, he has appeared in only one film: Stargate: Continuum, which came out in 2008 as a spin-off film following the Stargate SG-1 series finale in 2007.
(as Major General and later Lieutenant General Jack O'Neill) appeared in Stargate: Atlantis and Stargate: Universe, a sequel to Stargate: Atlantis and Stargate: Universe.
Early life
Anderson was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the oldest of four sons born to Stuart Jay Anderson, a teacher, and Jocelyn Rhae Carter, an artist. He is of Mohawk, Norwegian, Scottish, Finnish-Swedish, and Swedish descent. Anderson, his Finnish-Swedish paternal grandfather, derives from his Finnish-Swedish paternal grandfather.
He grew up in Roseville, Minnesota, where he attended Alexander Ramsey High School. As a child, his aspirations to become a professional hockey player were shattered when he broke both arms three weeks apart while playing hockey for the school team at the age of 18. Anderson was "a hockey nut and a damn good hockey player," according to Hockey Hall of Fame member Stan Mikita as of 2009. He began early in childhood with an interest in music, painting, and acting. He tried to become a jazz musician for a brief period of time.
Anderson trained to be an actor at St. Petersburg. Cloud State University and later Ohio University, but he dropped out before he received his degree because he was "listless." He rode from Minnesota to Alaska right after his freshman year in college. He and his partner and mom then travelled to North Hollywood before settling in Los Angeles. He appeared as a whale handler in a marine mammal show, as the entertainment director of Marineland, a performer in medieval dinner theater, and as a street mime and juggler. He has said that this was "the best of [his] life" and that he would continue to teach juggling, clowning, and other circus arts to disadvantaged youths.
Personal life
Anderson divides his time in Vancouver, Los Angeles, and northern Minnesota. He loves hockey and skiing, and he's self-described "winter sports fanatic." "I had to slow it down a little bit" because of his "a couple of reconstructed knees," he said in 1998. He orchestrated both street and ice hockey games involving cast and crew during SG-1's filming. During the MacGyver years, he was also a racer.
Apryl A. Prose, the mother of his only child, Wylie Quinn Annarose Anderson (born on August 2, 1998), was his partner from 1996 to 2003. Anderson left Stargate SG-1 because he wanted to spend more time with his daughter, "Being a father, I don't know if this is a change," says Anderson. Get off the clock. "Since the baby is my reason for life, I'm able to go to work."
Career
Anderson's first screen appearance was The Birthday Party, a 1975 short film produced by the Marine Reserve Public Affairs Unit to commemorate the United States Marine Corps' founding 200th anniversary of the formation of the United States Marine Corps. Anderson appeared in the American soap opera titled 'General Hospital' as Dr. Jeff Webber from 1976 to 1981. In an episode of The Facts of Life where also served as a backdoor pilot, Anderson later appeared as one half of an interracial couple. Adam in the CBS television series Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1982–1983) was based very closely on the movie of the same name. He appeared on the 22-week Dennis Weaver series Emerald Point, N.A., from 1983-84. Celia Warren (Susan Dey), the wife of naval lawyer Jack Warren (Charles Frank), appeared on CBS on CBS, paired onscreen with Celia Warren (Susan Dey), the wife of naval advocate Jack Warren (Charles Frank). Anderson appeared in Ordinary Heroes, the acclaimed television film that aired in 1986.
Anderson rose to fame in the lead role of Angus MacGyver in the hit television series MacGyver, which ran from 1985 to 1992, and was extremely popular during its seven-year run. Angus MacGyver, also known as MacGyver or MacGyver, was a hero of hope who was known for using a Swiss Army knife rather than a pistol as his weapon of choice. Anderson said he was initially attracted to the role because he was "interested by the prospect of a television hero who had an aversion to guns," while explaining how it differed from popular action heroes of the time and his own resistance to violence.
In 1994, Anderson would produce two sequels to MacGyver. "MacGyver was seven years of being in virtually every frame and having absolutely no life at all," Anderson said after MacGyver's departure.
Anderson sustained a variety of injuries related to doing his own stunt work during the course of the program, some of which needed surgery. When filming an episode midway through the first season of the show, he had a compressed disc in his back; he continued shooting in a "fairly crippled" state for a year and a half before recovering from the accident, but he still suffered from the pain. Anderson called it a "exploded" disc with a "severe sciatic disease disorder."
Anderson appeared in Stargate SG-1, based on the movie Stargate starring Kurt Russell and James Spader from 1997 to 2005. Anderson, the president of Metro–Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), called Anderson himself and asked if he wanted to be involved in the film. Anderson rewatched the Stargate film over and over again and came to the conclusion that the film had "unique potential" and that he had "unique talent" and that he had agreed to work with the Stargate producers. Anderson decided to become involved in the venture if his character was given much more comedic leeway than Kurt Russell's in the film. He also requested that Stargate SG-1 be more of an ensemble performance so that he would not be tackling the plot alone as he did on MacGyver. Anderson says he'll also ad-lib "a lot of lines to bring a slightly sarcastic humor to the story." In season eight, he selected Don S. Davis's suggestion that his character be "promoted" to base commander. Davis was able to retire from acting due to his failing health and Anderson to take over the smaller role, which involved much less on-location shooting so that he could spend more time with his young daughter. Anderson resigned as both actor and producer of Stargate SG-1 in the following seasons, leaving his sizable part to be filled by veteran actors Ben Browder (replacing Anderson as the comedian) and Emmy nominee Beau Bridges (replacing Anderson as Base commander).
On September 14, 2004, then-Air Force Chief-of-Staff General John P. Jumper presented Anderson with an award for his role as actor and executive producer of Stargate SG-1, a series that featured the Air Force in a positive light from its premiere. Anderson was also named an honorary Air Force brigadier general.
In 1995, he co-starred with John de Lancie in Legend, a comic stripe novelist in the Wild West who is obliged to play the part of his own fictional character. Legend began as a TV film, and with the decision to make Legend a series, the original teleplay became the two-hour pilot episode. Many commentators, including John O'Connor of The New York Times, applauded Anderson for his role as Ernest Pratt and Nicodemus Legend.
Anderson, a huge fan of the television show The Simpsons, which he often referred to during his time on SG-1, was invited to guest star on the series in 2005. In the episode "Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang Bang Bang Bang Bang," the actor was kidnapped by Selma and Patty Bouvier, Marge Simpson's sisters' children, his MacGyver character had been their long-serving heartthrob. In describing his unnatural ability to see Jack O'Neill's life, Dan Castellaneta, a voice actor playing Homer Simpson (among other characters), made a guest appearance on Stargate SG-1 ("Citizen Joe") and referred to O'Neill's fondness for The Simpsons.
Anderson briefly reprised his role as Angus MacGyver in 2006, when he appeared in a MasterCard commercial during Super Bowl XL. Although the story follows the "MacGyver Formula," it is certainly satirical of the series, displaying unlikely if not impossible solutions to Anderson's character (in one shot, he cut through a thick rope with a pine-scented air freshener). "The Return of MacGyver" is the MasterCard company's official website for the commercial.
On May 3, 2008, MacGyver's producer, Lee David Zlotoff, announced that a MacGyver film was in production. Anderson expressed an interest in revisiting his role, but the film hasn't been produced or released.
Anderson appeared on MacGyver in what seemed to be a Saturday Night Live advertisement parody starring the show's recurring character MacGruber (portrayed by Will Forte), but it was rather a real commercial for both Saturday Night Live and Pepsi in which the titular character becomes obsessed with the soft drink. During the SNL broadcast on January 31, 2009, this appeared three times, and the second part aired again during Super Bowl XLIII on the following day.
Anderson has appeared in Stargate Atlantis and Stargate Universe, which premiered in October 2009.
Anderson appeared in three episodes of Fairly Legal on USA Network in fall 2010.
Anderson has appeared in six shows in which he has performed himself: MacGyver's Lost Treasure of Atlantis, MacGyver, Legend, Firehouse SG-1, Firehouse, and From Stargate to Atlantis: Sci Fi Lowdown.
For the MacGyver episode "The Negotiator," Anderson wrote "Eau d'Leo."
Anderson created the Gekko Film Corporation in collaboration with Michael Greenburg. With the exception of 2006, the corporation was involved with Stargate SG-1, which was responsible for every episode from 1997 to 2007. Anderson's funding agency has existed for the company long.