He received the Boston Film Critics Award, an American Comedy Award, a Sierra Award and a tribute from AFI for his portrayal of Buck Laughlin in Best in Show. For his performance in Waiting for Guffman, Willard received an American Comedy Award nomination and a Screen Actors Guild nomination for Funniest Supporting Actor. Willard appeared in several Christopher Guest films, such as A Mighty Wind, in which he played Mike LaFontaine (known for his catchphrase "Eh-whahappen'?") Best in Show, where he played Buck Laughlin, a dog show announcer with an unending stream of bad jokes and off-color comments Waiting for Guffman, playing Ron Albertson, a travel agent who performs in amateur stage productions with his wife This Is Spinal Tap, where he played a lieutenant on the military base where Spinal Tap perform and For Your Consideration as an obnoxious entertainment television show anchor. He played Mayor Deebs in Roxanne, starring Steve Martin. He and Mull joined up again for the mockumentary The History of White People in America. Willard voiced travel agent Wally Kogen in the 1999 episode " Sunday, Cruddy Sunday" for The Simpsons.įrom 2001 to 2002, he played the father of five children on Maybe It's Me, and also guest-starred in an episode of The Weird Al Show. That same year, Willard guest-starred in three episodes of Sister, Sister, starring Tia and Tamera Mowry Willard played Carl Mitushka, a teacher at Roosevelt High who often spoke popular teenage slang terms in order to sound cool to his students. The couple married in the episode " December Bride," and Scott became a recurring character during the series' final two seasons. In 1995, Willard reunited with his Fernwood co-star playing Scott, the romantic partner of Mull's character Leon Carp, on Roseanne. As part of that show, on September 21, 1990, he appeared in episode 7 of the cult public-access television show Decoupage with Summer Caprice.
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In 1990, Willard hosted the cable TV show Access America on the Ha! Comedy Network. Willard hosted the talk show What's Hot, What's Not, which aired from 1985 to 1986 and earned him a daytime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Talk Show Host. Follies, and was host to the Krofft puppets portraying political figures of the time. From 1987 to 1989 he starred as a bartender/straightman in Sid and Marty Krofft's D.C. He played Tom Osbourne in the 1987 Academy Award–winning short film Ray's Male Heterosexual Dance Hall.
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He was an original cast member of the NBC series Real People in 1979, then again from 1981 to 1983. Willard achieved wider fame in 1977–78 as Barth Gimble's ( Martin Mull) sidekick and announcer Jerry Hubbard on the Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman spinoffs Fernwood 2 Night, Forever Fernwood and America 2-Night, which parodied the nighttime talk shows of the day. They performed sketches on The Tonight Show With Johnny Carson over 50 times, and appeared regularly on This is Tom Jones. He was a founding member of the improvisational comedy group Ace Trucking Company, whose other members included Michael Mislove and Bill Saluga. One of Willard's earliest performing jobs was at The Second City, Chicago, where he shared the stage with Robert Klein and David Steinberg. He later reported that the audience at one screening booed when his character interrupted an attempted sexual assault of the female lead. Willard's film debut was in the 1967 exploitation film Teenage Mother. They were offered roles in the television series Get Smart and The Carol Burnett Show, but the offers fell through due to poor management. They later performed as Willard & Grecco in the Greenwich Village area, found some success touring, and appeared on The Dean Martin Show, The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour and The Tonight Show.
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His initial work included a production of Desperate Hours at a local YMCA where he worked with future comedy partner Vic Grecco.
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Willard's stage career began when he moved to New York in the late 1950s. He was stationed in Germany while serving in the United States Army. Willard graduated from the Kentucky Military Institute in 1951 and the Virginia Military Institute in 1955. His father, Frederick Charles Willard, died in 1945 when he was 12 years old. Willard's mother, Ruth (née Weinman) was a housewife. Frederic Charles Willard was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on September 18, 1933.