Benjamin Edward Stiller (born November 30, 1965) is an American comedian, actor, and film director, the son of Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara, both of whom are veteran comedians and actors. Stiller is best known for his roles in the films There's Something About Mary, Zoolander, A True Underdog Story, Meet the Parents, and its sequel, Meet the Fockers.
Stiller was born in in New York City and grew up in Manhattan, the second child of his famous comedy parents, who frequently took him on the sets of their appearances. He displayed an early interest in film making, making Super 8 movies with his sister and friends. At ten years old, he made his acting debut as a guest on his mother's series Kate McShane.
In 1983, he enrolled as a film student at the University of California, Los Angeles. Stiller lasted nine months before dropping out to relocate back to New York City as he made his way through acting classes, auditioning and trying to find an agent.
He landed a role in the Broadway revival of John Guare's The House of Blue Leaves, alongside John Mahoney, a play which later garnered four Tonys. During its run, Stiller produced a satirical mockumentary whose principal was fellow actor Mahoney. His comedic work was so well received that he followed up with a 10 minute short called "The Hustler of Money," a parody of the Martin Scorsese film The Color of Money featuring him in a send-up of Tom Cruise's Vince character and Mahoney in the Paul Newman role-- only this time as a bowling hustler instead of a pool shark. The short got the attention of Saturday Night Live, which aired it in 1987, and two years later offered him a spot as a writer. In the meantime, he also had a bit part in Steven Spielberg's Empire of the Sun.
In 1989, Stiller wrote and appeared on a season of Saturday Night Live as a featured performer. He was offered his own vehicle on MTV as host and performer in a self-titled comedy sketch show, which led to The Ben Stiller Show on the Fox Network in 1992. The show lasted 12 episodes on FOX-- with a thirteenth unaired episode broadcast by Comedy Central in a later revival. Throughout its short run, the Ben Stiller Show frequently appeared at the bottom of the ratings, even as it garnered critical acclaim, eventually winning the Emmy for "Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing in a Variety or Music Program" after it was cancelled. The show also starred (and launched the careers of) his frequent collaborators Andy Dick, Janeane Garofalo, and Bob Odenkirk.
Stiller directed both Reality Bites and The Cable Guy, to generally mixed reviews. Stiller put aside his directing ambitions to star in There's Something About Mary, which launched Stiller's career into the stratosphere. Another directorial effort, 2001's Zoolander was well-received, showing he could be a bankable star both behind the camera as well as in front of it.
In the parody self-help book they co-authored, Feel This Book, he and frequent co-star Janeane Garofalo wrote about, as they put it, their "train wreck of a relationship", but it was done with a tongue-in-cheek style. During much of the 1990s, he was involved with actress Jeanne Tripplehorn.
Although Stiller is best known for his film roles, he has appeared in many sitcoms, the earliest being the 1997 Friends episode The One With the Screamer playing Rachel's angry boyfriend 'Tommy'. In recent years he has made notable cameos in groundbreaking shows such as Arrested Development and Curb Your Enthusiasm, as well as the British sitcom Extras. In the latter two programs, Stiller appeared as a twisted version of himself: a Hollywood hotshot who is pithy, childish, and hot-tempered. In Arrested Development he took on the role of "Tony Wonder," a bumbling magician.
His film credits include a tyrannical nursing home employee in Happy Gilmore, an evil fitness instructor named Tony Perkis in Heavyweights, a put upon attorney in Zero Effect and a second rate superhero in Mystery Men. He also appeared in dramatic roles as a slimy detective in Black and White and as drug-addicted writer Jerry Stahl in the film version of Stahl's Permanent Midnight.
In July 2006, Stiller announced he would be directing a comedy starring his wife as the lead role. The show will be featured on CBS and will use a single-camera format. Stiller will make several cameos as husband to his wife's character.
Amy Stiller, his older sister, is also an actress.
Princeton University's Class of 2005 inducted Stiller as an honorary member of the class during its "Senior Week" in April 2005.
In 2005, Stiller revealed that he has bipolar disorder, an illness he says runs in his family *.
| Year | Title | Role | 'Other notes |
| 2008 | Madagascar 2 | Alex | (voice) |
| 2007 | The Persuaders | Danny Wilde | |
| Used Guys | Unknown | ||
| 2006 | Tropic Thunder | Unknown | |
| Night at the Museum | Unknown | ||
| In Search of Ted Demme | Himself | ||
| The Pick of Destiny | Guitar Store Dude | ||
| The Mirror | Himself | ||
| 2005 | Danny Roane: First Time Director | Himself | |
| Madagascar | Alex | (voice) | |
| Sledge: The Untold Story | Commander | ||
| 2004 | Meet the Fockers | Gaylord 'Greg' Focker | |
| The Legend of Ron Burgundy | Arturo Mendes | cameo | |
| A True Underdog Story | White Goodman | ||
| Envy | Tim Dingman | ||
| Starksy & Hutch | David Starsky | ||
| Along Came Polly | Reuben Feffer | ||
| 2003 | Nobody Knows Anything! | Peach Expert | (cameo) |
| Duplex | Alex Rose | ||
| Pauly Shore Is Dead | Himself | (cameo) | |
| 2002 | Orange County | The Firefighter | |
| Run Ronnie Run | Himself | ||
| 2001 | The Royal Tenenbaums | Chas Tenenbaum | |
| Zoolander | Derek Zoolander | also Director | |
| 2000 | Meet the Parents | Gaylord 'Greg' Focker | |
| Keeping the Faith | Rabbi Jake Schram | ||
| The Independent | Cop | ||
| 1999 | Black and White | Mark Clear | |
| Mystery Men | Mr. Furious | ||
| The Suburbans | Jay Rose | ||
| 1998 | Permanent Midnight | Jerry Stahl | |
| Your Friends & Neighbors | Jerry | ||
| There's Something About Mary | Ted Stroehmann | ||
| Zero Effect | Steve Arlo | ||
| 1996 | The Cable Guy | Sam Sweet/Stan Sweet | also Director |
| Flirting with Disaster | Mel | ||
| If Lucy Fell | Bwick Elias | ||
| Happy Gilmore | Nursing Home Orderly | ||
| 1995 | Heavyweights | Tony Perkis/Tony Perkis Sr. | |
| 2 stupid dogs | Tony Robbins-style character | ||
| 1994 | Reality Bites | Michael Grates | also Director |
| 1992 | The Nutt House | Pie Thrower | (cameo) |
| Highway to Hell | Pluto's Cook/Attila the Hun | ||
| 1990 | Stella | Jim Uptegrove | |
| 1989 | Next of Kin | Lawrence Isabella | |
| Elvis Stories | Bruce | ||
| That's Adequate | Chip Lane | ||
| 1988 | Fresh Horses | Tipton | |
| 1987 | Empire of the Sun | Dainty | |
| Hot Pursuit | Chris Honeywell | ||
| Shoeshine |
1965 births | Living people | American comedians | American film actors | American film producers | American film directors | American screenwriters | Cast of Arrested Development | English-language film directors | Irish-American actors | Jewish American actors | Jewish American comedians | Jewish American film directors | Miami Vice actors | People from Manhattan | People with bipolar disorder | Saturday Night Live cast members | Worst Actor Razzie nominees
Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller | სტილერი, ბენ | Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller | ベン・スティラー | Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller | Ben Stiller
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