Gary Wayne Coleman (born February 8 1968, in Zion, Illinois) is an American actor. He resides in Utah, having relocated from California in 2005.
Coleman was born with a congenital kidney disease causing nephritis (an autoimmune destruction of the kidney), which halted his growth at an early age, leading to a notably small stature (4' 8") which became his most distinguishing feature. Coleman has had two kidney transplants, one in 1973 and one in 1984, and requires constant dialysis.
During the run of the show Coleman was a popular figure, starring in a number of feature films and made-for-TV movies including On the Right Track, and The Kid With the Broken Halo. The Kid With the Broken Halo eventually served as the basis for the Hanna-Barbera produced animated series The Gary Coleman Show from 1982.
At the height of his fame on Diff'rent Strokes, Coleman earned $70,000 per episode. As he grew older, however, he fell from public favor. After the cancellation of Diff'rent Strokes, his acting career declined sharply. He did play a building code inspector in a Married With Children episode: S08E16, entitled "How Green Was My Apple," where Bundy had called him to report an illegal driveway.
In 1995, Gary also featured as character Mad Dog on the show Martin. Episode title: "High Noon", he played as an ex-convict which Martin helped to imprison and once released comes looking for Martin. In 1997, Gary did voice work for the The Curse of Monkey Island the third installment in the Monkey Island series of comedy adventure games developed by LucasArts. In 2004, Coleman played a supporting role in the controversial computer game Postal² by Running With Scissors, Inc.
In 2001, he was employed as a shopping mall security guard in the Los Angeles area. A video of him trying to stop a vehicle from entering a compound while the driver (obviously a member of the paparazzi) ridiculed him made the rounds on various late night talk shows. He also cameoed on The Simpsons as himself (in security guard mode).
Coleman occasionally is able to cash in on his camp value to members of Generation X, by appearing in cameo roles in film and TV. As with Day-Glo, Rubik's Cube, Valley girls, Care Bears, Mr. T, the Smurfs and other artifacts from the early 1980s, Coleman's popularity coincided with the childhood of a particularly productive demographic of internet users, and he is, as of 2005, a minor cult figure.
He has also appeared in World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) superstar John Cena's music video for "Bad Bad Man" in which he appeared as himself, as well as in Kid Rock's video for "Cowboy". In this video he appeared, appropriately garbed, taking on Rock's diminutive sidekick, Joe C. Additionally, Coleman's one-time Surreal Life co-star, Ron Jeremy also has a cameo, as a piano player.
In one of the Lost sketches of The Chappelle show, Gary Coleman plays a security guard.
Gary Coleman made an appearance on E's short-lived celebrity dating show where washed up celebrities went on blind dates with regular people.
In late 2005 Coleman opened an ice cream shop in Cheyenne, Wyoming, called Short Stuff's frozen treats. He is already making plans to expand his business and hopes that he will be taken seriously in the business world.
Gary also appeared in a Nickelodeon sitcom called Drake & Josh. The two main characters were selling a product called the Gary Coleman Grill (a parody of the George Foreman Grill). At the end of the show Gary appears as himself.
In June 2005, VH-1 named Gary Coleman No. 1 on its list of the Top 100 Child Stars Ever.
In 1986, Gary Coleman had a very short appearance in one episode of an Italian talk-show, Studio 5, with popular italian TV comedian actor Marco Columbro and show-girl Roberta Termali. Also, he and his Italian dubbing actor Fabrizio Manfredi had a special guest appearance in Pentatlon, a quiz show by Mike Bongiorno.
In Italy, Diff'rent Strokes was aired under several names: Harlem contro Manhattan (1979-80), Il mio amico Arnold (1981-87), Arnold (1988-today). Original theme was often replaced by several italian music songs: the first one, Arnold, performed by Nico Fidenco, was a single hit in 1980.
In 2006, best episodes were still broadcast on Italia Uno (Mediaset group), every day, on 06.00am.
Coleman appeared in court on November 2, 2000, charged with assault. He was ordered to pay bus driver Tracy Fields $1,665 for hospital bills resulting from a fight. Fields had attempted to get Coleman's autograph while he was shopping for a bulletproof vest in a California mall.Coleman said he felt "threatened by her insistence" and punched her in the head. Coleman was working as a security guard at the time[http://members.tripod.com/~former_child_star/coleman_gary.html.
He is sometimes confused with Emmanuel Lewis, star of the 1980s sitcom Webster, considered a knock-off of Coleman's earlier success.
Was voted the Vh1 greatest child star of all time.
| Year | Film | Other notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1981 | On the Right Track | |
| 1982 | Jimmy the Kid | |
| 1994 | Party | Short-subject, he was also the Associate Producer |
| S.F.W. | Cameo | |
| 1996 | Fox Hunt | |
| 1997 | Off the Menu: The Last Days of Chasen's | Documentary |
| 1998 | Dirty Work | Cameo |
| 2000 | The Flunky | |
| Shafted! | ||
| 2002 | Frank McKlusky, C.I. | Cameo |
| 2003 | Former Child Star | Cameo |
| 2004 | Chasing the Edge | Short-subject |
| Save Virgil | Short-subject | |
| 2005 | A Christmas Too Many | |
| 2006 | Church Ball | |
| 2007 | Postal |
Coleman also had a brief appearance as a security guard in the Jim Carrey movie "Me, Myself, and Irene."
1968 births | African-American actors | American television actors | American child actors | Troubled former child stars | Worst Actor Razzie nominees | Living people | Computer and video game actors
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