John Goodman
John Stephen Goodman (born June 20, 1952) is an American actor. He played Dan Conner on the ABC TV series Roseanne (1988–1997; 2018), for which he won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in 1993, and reprised the role in its sequel series The Conners. He is a regular collaborator with the Coen brothers on such films as Raising Arizona (1987), Barton Fink (1991), The Big Lebowski (1998), O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000), and Inside Llewyn Davis (2013). His voice roles include Pacha in Disney's The Emperor's New Groove franchise (2000), James P. Sullivan in Pixar's Monsters, Inc. franchise (2001–2020), Baloo in The Jungle Book 2 (2003), George Wolfsbottom in Clifford's Really Big Movie (2004), Layton T. Montgomery in Bee Movie (2007) and Eli "Big Daddy" LaBouff in The Princess and the Frog (2009).
John Goodman | |
---|---|
Goodman at the 2016 San Diego Comic-Con | |
Born | John Stephen Goodman June 20, 1952 Affton, Missouri, U.S. |
Alma mater | Southwest Missouri State University |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1975–present |
Spouse(s) | Annabeth Hartzog (m. 1989) |
Children | 1 |
His other film performances include lead roles in Always (1989), King Ralph (1991), The Babe (1992), The Flintstones (1994), Blues Brothers 2000 (1998), and 10 Cloverfield Lane (2016), and supporting roles in True Stories (1986), Beyond the Sea (2004), Evan Almighty (2007), Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close (2011), The Artist (2011), Argo (2012), Flight (2012), Trouble with the Curve (2012), The Monuments Men (2014), Trumbo (2015), Patriots Day (2016), and Atomic Blonde (2017).
On television, Goodman has had regular roles on Amazon Studios's Alpha House (2012–2013) and on the first season of HBO's Treme (2010–2011)[1] and has been a frequent host of Saturday Night Live, as well as playing guest roles on series such as Community. He currently stars in the HBO comedy The Righteous Gemstones (2019–present). John Heilpern of Vanity Fair has called him "among our very finest actors".[2]
Early life
Goodman was born in Affton, Missouri.[3] His father, Leslie Francis Goodman, was a postal worker who died of a heart attack when John was two years old. Goodman's mother, Virginia Roos (née Loosmore), was a waitress at Jack and Phil's Bar-B-Que,[3][4] a retail store worker, and also took in laundry to support the family.[2] Goodman has a younger sister, Elisabeth, born six months after his father died, and an older brother, Leslie, who is 14 years his senior.[5][6] He is of English, German, and Welsh ancestry[4] and was raised Southern Baptist.[7]
Goodman described his childhood as alone and withdrawn after his father had died so early and his brother had left to go to college. He was bullied at school for being overweight.[6] Until ninth grade, Goodman was in the Boy Scouts, which he said offered him the structure and camaraderie he missed; he additionally looked to Boy Scout leaders, and later, acting coaches, as father figures.[6] His brother later returned home to help raise Goodman and his sister. As a child, Goodman spent a lot of time listening to the radio and reading comic books, initially subscribing to DC's Green Lantern and The Atom, and later turning to Marvel Comics. He also read his brother's copies of Mad and would later confess to shoplifting its paperback editions. Goodman credits his brother with introducing him to comedy and bebop.[6]
Goodman went to Affton High School, where he played football (offensive guard and defensive tackle)[6] and dabbled in theater. After graduating in 1970, he took a gap year. He earned a football scholarship to Missouri State University (then called Southwest Missouri State University, or "SMSU") in Springfield.[8] He pledged to Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, although he did not join until several years later. He discovered the drama program and studied there with future Hollywood stars Kathleen Turner and Tess Harper.[9] He remains close to his school friends.[2] Goodman graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1975.[10]
Career
1980s
After an injury ended his college football career, Goodman decided to become a professional actor and left Missouri for New York City in 1975.[8] With a small bankroll from his brother, Goodman found an apartment in Hell's Kitchen[11] near the Theater District and unsuccessfully tried to make money as a bartender and waiter. However, he eventually found modest success in voice-overs, commercials, and plays. He was the person who slapped himself (uttering the tagline, "Thanks... I needed that!") in an iconic television ad for Skin Bracer by Mennen.[9] Goodman also performed off-Broadway and in dinner theaters before landing character roles in film during the early 1980s.[8]
In 1982, Goodman made his film debut with a small role in Eddie Macon's Run. During this period he continued to work on the stage, starring as Pap Finn in Big River from 1985 to 1987. For his role, he received a Drama Desk nomination for Best Featured Actor in a Musical; he is also featured on the Original Broadway Cast Recording. Before landing his big break into movies in 1986 with a significant comedic role in True Stories,[12] he had a brief cameo as Otis in Sweet Dreams. In the former film, his character Louis Fyne says "I'm 6' 3" and maintain a consistent panda bear shape", establishing his trademark size as an important part of many characters he would later play on film and stage.
Goodman rose to fame in acting by playing the role of Dan Conner on the ABC sitcom Roseanne from 1988 to 1997. He returned to the character in 2018 for the revived, 10th season, where he said "Roseanne and I just went back to having a ball",[6] and then stayed on for the show's subsequent spin-off The Conners. Goodman had a long history of appearances on late night comedy shows and was the first guest on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, which won him the series' "First Guest Medal" (Goodman joked he would pawn the medal for a bottle of cheap Scotch).[13] Goodman has hosted NBC's Saturday Night Live 13 times, while also making seven cameo appearances as Linda Tripp during the Monica Lewinsky scandal, three appearances as Rex Tillerson, and cameoing on the season 28 finale hosted by former SNL cast member Dan Aykroyd.[8] With little to no experience in TV comedy, Goodman auditioned to be a cast member for Jean Doumanian's tumultuous 1980–1981 SNL season and was rejected, along with up-and-coming comedians Jim Carrey, Paul Reubens, and Robert Townsend.[14]
1990s
Goodman first worked with the Coen Brothers on Raising Arizona (1987). He would go on to appear in their films Barton Fink (1991), The Big Lebowski (1998), O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000), and Inside Llewyn Davis (2013).[15] Only Steve Buscemi has appeared in more Coen works (six films), though Frances McDormand and Jon Polito have also appeared in five of their films.
He worked with Steven Spielberg on Always (1989), Arachnophobia (1990) and The Flintstones (1994).
Goodman had guest roles on the Aaron Sorkin television dramas The West Wing and Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip. In the former he appeared in four episodes, playing Speaker of the House and eventual acting president Glen Allen Walken. In the latter, he appeared as Pahrump, Nevada Judge Robert Bebe, earning a 2007 Emmy[16] for Outstanding Guest Actor – Drama Series for his performance.[17] In addition, Goodman starred as Fred Flintstone in the film adaptation of The Flintstones.[18]
2000s
He voiced Robot Santa in the character's first appearance on Futurama. Beginning in 2007, Goodman has been the voiceover in Dunkin' Donuts commercials.[19] In 2000, Goodman provided the voice of Pacha in Disney's The Emperor's New Groove and, a year later, the voice of Sulley in Pixar's Monsters, Inc. He returned to the character for the film's 2013 prequel Monsters University (2013) and the 2020 Disney+ series Monsters at Work.[20] In 2009, Goodman voiced "Big Daddy" La Bouff in The Princess and the Frog. Goodman's voice can also be heard on an automated message system at Lambert-St. Louis International Airport.[21] He was the original voice of the yellow M&M in 1995 before being replaced by J. K. Simmons the following year.[22]
In theater, Goodman played the Ghost of Christmas Present in the 2008 Kodak Theatre production of A Christmas Carol, starring Christopher Lloyd as Ebenezer Scrooge. He played the role of Pozzo in a Studio 54 revival of Samuel Beckett's play Waiting for Godot, opposite Bill Irwin and Nathan Lane. John Heilpern of Vanity Fair called it "the greatest Pozzo I've ever seen."[2] In 2009, he reprised the role of Pozzo at the Roundabout Theatre Company.
Goodman was cast in In the Electric Mist (2009) as Julie "Baby Feet" Balboni. At one time, he was slated to play the role of Ignatius Reilly, the main character of A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole. The story takes place almost entirely in New Orleans. However, the movie was never put into production. The Princess and the Frog where he lent his voice as Eli "Big Daddy" La Bouff also takes place in New Orleans. Goodman also featured in Treme, a drama series focusing on a group of interconnected people trying to rebuild their lives in post–Hurricane Katrina New Orleans. Goodman played Creighton Bernette, a Tulane English professor, in the show's first season.
2010s
In 2011, Goodman was a guest star on the third season of Community. He also voiced a character in the video game Rage voicing Dan Hagar, and played movie studio chief Al Zimmer in the Academy Award–winning live action film The Artist, as well as Best Picture nominee Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close the same year. Also in 2011, Goodman starred in Kevin Smith's Red State playing ATF Agent Joseph Keenan. In February 2012, it was reported that Goodman would reunite with Roseanne Barr for a new NBC pilot titled Downwardly Mobile. The series would have had Goodman portray a bachelor mechanic who resides in a trailer park, and would have used the standard multiple-camera setup traditionally found in sitcoms;[23] however, the series' option was not picked up by the network. Other prominent roles include performances in Flight (2012) and The Monuments Men (2014). With his well-received supporting roles in The Artist (2011) and Argo (2012), Goodman accomplished the rare feat of appearing in back-to-back winners of the Academy Award for Best Picture.
On August 10, 2013, Goodman was inducted as a Disney Legend.[24] In 2013, Goodman received positive reviews for his performance as North Carolina Senator Gil John Biggs in Amazon's Alpha House, a political comedy written by Garry Trudeau.[25] In the show Goodman's character, a retired UNC basketball coach, and three other Republican senators share a house on Capitol Hill. The show ended after two seasons in 2014.[26]
In April 2015, Goodman made his return to the stage, making his West End debut in the process while starring as Donny in American Buffalo at the Wyndham's Theatre alongside Damian Lewis and Tom Sturridge.[27] He went on to star as Sheriff Hartman in the 2016 Broadway revival of The Front Page, alongside Nathan Lane and John Slattery.[28]
On March 10, 2017, Goodman received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his work in motion pictures, located at 6767 Hollywood Boulevard.[29][30][31]
On April 28, 2017 it was announced that a revival of Roseanne was in the works and that Goodman along with most of the original cast and some of the producers would return for the limited series that was being shopped around with ABC and Netflix the frontrunners to land the show.[32] On May 16, 2017 it was confirmed that 8 episodes would air mid-season in 2018 on ABC.[33] On May 29, 2018, in the wake of controversial remarks made by Barr on Twitter regarding Valerie Jarrett (an advisor of former president Barack Obama), ABC canceled the revival after a single season.[34][35][36] The next month, ABC ordered a ten-episode Roseanne spin-off titled The Conners, which stars the Roseanne cast sans Roseanne Barr.[37] The show's second season premiered on September 24, 2019.
In 2019, Goodman starred in the role of Southern megachurch preacher and family patriarch Eli Gemstone on the HBO comedy The Righteous Gemstones, created by and co-starring Danny McBride.[38] Goodman accepted the role right after the revived Roseanne series had been cancelled and before its spin-off The Conners was announced, which led to Goodman doing both shows.[6] The Righteous Gemstones was renewed for a second season in September 2019.[39]
Philanthropy
Since Hurricane Katrina, Goodman has appeared in several recovery commercials aired in Louisiana.[40]
In 2010, Goodman appeared in a commercial to raise awareness for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Also starring in the commercial were Sandra Bullock, Peyton Manning, Eli Manning, Jack Del Rio, Drew Brees, Emeril Lagasse, James Carville, and Blake Lively.[41]
Personal life
Goodman married Annabeth Hartzog, originally of Bogalusa, Louisiana, in 1989.[42] They met at a Halloween party at Tipitina's when he was filming Everybody's All-American in New Orleans.[43] They reside in the Garden District of New Orleans.[8][44] Their daughter, Molly Evangeline Goodman (born 1990), works as a production assistant in the film industry.[45]
In a 2009 interview, Goodman discussed his struggles with alcoholism:
I don't know how much the old Jackie Daniel's franchise ruined my memory, which is going anyway, because of my advancing decrepitude. I had a 30-year run, and at the end I didn't care about anything. I was just fed up with myself. I didn't even want to be an actor anymore.[9]
In October 2012, he stated: "If I'd picture in my mind a drink—usually straight out of the bottle—I couldn't not do it," noting that while acting in plays he would "have the shakes so bad I'd have to have a drink to get through the show. I'm lucky I never got fired."[46] He had started drinking heavily and using cocaine in 1978[47] after going through a breakup. Sober since 2007,[2][48] Goodman tries to attend an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting every morning.[45]
Goodman was formerly known by his sizable frame, at one point weighing close to 400 lb (180 kg).[49] However, by August 2010, he had lost 100 lb (45 kg) through a program of exercise and food journaling.[50] His new figure attracted attention at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2015 and the BFI London Film Festival in October 2015.[49]
Goodman is a lifelong fan of the St. Louis Cardinals[51] and narrated a 2020 MLB Network documentary about the Cardinals teams of the 1980s.[52]
Work
Film
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | Eddie Macon's Run | Herbert | |
1983 | The Survivors | Commando | |
1984 | Crackers | Cracker | |
1984 | C.H.U.D. | Cop in Diner | |
1984 | Maria's Lovers | Frank | |
1984 | Revenge of the Nerds | Coach Harris | |
1985 | Sweet Dreams | Otis | |
1986 | True Stories | Louis Fyne | |
1987 | The Big Easy | Det. Andre DeSoto | |
1987 | Raising Arizona | Gale Snoats | |
1987 | Burglar | Det. Nyswander | |
1988 | The Wrong Guys | Duke Earle | |
1988 | Punchline | John Krytsick | |
1988 | Everybody's All-American | Edward Lawrence | |
1989 | Sea of Love | Det. Sherman Touhey | |
1989 | Always | Al Yackey | |
1990 | Stella | Ed Munn | |
1990 | Arachnophobia | Delbert McClintock | |
1991 | King Ralph | Ralph Hampton Gainesworth Jones | |
1991 | Barton Fink | Charlie Meadows/Karl Mundt | |
1992 | The Babe | George Herman "Babe" Ruth | |
1993 | Matinee | Lawrence Woolsey | |
1993 | Born Yesterday | Harry Brock | |
1993 | We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story | Rex the Dinosaur | Voice |
1994 | The Hudsucker Proxy | Newsreel Announcer | Voice; Credited as Karl Mundt[53] |
1994 | The Flintstones | Fred Flintstone | |
1996 | Pie in the Sky | Alan Davenport | |
1996 | Mother Night | Major Frank Wirtanen | |
1997 | The Borrowers | Ocious P. Potter | |
1998 | Fallen | Det. Jonesy | |
1998 | Blues Brothers 2000 | "Mighty" Mack McTeer | |
1998 | The Big Lebowski | Walter Sobchak | |
1998 | Dirty Work | Mayor Adrian Riggins | Uncredited[54] |
1998 | Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie | Santa Claus | Voice |
1998 | The Real Macaw | Mac the Parrot | Voice; US Version |
1999 | The Runner | Deepthroat | |
1999 | Bringing Out the Dead | Larry Verber | |
1999 | The Jack Bull | Judge Joe B. Tolliver | |
2000 | What Planet Are You From? | Roland Jones | |
2000 | O Brother, Where Art Thou? | Daniel "Big Dan" Teague | |
2000 | The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle | Oklahoma Highway Patrol Officer | Cameo |
2000 | Coyote Ugly | William James Sanford | |
2000 | The Emperor's New Groove | Pacha | Voice |
2001 | My First Mister | Benjamin Wilson | |
2001 | One Night at McCool's | Det. Dehling | |
2001 | Storytelling | Marty Livingston | Segment: "Non-Fiction" |
2001 | Happy Birthday | The Dean | |
2001 | Monsters, Inc. | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan | Voice |
2002 | Mike's New Car | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan | Voice; Short film |
2002 | Dirty Deeds | Tony Testano | |
2003 | Masked and Anonymous | Uncle Sweetheart | |
2003 | The Jungle Book 2 | Baloo | Voice |
2004 | Freshman Orientation | Rodney | |
2004 | Clifford's Really Big Movie | George Wolfsbottom | Voice |
2004 | Beyond the Sea | Steve "Boom Boom" Blauner | |
2005 | Marilyn Hotchkiss' Ballroom Dancing and Charm School |
Steve Mills | |
2005 | Kronk's New Groove | Pacha | Voice; Direct-to-DVD |
2006 | Cars | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan Truck | Voice; Cameo |
2006 | Tales of the Rat Fink | Ed "Big Daddy" Roth | Voice; Documentary film |
2007 | Death Sentence | Bones Darley | |
2007 | Evan Almighty | Congressman Chuck Long | |
2007 | Bee Movie | Layton T. Montgomery | Voice |
2008 | Speed Racer | Pops Racer | |
2008 | Gigantic | Al Lolly | |
2009 | Confessions of a Shopaholic | Graham Bloomwood | |
2009 | In the Electric Mist | Julie "Baby Feet" Balboni | |
2009 | Alabama Moon | Mr. Wellington | |
2009 | Beyond All Boundaries | Capt. Edwin Simmons | Voice; Short film |
2009 | The Princess and the Frog | Eli "Big Daddy" La Bouff | Voice |
2009 | Pope Joan | Pope Sergius II | |
2009 | Drunkboat | Mr. Fletcher | |
2011 | The Artist | Al Zimmer | |
2011 | Red State | Joseph Keenan | |
2011 | Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close | Stan the Doorman | |
2012 | ParaNorman | Mr. Prendergast | Voice |
2012 | The Campaign | Scott Talley | Cameo |
2012 | Trouble with the Curve | Pete Klein | |
2012 | Argo | John Chambers | |
2012 | Flight | Harling Mays | |
2013 | Inside Llewyn Davis | Roland Turner | |
2013 | The Hangover Part III | Marshall | |
2013 | The Internship | Sammy Boscoe | Uncredited |
2013 | Monsters University | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan | Voice |
2014 | The Monuments Men | Capt. Walter Garfield | |
2014 | Party Central | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan | Voice; Short film |
2014 | Transformers: Age of Extinction | Hound | Voice[55] |
2014 | The Gambler | Frank | |
2015 | Curious George 3: Back to the Jungle | Hal Houston | Voice; Direct-to-DVD |
2015 | Trumbo | Frank King | |
2015 | Love the Coopers | Sam Cooper | |
2016 | 10 Cloverfield Lane | Howard Stambler | |
2016 | Ratchet & Clank | Grimroth | Voice |
2016 | Patriots Day | Ed Davis | |
2017 | Bunyan and Babe | Paul Bunyan | Voice |
2017 | Kong: Skull Island | William "Bill" Randa | |
2017 | Atomic Blonde | Emmett Kurzfeld | |
2017 | Once Upon a Time in Venice | Dave Phillips | |
2017 | Transformers: The Last Knight | Hound | Voice[56] |
2017 | Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets | Igon Siruss | Voice |
2019 | Captive State | William Mulligan | |
2019 | Easy Does It | "Catfish" Crawford | Voice |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1980 | The Mystery of the Morro Castle | George Rogers | Unknown episodes[57] |
1983 | The Face of Rage | Fred | Television film |
1983 | Heart of Steel | Raymond Bohupinsky | Television film |
1983 | Chiefs | Newt "Tub" Murray | Episode: "Part 3" |
1987 | The Equalizer | Harold Winter | Episode: "Re-Entry" |
1987 | Moonlighting | Donald Chase | Episode: "Come Back Little Shiksa" |
1987 | Murder Ordained | Hugh Rayburn | Television film |
1988–1997, 2018 |
Roseanne | Dan Conner | 220 episodes |
1989–2013 | Saturday Night Live | Himself / Host | 13 episodes |
1990 | Grand | Red | Episode: "The Healing" |
1992 | The Jackie Thomas Show | Dan Conner | Episode: "The Joke" |
1992 | Frosty Returns | Frosty the Snowman | Voice; TV special |
1993 | Grace Under Fire | Police Officer | Episode: "Pilot"; Uncredited[58] |
1995 | Kingfish: A Story of Huey P. Long | Huey Long | Television film |
1995 | A Streetcar Named Desire | Harold "Mitch" Mitchell | Television film |
1995 | Sesame Street | Himself | 1 episode |
1997–1998 | Soul Man | Capt. Stan Hamel | 2 episodes |
1999 | The Simpsons | Meathook | Voice; Episode: "Take My Wife, Sleaze" |
1999 | Futurama | Robot Santa | Voice; Episode: "Xmas Story" |
1999–2000 | Now and Again | Michael Wiseman | 2 episodes |
2000 | Pigs Next Door | Phil Stymington | Voice; 13 episodes |
2000 | Normal, Ohio | William "Butch" Gamble | 13 episodes |
2001 | When Dinosaurs Roamed America | Narrator | Voice; Television film |
2001 | Ed | Big Rudy | Episode: "Loyalties" |
2003–2004 | The West Wing | Speaker Glen Allen Walken | 4 episodes |
2004–2005 | Father of the Pride | Larry | Voice; 15 episodes |
2004–2005 | Center of the Universe | John Barnett | 12 episodes |
2006 | Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip | Judge Bobby Bebe | 2 episodes |
2006 | Odd Job Jack | Garbage Czar | Voice; Episode: "The Big Dump" |
2006 | The Year Without a Santa Claus | Santa Claus | Television film |
2007 | King of the Hill | Tommy | Voice; Episode: "SerPUNt" |
2007–2008 | The Emperor's New School | Pacha | Voice; 16 episodes |
2010 | You Don't Know Jack | Neal Nicol | Television film |
2010–2011 | Treme | Creighton Bernette | 13 episodes |
2011 | Damages | Howard T. Erickson | 10 episodes |
2011–2012 | Community | Vice Dean Robert Laybourne | 6 episodes[59] |
2012 | SpongeBob SquarePants | Santa Claus | Voice; Episode: "It's a SpongeBob Christmas!" |
2013 | Dancing on the Edge | Masterson | 5 episodes |
2013–2014 | Alpha House | Gil John Biggs | 21 episodes |
2016–2018 | Saturday Night Live | Rex Tillerson | 3 episodes[60] |
2018 | Black Earth Rising | Michael Ennis | 8 episodes |
2018–present | The Conners | Dan Conner | Main cast |
2019–present | The Righteous Gemstones | Eli Gemstone | Main cast |
2020 | Birds of a Different Game: The 80's Cardinals | Narrator | Voice; Documentary |
2020 | The Freak Brothers | Fat Freddy | Voice; Animated series |
2021 | Monsters at Work | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan | Voice; Upcoming series[20] |
Theatre
Year | Title | Role | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
1981 | Henry IV Part I | Blunt | Delacorte Theater |
1983 | Triple Feature | Winninger (Half) | Stage 73 |
1984–85 | Big River | Pap Finn | American Repertory Theater La Jolla Playhouse, San Diego Eugene O'Neill Theatre, Broadway |
1998 | The Skin of Our Teeth | Mr. Antrobus | Delacotre Theater |
2001 | The Seagull | Shamrayev | Delacotre Theater |
2002 | The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui | Emanuele Giri | Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts |
2005 | Cat on a Hot Tin Roof | Big Daddy | The Geffen Playhouse, Los Angeles |
2008 | A Christmas Carol | Ghost of Christmas Present | Kodak Theatre, Los Angeles |
2009 | Waiting for Godot | Pozzo | Studio 54, Broadway |
2015 | American Buffalo | Donny | Wyndham's Theatre, West End |
2016–17 | The Front Page | Sheriff Hartman | Broadhurst Theatre, Broadway |
Video games
Year | Title | Voice role |
---|---|---|
1994 | The Flintstones | Fred Flintstone |
1996 | Pyst | King Mattruss |
2002 | Monsters, Inc. Scream Arena | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan |
2007 | Bee Movie Game | Layton T. Montgomery |
2007 | Cars Mater-National Championship | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan Truck |
2009 | Cars Race-O-Rama | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan Truck |
2011 | Rage | Dan Hagar |
2018 | Lego The Incredibles | James P. "Sulley" Sullivan |
Awards and nominations
References
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- "The Southern A-List: John Goodman". Garden & Gun. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
- Yuan, Jada (October 28, 2012). "John Goodman, Fall's Busiest Supporting Actor, Needs a Cigarette". Vulture.com. New York City: New York Media. Retrieved October 18, 2018.
- "John Goodman Talks About His Battle With Alcoholism". www.inquisitr.com. Retrieved November 4, 2019.
- "If the Stars Are Out in New York Tonight, They're Probably Twinkling at Cafe Central". PEOPLE.com. Retrieved November 4, 2019.
- "John Goodman checks out of Malibu rehab center". Orange County Register. October 18, 2007. Retrieved November 4, 2019.
- Jacobo, Julia (October 10, 2015). "Once 400-pound John Goodman debuts dramatic weight loss at London film festival". WPIX. New York City: Tribune Broadcasting. Retrieved October 12, 2015.
- Hamm, Liza (August 5, 2010). "John Goodman: How I Lost 100 Lbs. — and Counting". People. New York City: Meredith Corporation. Retrieved February 28, 2012.
- John Goodman Comes Home to St. Louis to Throw First Pitch, Eat Ted Drewes
- St. Louis Cardinals era under Whitey Herzog explored in new documentary 'Birds of a Different Game'
- "The Hudsucker Proxy". March 11, 1994 – via IMDb.
- "Movie Review: Dirty Work(1998)". Entertainment Weekly. New York City: Meredith Corporation. March 1, 1998. Retrieved August 2, 2012.
- Bay, Michael (May 8, 2014). "John Goodman And Ken Watanabe Join The Autobot Voice Cast in Michael Bay's 'Transformers: Age Of Extinction'". Michael Bay. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
- "Transformers: The Last Knight Director Confirms John Goodman, John Turturro Returns". Retrieved January 6, 2017.
- Lynch, Jason (February 7, 2014). "John Goodman on getting wooed by Clooney and bunking with Bruce Willis". The A.V. Club. The Onion, Inc. Retrieved February 7, 2014.
- Gray, Tim (September 29, 1993). "Review: 'Grace Under Fire'". Variety. Retrieved March 24, 2017.
- Mitovich, Matt Webb (August 28, 2011). "Community Sneak Peek Video: John Goodman Tells the Dean 'Wassup'". TVLine. Retrieved August 29, 2011.
- Anderson Cooper White House Turmoil Cold Open, March 17, 2018, retrieved October 3, 2018
External links
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