Rob Corddry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rob Corddry
Born: February 4, 1971
Weymouth, Massachusetts
Occupation: actor, writer, comedian

Rob Corddry (born on February 4, 1971 in Weymouth, Massachusetts), born as Robert Cornelius Corddry, is an American comedian known best for his work on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and as the main character in the FOX sitcom The Winner. He is the older brother of former Daily Show correspondent and current Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip star Nate Corddry.

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After graduating from Weymouth High School in 1989, Corddry went to the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. According to an interview in the UMass Amherst alumni magazine, Corddry planned to study journalism when he arrived in fall 1989. He stuck with the major for just two days. English became his official major instead, but by his sophomore year, he focused much of his attention on drama classes and plays including Torch Song Trilogy, Ten Little Indians, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Romeo and Juliet, and Reckless. While at UMass, Rob pledged Theta Chapter of Theta Chi Fraternity. He graduated in 1993.

He moved to New York City in January 1994. His early paying jobs included working as a security guard at The Metropolitan Museum of Art and handing out menus for a Mexican restaurant. He eventually landed acting jobs, including a year-long tour with the National Shakespeare Company. He trained in improv at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in New York City, performing regularly with the sketch comedy group "Naked Babies" and spent two years with the sketch comedy group Third Rail Comedy. Corddry's first notable television appearances were on Upright Citizens Brigade on Comedy Central from 1998–2000.

In spring of 2002 he was asked to audition for the The Daily Show and was accepted. On October 4, 2005, his younger brother Nate Corddry made his first appearance as a Daily Show correspondent.

In January 2006, Corddry's wife Sandra appeared with him on a Daily Show segment in which he discussed his obsession with having a threesome. They welcomed their first child, daughter Sloane Sullivan Corddry, on July 3, 2006.

Corddry also hosted the 10th annual Webby Awards ceremony on June 12, 2006.

His pieces for The Daily Show have frequently included references to Boston, Massachusetts, which he considers to be his hometown. Some have described his comic style as "a common Masshole".[1]

He has since become one of The Daily Show's popular correspondents, where he is well known for his cocky attitude during interviews. Since the departure of Stephen Colbert, who left to host his own show, The Colbert Report, and Corddry taking over the hosting duties of "This Week in God", Corddry had the most correspondent screentime, becoming a featured part of the show. When he took over "This Week in God," he mentioned that he is an Episcopalian.

On February 9, 2006, due to the absence of Jon Stewart (jokingly because the show's regular host was "in the shop", but in fact because of the birth of Stewart's second child), Corddry hosted an episode of The Daily Show.

On August 15, 2006, Corddry said "I've got like a week and a half left, all bets are off", and then on August 21, 2006, Stewart remarked that Corddry's last day on The Daily Show would be August 24, 2006. Corddry appeared throughout the week, once filing a report from inside a toilet bowl supposedly onboard an aircraft transporting John Mark Karr, and another dressed up in a 1970s fashion; Stewart remarked, "It's his last week, and really, we're trying to come up with terrible things for him to have to do."

During that last show on August 24, Corddry aired a self-produced tribute to his four years on the show, going out, as Stewart said, with a "poop joke".

Stewart - "That was a very fitting tribute, Rob. We're gonna miss you on the show." Corddry - "Why thank you, Jon. But wherever I go and whatever I do, there'll always be a part of me here." Stewart - "Wow...that's a really sweet thing to say." Corddry - "No no no, I'm not kidding. It's in the second floor men's room, actually. That's what you get for not giving me a proper sendoff." Stewart - "You're really gonna go out on a poop joke?" Corddry - "I have to stay true to myself, Jon."

The bar featured during the tribute was 21 Nickels in Watertown, Massachusetts, near Corddry's hometown of Weymouth. The two guys with Rob in the bar segment were fraternity brothers from UMass.

Corddry left The Daily Show to work on other productions, including The Winner, a 2007 TV series.[2] Corrdry tells Stuff Magazinethat "The Winner" is "sort of like a fucked-up Wonder Years."

Corddry's most notable achievement is his work on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, but he has also appeared in the movies Old School (2003, credited as Robert Corddry) and was the lead character in Blackballed: The Bobby Dukes Story (2004).

Corddry voices the animated Devil character on Cartoon Network's Weighty Decisions series (alongside fellow The Daily Show correspondent Ed Helms). He also appeared in a commercial for Cartoon Network's "Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy" series.

He has appeared in a Curb Your Enthusiasm episode entiled "The Seder" as a sex offender who moves into Larry David's neighborhood. In addition, he appeared as Moses Taylor, an actor who plays "Frank Wrench", an obsessively by-the-books detective on a fictional television series Wrench on two episodes of FOX's Arrested Development.

Corddry appeared in the film Failure to Launch as an excitable gun salesman.

On 3 October 2006, Corddry debuted as a featured writer for alt porn website SuicideGirls.[3]

Since March 4, 2007 Corddry now stars as the main character in the Fox Network mid-season comedy The Winner [4] and will have a leading role in the Ben Karlin and Jon Stewart produced film, The Donor.[5]

  1. ^ Article on Corddry's comedic style
  2. ^ Article on Corddry's activities after the Daily Show
  3. ^ Articles Corddry wrote on Suicide Girls website
  4. ^ Corddry in The Winner
  5. ^ Article on The Donor

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