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John Ritter

Full / Real Name: John Southworth Ritter
Born: 17 September 1948 (76 years old)
Gender: Male

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Bio

John Ritter (September 17, 1948 – September 11, 2003) was an American actor and comedian best known for his role as Jack Tripper in the sitcom Three's Company, from 1976-1984.

The son of a legendary country singing musician/actor (Tex) and his wife (Dorothy Fay), John was born in Burbank, California, on September 17, 1948.

His parents were married in 1941. Their first child, Tom, was diagnosed with cerebal palsy, and he went on to become a lawyer.

John was destined to follow in his parents' footsteps. He was enrolled at Hollywood High School, where he was a student body president, and became one of the school's most popular students ever.

After graduation from high school, he later attended the University of Southern California, where he majored in Psychology and minored in Architecture.

In 1966, before attending college, his first appearance on TV was as a contestant on Dating Game, The (1965); he managed to win a vacation to Lake Havasu, Arizona.

After making his very first cameo appearance and a couple of years of attending school, he was encouraged to join an acting class taught by Nina Foch. John changed his major to Theater Arts and graduated in 1971 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Drama.

He also studied acting with Stella Adler at the Harvey Lembeck Comedy Workshop.

Between 1968 and 1969, he appeared in a series of stage plays in England, Scotland, Holland and in Germany. His father was entertaining troops in Germany at the same time that his son was performing at an air base there.

His acting debut was on an episode of Hawaii Five-O, playing various roles. On Dan August, he played a campus revolutionary, in a film which also starred Burt Reynolds and Norman Fell, who later starred with him on Three's Company.

Then he appeared as Reverend Matthew Fordwick on The Waltons. His guest-starring spot was so popular it became a recurring role on the show.

He continued making more guest appearances on Medical Center, M*A*S*H, The Bob Newhart Show, The Streets of San Francisco, Kojak, and, once again, a preacher on Rhoda and The Mary Tyler Moore Show, among many others.

While working on The Waltons he received word that his father had passed away, just a day after New Years' Day in 1974.

The following year, in late 1975, ABC picked up the rights for a new series based on a British sitcom, A Man About The House. Ritter beat out 50 actors, including a young Billy Crystal, to get the major role.

The first pilot was trashed, and in order for it to be improved, Joyce DeWitt, an unknown actress, played the role of Janet Wood the following year, along with Susan Lanier as the dumb blonde, Chrissy Snow.

Unlike the first pilot, it did better but the producers still needed a change and Suzanne Somers came to the show, at the very last minute to play Chrissy. The series, Three's Company, was born.

When it debuted as a mid-season replacement, it became a ratings hit, like many other sitcoms of the 70s, and it focused mainly on his character, Jack Tripper, an admirable chef who lived in an apartment with two attractive ladies, while pretending to be gay.

Before playing Jack Tripper on the small screen, he also made his box office debut in the movie Nickelodeon (1976). Two years later, he worked with his close friend, Jenny Sullivan, in Breakfast in Bed (1978), and the following year, played Pres. Chet Roosevelt in the movie Americathon (1979).

John also became more popular with movies such as Hero at Large (1980), and They All Laughed (1981).

In 1980, when Three's Company was sold into syndication, the show became a ratings phenomenon during its last two years. At the height of Ritter's popularity, he won a Golden Globe in 1983 for Best Performance by an Actor, after being nominated twice for Best TV Actor in a Musical-Comedy Series, and one year later won an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor In a Comedy Series, after being nominated twice.

By its eighth season, the show began to drop in the ratings and was cancelled in 1984. After the cancellation he starred in its spin-off Three's A Crowd, starring Mary Cadorette, but it lasted for only one season.

In 1987 John came back to series television as Detective Harry Hooperman in the comedy/drama, Hooperman, for which he was nominated for both an Emmy and a Golden Globe in 1988, for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series, and won a People's Choice Award for his role.

During and after his role on Hooperman, he continued doing more box-office films, from 1987-1992, such as Skin Deep (1989), in which he played a womanizing, drunken, alcoholic writer whose life seemed to be falling apart at the seams.

In the two-part movies, Problem Child (1990), and in Problem Child 2 (1991), he played the surrogate father of a rebellious little boy who continues to wreak havoc with the family and to make fun out of everybody.

He also worked on Noises Off... (1992), and Stay Tuned (1992), before returning to another TV series called Hearts Afire in 1992. On this sitcom, he played John Hartman, who was an aide to a senator whose life was also complicated by his girlfriend's father, and Billy Bob Thornton played Billy Bob Davis.

Like Three's Company, the show had well-written scripts, but failed to reach a massive audience, which led to its cancellation in 1995.

While he was working on Hearts Afire he played Ward Nelson on North (1994). Then, he had the opportunity to work with former Hearts Afire actor Billy Bob Thornton in the movie Sling Blade (1996), in which Ritter played the gay manager of a department store. Thornton wrote and directed the movie, giving Ritter/Thornton the best reviews.

John also provided the voice of Clifford in the PBS animated series Clifford the Big Red Dog (2000).

He was nominated for a Daytime Emmy Award, three times in a row, making it seven Emmy nominations in his 35-year career. In 1999, he was also nominated for an Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series, playing the role of George Madison on an episode of Ally McBeal.

Soon afterwards, he landed his last television role in 8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter, based on the popular book. On this sitcom, he played Paul Hennessey, a loving, yet rational dad, who laid down the ground rules for his three children, and dealt with such topics as curfews, sex, drugs, getting arrested, etc.

The show was a ratings winner in its first season and won a People's Choice Award for Best New Comedy and also won for Favorite Comedy Series by the Family Awards.

While working 8 Simple Rules, he also starred in his second-to-last film, Manhood (2003). That same year, he first felt ill while rehearsing on set, and was rushed across the street to Providence St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, California, where he was diagnosed with an aorta dissection,an unrecognized flaw of the heart.

He underwent surgery and died on September 11, 2003, just days shy of his 55th birthday.



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