David Spade (born July 22, 1964 in Birmingham, Michigan) is an American
actor, comedian and producer. Spade is the youngest of Wayne Spade and Judy
Todd's three sons. He grew up in Scottsdale, Arizona and is the brother of Andy
Spade, CEO of Kate Spade and brother-in-law of the famed designer Kate Spade.
Biography
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He graduated with a degree in business from Arizona State University in 1986 and
is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
David Spade, encouraged by friends to pursue a career in comedy, joined Saturday
Night Live in 1990 as a regular cast member and writer. Here he made popular his
well-known sarcastic, smart aleck character in a number of skits, some of which
include: a flight attendant who bids an unpleasant "Buh-Bye" to each passenger
as they deplane; a receptionist for Dick Clark who, as a matter of policy, asks
even the most recognizable face "And you are?"; and, most famously, the bitingly
sarcastic Hollywood Minute reporter who assaults celebrities with a series of
one-liners. This particular role won Spade both acclaim from the public and
scorn from celebrities—perhaps most noticeably from fellow Saturday Night Live
alumnus Eddie Murphy when Spade did a joke in which a photograph of Murphy,
whose career had started to falter, was shown, and Spade quipped, "Look
children, a falling star... Quick, make a wish." In a Spade in America sketch he
received a tattoo of Calvin from Calvin and Hobbes from Sean Penn. He also
impersonated celebrities such as Michael J. Fox,
Kurt Cobain and Tom Petty.
Though many of the cast left in 1995, David Spade stayed on the following year
to help in the transition with the new cast. He returned to host an episode in
1998 and another in 2005.
David Spade also has a reasonably successful movie career highlighted by his work with
fellow Saturday Night Live cast member
Chris Farley. His more recent movies, such as Joe Dirt, have not been
commercial successes. In 1997 Spade reprised his role as a sarcastic
receptionist in the television series Just Shoot Me.
He voiced characters on several episodes of
Beavis and Butt-head, and produced his own TV series Sammy in 2000. Spade
has also appeared in recent commercials for Capital One, with Nate Torrence
where he plays the employee of a fictional rival company whose policy toward
honoring credit card rewards is "always no."
David Spade is currently the host of a new Comedy Central show, The Showbiz Show
with David Spade, which began in September 2005. On the show, Spade makes fun of
Hollywood and celebrities in a manner similar to his old "Hollywood Minute"
segment on SNL.
Film List
Upcoming:
Television Work
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