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John Larroquette spent a majority of his acting career in the courtroom, playing crude and sex-obsessed Dan Fielding in “Night Court” (NBC, 1984-1992). The tall framed actor won four Emmy Awards for Best Supporting Actor as the hilariously vulgar Assistant District Attorney of the long-running courtroom comedy. Larroquette won his fifth Emmy in 1998 as a guest star on two episodes of another legal themed series “The Practice” (ABC, 2004- ). In 2007, after having played everything from a bus driver to a detective to a Klingon, the TV veteran made a triumphant return to the courtroom when he joined the cast of “Boston Legal” (ABC, 2004- )....

Filmography

Kill Your Darlings - ( Dr Bangley / 2006 / Released / )
Southland Tales - ( Vaughn Smallhouse / 2006 / Released / )
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre - ( Narrator / 2003 / Released / Sandew Metronome International )
Isn't She Great - ( Maury Manning / 2000 / Released / )
Richie Rich - ( Lawrence Van Dough / 1994 / Released / )
J.F.K. - ( Jerry Johnson / 1991 / Released / )
Madhouse - ( Mark / 1990 / Released / )
Tune in Tomorrow... - ( Dr Albert Quince / 1990 / Released / Nova Entertainment )
Second Sight - ( Willis / 1989 / Released / )
Blind Date - ( David Bedford / 1987 / Released / )
Summer Rental - ( Don Moore / 1985 / Released / )
Choose Me - ( Billy Ace / 1984 / Released / )
Meatballs Part II - ( Foxglove / 1984 / Released / )
Star Trek III - ( Maltz / 1984 / Released / )
Hysterical - ( Bob X Cursion / 1983 / Released / )
Twilight Zone - the Movie - ( Klansman / 1983 / Released / )
Cat People - ( Bronte Judson / 1982 / Released / )
Green Ice - ( Claude / 1981 / Released / )
Stripes - ( Captain Stillman / 1981 / Released / )
Altered States - ( X-Ray Technician / 1980 / Released / )
Heart Beat - ( Television Talk Show Host / 1979 / Released / Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution )
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre - ( Narrator / 1974 / Released / )
TV Credits
McBride: Dogged ( 2007 / Released ): Director / Actor
McBride: Semper Fi ( 2007 / Released ): Director / Actor
McBride: Fallen Idol ( 2006 / Released ): Director / Actor
Kitchen Confidential ( 2005 / Released ): Actor
McBride: Anybody Here Murder Marty? ( 2005 / Released ): Actor
McBride: It's Murder Madam ( 2005 / Released ): Actor
McBride: Murder Past Midnight ( 2005 / Released ): Actor
McBride: The Chameleon Murder ( 2005 / Released ): Actor
McBride: The Doctor Is Out... Really Out ( 2005 / Released ): Director / Actor
McBride: Tune In For Murder ( 2005 / Released ): Actor
Boston Legal ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
Patriot Acts ( 2008 )
TV Episode Carl Sack

TV Episode Carl Sack

TV Episode Carl Sack

Rescue Me ( 2008 )
TV Episode Carl Sack

Glow in the Dark ( 2008 )
TV Episode Carl Sack

House ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
Joey ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
Joey and the ESL ( 2005 )
TV Episode Benjamin Lockwood

TV Episode Benjamin Lockwood

Wedding Daze ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
Happy Family ( 2003 / Released ): Actor
Dear Mom ( 2004 )
TV Episode Peter Brennan

TV Episode Peter Brennan

The Play ( 2004 )
TV Episode Peter Brennan

The Juicer ( 2004 )
TV Episode Peter Brennan

Secrets ( 2004 )
TV Episode Peter Brennan

Recipe for Disaster ( 2003 / Released ): Actor
The Incurable Collector ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Till Dad Do Us Part ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Walter and Henry ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
The 10th Kingdom ( 2000 / Released ): Actor
Payne ( 1999 / Released ): Executive Producer / Actor
The West Wing ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
50th Emmy Awards ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
The Defenders: Payback ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
The Practice ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
The Verdict ( 2002 )
TV Episode Joey Heric

TV Episode Joey Heric

Star Trek: 30 Years and Beyond ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
The 11th Annual Soap Opera Awards ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
The 52nd Annual Golden Globe Awards ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
46th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
Comic Relief VI ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
Madman of the People ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
The 8th Annual American Comedy Awards ( 1994 / Released ): Actor
45th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards ( 1993 / Released ): Actor
One Special Victory ( 1991 / Released ): Executive Producer / Actor
Night of 100 Stars III ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
The 47th Annual Golden Globe Awards ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
Comic Relief III ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
The 41st Annual Emmy Awards ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Hot Paint ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
Jackie Gleason: The Great One ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
Secrets Men Never Share ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
The 40th Annual Emmy Awards ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
The 9th Annual ACE Awards ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
NBC Presents the AFI Comedy Special ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
The 39th Annual Emmy Awards ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
The Eleventh Annual Young Comedians Show ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
Convicted ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
The Barbour Report ( 1986 / Released ): Actor
The Last Ninja ( 1983 / Released ): Actor
Bare Essence ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
Stunts Unlimited ( 1980 / Released ): Actor
The 416th ( 1979 / Released ): Actor
Baa Baa Black Sheep ( 1976 / Released ): Actor
Doctors Hospital ( 1975 / Released ): Actor
Dave's World ( Released ): Actor
McBride: Requiem ( Lensing/Awaiting Release ): Actor
Night Court ( Released ): Actor
The John Larroquette Show ( Released ): Executive Producer / Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

John Larroquette spent a majority of his acting career in the courtroom, playing crude and sex-obsessed Dan Fielding in “Night Court” (NBC, 1984-1992). The tall framed actor won four Emmy Awards for Best Supporting Actor as the hilariously vulgar Assistant District Attorney of the long-running courtroom comedy. Larroquette won his fifth Emmy in 1998 as a guest star on two episodes of another legal themed series “The Practice” (ABC, 2004- ). In 2007, after having played everything from a bus driver to a detective to a Klingon, the TV veteran made a triumphant return to the courtroom when he joined the cast of “Boston Legal” (ABC, 2004- ).

John Bernard Larroquette was born on Nov. 25, 1947 in New Orleans, LA to Bertha Oramous, a department store clerk, and John Edgar Larroquette, who served in the U.S. Navy. As a child, the actor loved music and played reed instruments while growing up in the South. After a brief time in the Naval Reserve, he started working as a radio disc jockey immediately after high school, soon landing several jobs in film and television doing voiceovers. In 1974, a year after moving to Los Angeles, CA, Larroquette narrated Tobe Hooper’s cult flick “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre,” yet his role was uncredited. Several years later, the actor finally got the credit he deserved when he was asked to narrate the horror film’s 2003 remake, and again three years later with “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning” (2006).

The mid 1970s marked a major change in Larroquette’s career; moving from voiceover work to appearing on camera. He made his network TV debut as Dr. Paul Herman in the soap opera “Doctor’s Hospital” (NBC, 1975-76), followed by a recurring role in “Baa Baa Black Sheep” (NBC, 1976-78), where he played Lt. Robert Anderson. Larroquette rounded out the rest of the decade and up to the early 1980s with appearances in several hit TV shows of that time, including “Three’s Company” (ABC, 1977-1984), “Fantasy Island” (ABC, 1978-1984), and “Dallas” (CBS, 1978-1991).

While delivering memorable performances in various primetime programs, Larroquette eventually caught the attention of NBC and the producers of “Night Court,” who cast him as the hilariously ill-mannered Dan Fielding. The role was a career highlight for the New Orleans native, and one that earned him a record-making four Emmy wins in a row between 1985 and 1988. The actor asked not to be considered for the award in 1989, yet remained a central part of the show’s ratings success and an unlikely audience favorite. Larroquette, along with costars Harry Anderson and Richard Moll, appeared in every episode of the series – but with Fielding, it was often spent leering at women or hitting on his fellow attorney, Christine Sullivan (Markie Post). The rare instances when Fielding wore his heart on his sleeve were even highly effective, but the greatest laughs derived from his callous disregard for anything other than winning his case or getting laid.

After “Night Court” ended in 1992, Larroquette was offered his own show on the peacock network. “The John Larroquette Show” (NBC, 1993-96) had a much darker tone compared to the slapstick comedy of “Night Court,” with the actor playing the role of John Hemingway, a recovering alcoholic who worked at a St. Louis, MO bus station. It was a character that hit close to home for Larroquette, who battled alcoholism as a young man. “I was known to have a cocktail or 60,” he once joked. Apart from TV, Larroquette also gave notable performances on the big screen throughout his career. His first acting job was in the movie “Follow Me, Boys” (1966), succeeded by the narrating role in “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” a few years later. Both those roles were uncredited, but Larroquette’s TV performances helped him get meatier movie roles later on. The 1980s kept the actor busy with film work, where he appeared in comedies such as “Stripes” (1981), “Meatballs 2” (1984), and Blake Edwards’ “Blind Date” (1987). In 1984, Larroquette entered the final frontier by joining the cast of “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock,” appearing as Klingon officer Maltz. In 1991, the actor played a Johnny Carson-type talk show host in Oliver Stone’s “JFK,” but his part was cut from the theatrical version. The scene was later added in the director’s cut on DVD, and the actor wrote a letter to Carson himself, telling him how he inspired the role.

After years acting in film and television, Larroquette showed his theatrical talent, starring in the 1989 production “Happy Jack.” It was the first time since moving to Los Angeles and appearing in local theater productions of “The Crucible” and “Enter Laughing” that the actor had acted on stage. “Happy Jack” was a critical success, receiving several Dramalogue nominations after its release. It also gave Larroquette the opportunity to work opposite his wife, actress Elizabeth Ann Cookson. The couple had three children and lived in L.A., where the actor stored his collection of rare books, and antique fountain pens, cameras, photographs, and watches. His love for collectibles – including over 5,000 first edition books by writers such as Samuel Beckett, Charles Bukowski, and Anthony Burgess – made him the ideal host of A&E’s “The Incurable Collector” a series that ran from 2001-04.

Larroquette collected much praise for his work, with memorable appearances throughout the 1990s and 2000s. His portrayal of a wisecracking psychopath who killed his gay lovers on a 1998 episode of “The Practice” won the actor his fifth Emmy and his first for a non-comedic role. The character returned in 2002, and sure enough, Larroquette was again nominated for an Emmy for his brilliant performance. He then went on to star in a series of crime-solving movies as Mike McBride for Hallmark Channel’s “McBride” between 2005 and 2007, as well as appear in independent films such as “Southland Tales” (2006) and “The Rapture of the Athlete Assume into Heaven” (2007).

“The Practice” creator David E. Kelley must have been so impressed by Larroquette’s body of work and award-winning performances that the actor was asked to join the cast of its spin-off show, “Boston Legal” in 2007. He played Carl Sack, a senior partner from the New York offices of Crane Poole & Schmidt, who transfers to the Boston office. The role reunited Larroquette with his former “Star Trek” costar William Shatner and the two proceeded to one-up each other to great effect on screen.


Profession(s):
Actor, producer, disc jockey, TV director, record promotion director, national promotion for a record company, naval reservist
Sometimes Credited As:
John Bernard Larroquette
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Family
daughter:Lisa Katherina Larroquette (Born c. 1969; mother, Elizabeth Larroquette)
son:Jonathan Preston Larroquette (Born c. 1977; mother, Elizabeth Larroquette)
son:Benjamin Lawrence Larroquette (Born c. 1987; mother, Elizabeth Larroquette)
wife:Elizabeth Larroquette (Met in a performance of "Enter Laughing"; mother of Larroquette's three children)
Awards (Back to top)
Emmy Award Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series "The Pratice" 1998
Emmy Award Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series "Night Court" 1988
Emmy Award Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series "Night Court" 1987
Emmy Award Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series "Night Court" 1986
Emmy Award Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series "Night Court" 1985

Milestones (Back to top)
2007 Co-starred in Richard Kelly's ensemble "Southland Tales"
2007 Joined the cast of of ABC's "Boston Legal" as a senior partner from the New York offices
2004 Played the title role in the "McBride" series of American TV movies
2003 Cast as the family patriarch in the short lived comedy "Happy Family" (NBC)
1999 Returned to series TV in the short-lived sitcom "Payne"
1997 Had memorable guest role as a gay man accused of murdering his lover on the "The Practice" (ABC)
1994 Had a supporting role in "Richie Rich," a live-action film based on the Harvey Comics comic book character
1993 - 1996 Starred as John Hemingway in the series, "The John Larroquette Show" (NBC); first credit as an executive producer
1990 Co-starred with Kirstie Alley as a married couple in "Madhouse"
1989 First film as a lead, "Second Sight"
1989 Co-starred on stage with his wife in a Los Angeles production of "Happy Jack"
1987 Played Kim Basinger's obsessed ex-boyfriend in the comedy, "Blind Date"
1986 TV directorial debut with an episode of "Night Court"
1984 - 1992 Played lawyer Dan Fielding on the long-running series, "Night Court"
1981 Played an incompetent commanding officer in the comedy "Stripes" starring Bill Murray and Harold Ramis
1979 TV-movie debut, "The 416th"
1979 Feature acting debut, "Heart Beat"
1976 - 1978 Played squadron member Robert Anderson in the war drama series, "Baa Baa Black Sheep"
1975 TV series debut as a regular, "Doctors Hospital"
1973 Moved to Los Angeles
Raised in New Orleans, Louisiana
Joined the naval reserve
Worked as a disc jockey
Professional acting debut in L.A. production of "The Crucible"