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James Adam "Jim" Belushi (born June 15, 1954) is an American actor, comedian and musician, the younger brother of late comedian John Belushi. He currently stars in the sitcom According to Jim.
BiographyEarly lifeBelushi was born in Chicago, Illinois, the son of Agnes B. (née Samaras), a first-generation Albanian American who worked as a cashier, and Adam Belushi, an Albanian immigrant and restaurant operator who left his native village, Qytezë, in 1934 at the age of fifteen.[2][3][4] After graduating from Wheaton Central High School, Belushi attended the College of DuPage and graduated from Southern Illinois University with a degree in Speech and Theater Arts. CareerFrom 1977 to 1980 Belushi, like his older brother, John Belushi, worked with the Chicago theater group The Second City. During this period, Belushi made his television debut in the 1978's Who's Watching the Kids and also had a small part in Brian De Palma's The Fury. His first significant role was in Michael Mann's Thief (1981). After his elder brother John's death, from 1983 to 1985, he appeared on Saturday Night Live; he portrayed characters such as Hank Rippy from "Hello, Trudy!", and "That White Guy". Belushi also appears in the film Trading Places as a drunk man in a gorilla suit during a New Year's Eve party. Jim made a guest appearance in Faerie Tale Theatre's Third Season episode Pinocchio starring Paul Reubens as the titular puppet. Belushi rose to greater prominence with his supporting roles in Only the Lonely, About Last Night..., Salvador, and Little Shop of Horrors (as Patrick Martin) (all 1986) which opened up opportunities for lead roles. He has starred in films including Once Upon A Crime 1987; Real Men (1987), The Principal (1987), Red Heat (1988), Homer and Eddie, Joe Somebody (1989), K-9 (1989) which featured a real life police dog from Kansas City, Missouri named Koton (played as "Jerry Lee" and was later killed in police action in 1991) and produced two sequels that were released straight to video; K-911 (1999) featuring Mac, Sonto & Reno as "Jerry Lee" and K-9: P.I. (2002) featuring King as "Jerry Lee", Dimenticare Palermo (1989), Taking Care of Business (1990), Mr. Destiny (1990), Curly Sue (1991), Wild Palms (1993), Royce (1994), Race the Sun (1996), Retroactive (1997), Gang Related (1997), and Angel's Dance (1999). His voice work includes The Mighty Ducks, Babes in Toyland, Gargoyles, and Hey Arnold!, and the more recent Hoodwinked and The Wild. He also lent his vocal talents for 9: The Last Resort (a PC game released in 1995), in which he portrayed 'Salty' a coarse yet helpful character. On January 4, 2001, Belushi appeared on the ER episode "Piece of Mind". The episode focused on both Dr. Mark Greene's life-or-death brain surgery in New York and Belushi's character, who had been in a car accident with his son in Chicago. Belushi's performance contributed to his reemergence in the public eye, and the following year he was cast as the titular role in ABC's According to Jim. His first animation voice-over was as a pimple on Krum's head in "Ahhhh! Real Monsters" on Nickelodeon. That performance led him to be cast in the continuing role as Simon, the Monster Hunter, in that series where he ad-libbed much of his dialogue. In 2003, Belushi and Dan Aykroyd released the album Have Love, Will Travel, and participated in an accompanying tour. He also performs at various venues nationwide as Zee Blues in an updated version of The Blues Brothers. He had his first book released, Real Men Don't Apologize, Real Women Don't Sass Back, in May, 2006. Recently, Belushi was a narrator of an NFL offensive linemen commercial. Belushi also introduced the starting lineups for the University of Illinois football team during ABC's telecast of the 2008 Rose Bowl. During his visit in Albania on November 11, 2008, Belushi received the order Honor of the Nation from the President of Albania H.E. Bamir Topi. Personal lifeBelushi has been married 3 times and has three children. He married Sandra Davenport on May 17, 1980 and had a son, Robert Belushi (born 1981), with her. Filmography
Characters on Saturday Night Live
Celebrity impersonations
Video GamesJames Belushi starred as the Masked Mutant in the 1997 video game adaptation of the Goosebumps novel "Attack of the Mutant". References
External linksArticle keywords: jim belushi the sacred hearts, jim john belushi, jim belushi bio, |
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