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Neil Flynn 

Neil Flynn
Born Neil Richard Flynn
November 13, 1960 (1960-11-13) (age 47)
Waukegan, Illinois,
United States

Neil Richard Flynn (born November 13, 1960) is an American actor, best known for his role as Janitor in the sitcom Scrubs.[1]

Contents

Biography

Early life

Flynn was born in the south side of Chicago, Illinois and moved to Waukegan, Illinois at an early age. As a student at Waukegan East High School in 1978, he and partner Mike Shklair won an Illinois Individual Events championship for “Humorous Duet Acting.” After graduating from Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois, in 1982, Flynn returned to Chicago to pursue an acting career. Flynn participated on the nationally renowned Bradley University Speech Team and was also a Sigma Nu there as well.

Career

During his time in Chicago, he acted with the renowned Goodman and Steppenwolf Theaters. Flynn was nominated for a Joseph Jefferson Award (Actor in a Principal Role, for The Ballad of the Sad Cafe, 1986). He also performed at the Improv Olympic and the Second City Comedy Troupe.

Flynn originally auditioned for the role of Dr.Cox but was given the role of Janitor instead. In Scrubs, Flynn was originally only cast for the first episode ("My First Day") but was so popular he became a regular, playing a character known only as Janitor who devotes much of his energies to menacing young Dr. John "J.D." Dorian. Although his role on Scrubs has been Flynn's most visible to date, he has had small roles in a variety of different TV shows and movies, including Seinfeld, That 70's Show, Baby's Day Out, CSI, My Boys, and Smallville. He also played a Chicago Transit Authority police officer in The Fugitive. This role was used in a subplot of the Scrubs episode ("My Friend the Doctor") (Season 3, Episode 8) when J.D. (Zach Braff) notices Flynn's character in the film. In 2008, he worked with Harrison Ford again, playing a suspicious law enforcement official as FBI agent Smith in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.

Flynn had a minor role in Mean Girls as the father of Lindsay Lohan's character. In this he brought her to America from Africa with her mother so she could go to High School. He then played the part of an anonymous police officer in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy; this scene was cut out of the final version of the film, though it can be viewed in the straight to DVD spin-off film Wake Up, Ron Burgundy: The Lost Movie, and in the deleted scenes of the Anchorman DVD. He also had a minor role in Major League as a longshoreman. Flynn had a role on Phil Hendrie's animated pilot that wasn't picked up by FOX. He was also the first baseman in the movie Rookie of the Year.[2]

Flynn once appeared in an episode of The Drew Carey Show, playing the fake husband/partner of future Scrubs co-star Christa Miller. He also appeared on Seinfeld, playing a police officer. In addition to his TV and movie credits, Flynn has done voice acting for the animated series Buzz Lightyear of Star Command, though is better known as the popular characters Skidd McMarx and the Plumber in the Ratchet & Clank video game series for the Playstation 2, and the Ratchet & Clank game for the PlayStation 3 . He also was the voice of a fashion policeman in Kim Possible.

In the episode of Scrubs ("My Choosiest Choice of All") Neil also played a security guard. Flynn has also played the role of a janitor in an episode of Clone High, as well as Julius Caesar and Moses ("Litter Kills: Litterally").

Frequently, Flynn can be seen at the iO WEST performing in Beer, Shark, Mice. Voted Chicago Improv Festival's Ensemble of the Year and considered one of the best long-form improvisational groups in the country, the cast, which includes Mike Coleman, Pat Finn, Neil Flynn, Peter Hulne and David Koechner, boasts an impressive list of credits, both collectively and individually (Scrubs, Anchorman, Seinfeld, American Body Shop, How High, My Boys, Ed, Mean Girls, Thank You for Smoking, SNL, among many others).

Filmography

References

  1. ^ According to a New York Times article
  2. ^ Rookie of the Year at IMDB

External links

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