Chris D'Elia

Chris D'Elia
Chris D'Elia.jpg
Chris at SXSW 2015
Born (1980-03-29) March 29, 1980 (age 41)
Occupation
  • Comedian
  • Actor
  • Podcaster
  • Writer
Years active1996–present
Spouse(s)
Emily Montague
(m. 2006; div. 2010)
Parent(s)
Websitechrisdelia.com

Christopher William D'Elia (born March 29, 1980)[2][3] is an American stand-up comedian, actor, writer, and podcast host. He is known for playing Alex Miller on the NBC sitcom Whitney, Danny Burton on the NBC sitcom Undateable, Kenny on the ABC television series The Good Doctor and Henderson on the Netflix thriller series You.

Early life

Christopher William D'Elia was born on March 29, 1980 in Montclair, New Jersey.[1] His parents are television producer and director Bill D'Elia[4] and interior decorator Ellie D'Elia (née Dombroski).[5] His younger brother is filmmaker/actor Matt D'Elia.[6] Their family relocated to Los Angeles when D'Elia was 12,[7] where he attended La Cañada High School in the late 1990s.[8]

Career

D'Elia started acting in high school, and had some guest starring parts on Chicago Hope.[9]

He attended New York University and studied acting but dropped out after a year, because he did not like college.[9] He then appeared in a movie that went straight to DVD. During his downtime as an actor he started writing scripts. When he was 25 he decided to do stand-up comedy, which he had always wanted to do.[10]

D'Elia has been doing stand-up comedy since 2006. His first set was at the Ha Ha Café in North Hollywood, Los Angeles[7] He considers himself to be a stand-up comedian who acts.[10] He has been featured on Comedy Central's Live at Gotham, Comedy Central Presents, and Showtime's Live Nude Comedy. He was introduced to a broader audience as a regular on the series Glory Daze,[11] which ran for one season on TBS, playing "the Oracle", William Stankowski. He was originally only cast for the pilot, but was made a series regular.[10]

He co-starred in the NBC comedy series Whitney, opposite comedian Whitney Cummings, for two seasons.[11][12]

D'Elia was one of three hosts of the Ten Minute Podcast (from 2012 to 2015), along with Bryan Callen and Will Sasso. Since February 2017, he has hosted the weekly podcast Congratulations with Chris D'Elia, which has charted in the top 20 comedy podcasts in multiple countries.[citation needed] Listeners of the podcast are often referred to as 'Babies'. Other podcasts have been heavily influenced by his style, including The Fighter and the Kid, hosted by friend Bryan Callen and former MMA fighter turned E! host Brendan Schaub.[13]

D'Elia also gained over 2 million followers on Vine.

In January 2013, D'Elia released his debut parody rap album, as MC "Chank Smith", called Such Is Life (produced by Mr. Green).[14]

On December 6, 2013, D'Elia's first one-hour stand-up special, White Male Black Comic, aired on Comedy Central.[15] He has had three subsequent comedy specials: Incorrigible (2015), Man On Fire (2017) and No Pain (2020), all of which aired on Netflix. All except No Pain were directed by his father,[16][1] while No Pain was directed by his brother, Matt D'Elia.[17]

D'Elia had a lead role in the 2014–2016 NBC sitcom Undateable as Danny Burton, a ladies' man whose friends are all in one way or another "undateable".[18] The show was executive produced by Bill Lawrence,[19] and is a multi-camera sitcom with a live audience.[20][21] The show often incorporated improvisation. The cast includes stand-up comics who were good friends before the show.[22][23] In 2015, Bill Lawrence and the comics from the cast (D'Elia, Brent Morin, Ron Funches and Rick Glassman) went on a series of stand-up tour dates to promote the show.[24]

In 2016, D'Elia headlined the Leafly 420 Comedy Tour show in Chicago with special guest Ron Funches.[25]

In March 2019, it was announced that D'Elia had been cast in the recurring role of Henderson on the second season of the Netflix thriller series You.[26]

On an April 2018 episode of his Congratulations podcast, D'Elia imitated rapper Eminem and made fun of Eminem's middle-aged fans, while conceding that Eminem was "one of the best rappers of all time".[27] Positive reaction to that imitation led D'Elia to imitate Eminem's rapping again in videos he posted online in September 2018 (in his car) and January 2019 (in his garage). In February 2019, Eminem posted the garage video on his Twitter account, writing, "This is INCREDIBLE!!! 4 a second I actually thought it WAS me!!" The May 2019 single "Homicide" by Logic featuring Eminem then included an audio clip from the car video at the end of the song. D'Elia said that it was a "huge honor" to be included in the song, and that he did not ask for any royalties.[28] D'Elia then had a substantial role in the music video for the song, released in June 2019, which had each rapper's part performed/lip-synced by someone else: Logic's part was performed by actor Chauncey Leopardi (in reference to a humorous internet meme that claimed that the two were the same person), Eminem's part was performed by D'Elia, and D'Elia's part was performed by Eminem, mimicking the appearance of D'Elia in the car video.[29]

In August 2020, it was officially announced that D'Elia would be replaced by Tig Notaro in Army of the Dead (2021).[30] Trailers for the film were released in April 2021 with Notaro in place of D'Elia.[31]

Four separate episodes of The Joe Rogan Experience featuring D’Elia have been removed by Spotify, but the reason remains unclear.[32]

Personal life

His father is a second generation Italian-American,[33] and his mother is of Polish and Italian descent.[citation needed]

In 2006, D'Elia married actress Emily Montague. They divorced in 2010.[34]

Although his characters in Whitney (Alex Miller) and Undateable (Danny Burton) are both portrayed as frequent drinkers, D'Elia has never consumed illicit drugs or alcohol.[35]

D'Elia lives in the Beachwood Canyon area of Los Angeles.[36]

Sexual misconduct allegations

In June 2020, D'Elia was accused of sexual harassment, grooming, and solicitation of nude photos by multiple underage girls.[37] D'Elia denied the allegations, saying that he had neither "knowingly pursued any underage women at any point" nor "met or exchanged any inappropriate photos with the people who have tweeted about me."[38]

Comedy Central removed the 2011 Workaholics episode "To Friend a Predator", which featured D'Elia as a child molester who befriends the main characters, from their website, Hulu, and Amazon Prime Video. Comedy Central also removed D'Elia's 2013 standup special White Male. Black Comic. from their website.[39] Whitney Cummings, who co-starred with D'Elia on Whitney from 2011 to 2013, said that she was "devastated and enraged" by the allegations and that D'Elia exhibited "a pattern of predatory behavior […] enabled by silence."[40] Creative Artists Agency dropped D'Elia due to the allegations.[41] Penn Badgley, the star of You who worked with D'Elia during the show's second season, said that "the idea that a show like ours would indirectly, unwittingly be a haven for people who are abusive is disturbing."[42] In August 2020, D'Elia who previously was cast and shot a role in Army of the Dead,[43] directed by Zack Snyder and set to be distributed by Netflix,[44] was replaced by Tig Notaro, due to the allegations.[45]

In early September 2020, CNN Entertainment reported that in 2011 D'Elia asked actress Megan Drust for a ride home from a Los Angeles restaurant. While in the car, D'Elia allegedly unzipped his pants and exposed himself and started to masturbate before Drust exited the vehicle, saying, "You're defiling my car". According to CNN, two of Drust's friends confirmed being told the story soon after the incident.[46]

In February 2021, D'Elia posted a 10-minute video on his YouTube channel about the allegations, saying that "sex controlled my life," and that he stands "by the fact that all my relationships have been consensual and legal." He also stated that the allegations do not represent the full scope of what happened and apologized to all who had been caught up in his activities.[47]

In March 2021, D'Elia was sued by an anonymous woman in U.S. federal court, on allegations that D'Elia sexually abused her while she was 17 years old and demanded sexually explicit images from her over social media. This allegedly led to the exchange of more than 100 sexually explicit photos and videos via Snapchat in a period of six or seven months in 2014 and 2015, half of which were of the woman while she was 17 years old. In a statement, a spokesperson for D'Elia said that he denies the allegations and will defend himself against them in court.[48][49][50]

Influences

D'Elia has cited Jim Carrey, Bryan Callen, Eddie Murphy,[16][51] and Mitzi Shore[52] as major influences on his comedic career.

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
2004 Almost Marc
2005 Bad Girls from Valley High Gavin
2005 Crazylove Jake
2012 Celeste and Jesse Forever Snow White
2013 Funny: The Documentary Himself Documentary
2015 Flock of Dudes Adam
2016 XOXO[53] Neil
2017 Band Aid Uber Annoying
2017 The Female Brain Charlie
2017 Little Evil Wayne
2018 Half Magic Edward
2020 Life in a Year Phil

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1996–1997 Chicago Hope Luke Sarison Episodes: "Quiet Riot" and "Love on the Rocks"
2000 Get Real Chuck Episodes: "Choices" and "Absolution"
2004 Boston Legal Kevin Quinlan Episode: "An Eye for an Eye"
2005 American Dreams Phil Toolin Episode: "California Dreamin'"Episode:
2005 Monk Cal Gefsky Episode: "Mr. Monk Gets Drunk"
2010–2011 Glory Daze Bill Stankowski Main role
2011 Workaholics Topher Episode: "To Friend a Predator"
2011–2013 Whitney Alex Miller Main
2012 Sullivan & Son Ryan Capps Episode: "The Fifth Musketeer"
2013 White Male. Black Comic Himself Television special
2013–2016 Sanjay and Craig Remington Tufflips Recurring
Voice
2014 Jennifer Falls Adam Recurring role
2014–2016 Undateable Danny Burton Lead role
2015 Incorrigible Himself Television special
2015 The Comedy Central Roast of Justin Bieber Himself One night television special
2016 Rush Hour Buddy Episode: "Welcome Back, Carter"
Typical Rick Lukee Sado Episodes: "Schmooze You Lose" and "Unbroken Family"
Lip Sync Battle Himself Episode: "Brent Morin vs. Chris D'Elia"
2017 The Great Indoors Aaron Wolf Episode: "Aaron Wolf"
Man On Fire Himself Television special
2017–2018 The Good Doctor Kenny Recurring
(Season 1)
2018 Alone Together Dean Recurring
2019 Comedians of the World Himself Episode: "Chris D'Elia"
Huge in France Himself Recurring
You Henderson Recurring role (season 2)[26]
2020 No Pain Himself Television special

Web

Year Title Role Notes
2012–2016 Ten Minute Podcast[54] Himself Podcast
2014–2017 The Joe Rogan Experience Himself Podcast
2018–2019 H3 Podcast Himself Podcast
2018 Tigerbelly Himself Podcast
2019 Armchair Expert Himself Podcast
2016–present The Fighter and The Kid Himself Podcast
2017–present Congratulations with Chris D'Elia Himself Podcast
2018–present This Past Weekend with Theo Von Himself Podcast
2020–present The King and The Sting Himself Podcast

Discography

Comedy albums
Title Album details
Such is Life[55]
White Male. Black Comic.[56]

References

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  2. ^ "Today in History, March 29, 2021". The News-Herald. March 29, 2021. Archived from the original on March 29, 2021. Retrieved May 13, 2021.
  3. ^ Kaye, Ben (June 17, 2020). "Comedian Chris D'Elia Accused of Sexual Misconduct, Grooming Underage Girls [Update]". Consequence. Archived from the original on May 13, 2021. Retrieved May 14, 2021.
  4. ^ Tomashoff, Craig (March 2013). "Like Father, Like Son". Emmy. Archived from the original on October 2, 2020. Retrieved July 20, 2014.
  5. ^ Beale, Lauren (June 18, 2018). "After a long run, television producer Bill D'Elia parts with his Seal Beach retreat". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  6. ^ Egner, Jeremy (May 17, 2012). "He's Not a Jerk, He Just Plays One". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 3, 2021.
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  9. ^ a b Gleib, Ben (July 11, 2012). "#034: Guest Chris D'Elia: "God Particle Testicle Fish"". Last Week on Earth with Ben Gleib. Smodcast. Archived from the original (Audio interview/podcast) on April 27, 2015. Retrieved August 15, 2014.
  10. ^ a b c Lamoray, Lena (February 2, 2011). "Exclusive Interview Chris D'Elia, Chris plays STANKOWSKI in GLORY DAZE on TBS". Lena Lamoray. Archived from the original on October 2, 2020. Retrieved July 20, 2014.
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  29. ^ Kreps, Daniel (June 29, 2019). "Watch Logic, Eminem Recruit Famous Stunt Doubles for 'Homicide' Video". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on October 2, 2020. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
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  31. ^ "CG Tig Notaro is the best part of the Army Of The Dead Trailer, though everything else is okay too". Sam Barsanti. April 13, 2021. AVClub.
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  42. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 2, 2020. Retrieved October 2, 2020.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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  53. ^ Gerard, Jeremy (August 8, 2013). "Hayley Kiyoko Of 'CSI: Cyber' Is Cast In 'XOXO', Netflix' Indie-Fest Feature Project". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on October 2, 2020. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
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  55. ^ "Chris D'elia AKA Chank Smith released his rap album...."Such is Life"". Duncan Trussell. May 30, 2011. Archived from the original on November 22, 2015. Retrieved June 4, 2011.
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External links

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