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| - Michael Jeter (August 26, 1952 – March 30, 2003) was an American actor.
- Jeter received critical acclaim for his role as the homeless cabaret singer in The Fisher King, co-starring Robin Williams. He also appeared in The Green Mile as condemned prisoner Eduard Delacroix, co-starring James Cromwell. In television, he was a regular on the Burt Reynolds sitcom Evening Shade, as assistant football coach Herman Stiles, for which he won an Emmy. He received a Tony Award for his role as Otto Kringelein in the Broadway adaptation of Grand Hotel.
- He and Vincent Schiavelli (another Hey Arnold! guest star) were later talked about on the internet documentary "No Small Parts."
- Michael Jeter was an American actor who portrayed Udesky in Jurassic Park III. He is best known for his role as Herman Stiles on "Evening Shady". During his life, Jeter won a Tony Award for his role in the Broadway musical Grand Hotel and an an Emmy for his television role in the sitcom Evening Shade.
- Michael Jeter (August 26, 1952 - March 30, 2003) was a Tony– and Emmy-winning American film, stage and television actor who played the drunken clown Norman Snively in the first Air Bud movie, and provided the voice of Runta in the Aladdin TV series. He also played Father Ignatius in Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit. He is best known for playing Mr. Noodle's Brother, "Mr. Noodle", on the children's TV series Sesame Street. Jeter has also appeared in TV shows and movies such as The Polar Express, Touched by an Angel, Jurassic Park III and The Green Mile.
- His published works include more than over 3,000 Short Stories, Novels, Plays, Comic Operas, Musical Comedies, Farces, Operettas, Novellas, Screenplay, Teleplays, Children's Books, Essays, Poems, Anthologies, Radio Plays, Lyrics, Poetry Collections, Novelized Books, Proses, Non-Fiction, a wide range of Criticism covering Literature, Animation, Comedy, Film, Television, Theater and Print Media. His work including his Cartoons is often published in The New Yorker magazine and Newspapers like The New York Times, The New York Post and many more. He has been known as "The Man of 1000 Laughs", as told by New York Times Critic Frank Rich.
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