Christopher Haden-Guest, 5th Baron Haden-Guest

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Christopher Haden-Guest, 5th Baron Haden-Guest

Birthdate:
Birthplace: New York, NY, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Peter Haden-Guest, 4th Baron Haden-Guest and Jean Pauline Haden-Guest
Husband of Jamie Lee Curtis
Father of Private and Private
Brother of Private and Private
Half brother of Private User

Occupation: Screenwriter, composer, musician, director, actor, comedian
Managed by: Randy Schoenberg
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Christopher Haden-Guest, 5th Baron Haden-Guest

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Guest

Christopher Haden-Guest, 5th Baron Haden-Guest (born February 5, 1948), better known as Christopher Guest, is an American screenwriter, composer, musician, director, actor and comedian. He is most widely known in Hollywood for having written, directed and starred in several "mockumentary" films that feature a repertory-like ensemble cast. In the United Kingdom, he holds a Baronial peerage, and has publicly expressed a desire to see the House of Lords reformed as a democratically-elected chamber. Despite initial activity in the Lords, his career there was cut short by the House of Lords Act 1999.

Guest was born in New York City, the son of Peter Haden-Guest, a British United Nations diplomat who later became 4th Baron Haden-Guest, and his second wife, Jean Pauline Hindes, a former vice president of casting at CBS. Guest's maternal grandparents were Jewish immigrants from Russia, while a paternal great-grandfather was Colonel Albert Goldsmid, a British Jew who founded the Jewish Lads' and Girls' Brigade. Although both of Guest's parents were born Jewish, they became atheists and Guest had no religious upbringing.

Guest spent parts of his childhood in his father's native UK. Guest attended The High School of Music & Art (New York City), studying classical music (clarinet). He later took up the mandolin and became interested in country music. He also played guitar with Arlo Guthrie, who went to the same school. Guest later began performing with bluegrass bands until he took up rock and roll.

Nearly a decade before he was born, his uncle David Guest, a lecturer and Communist Party member, was killed in the Spanish Civil War fighting in the International Brigades.

Peerage and heirs

Guest became the 5th Baron Haden-Guest, of Saling, in the County of Essex, when his father died in 1996. He succeeded upon the ineligibility of his older half-brother, Anthony Haden-Guest, who was born prior to the marriage of his parents. According to an article in The Guardian, Guest attended the House of Lords regularly until the House of Lords Act 1999 barred most hereditary peers from their seats. In the article Guest remarked:

“ There's no question that the old system was unfair. I mean, why should you be born to this? But now it's all just sheer cronyism. The Prime Minister can put in whoever he wants and bus them in to vote. The Upper House should be an elected body, it's that simple. ”

Guest married actress Jamie Lee Curtis in 1984 at the home of their mutual friend Rob Reiner. They have two adopted children: Anne (born 1986) and Thomas (born 1996). As Guest's children are adopted, they cannot inherit the family barony under the terms of the letters patent that created it, though a 2004 Royal Warrant addressing the style of a peer's adopted children states that they can use courtesy titles. The current heir presumptive to the barony is Guest's younger brother, the actor Nicholas Haden-Guest.

Career

1970s

Guest began his career in theatre during the early 1970s with one his earliest professional performances being the role of Norman in Michael Weller's Moonchildren for the play's American premiere at the Arena Stage in Washington D.C. in November 1971. Guest continued with the production when it moved to Broadway in 1972. The following year he began making contributions to The National Lampoon Radio Hour for a variety of National Lampoon audio recordings. He both performed comic characters (Flash Bazbo-Space Explorer, Mr. Rogers, music critic Roger de Swans, and sleazy record company rep Ron Fields) and also wrote, arranged and performed numerous musical parodies (of Bob Dylan, James Taylor and others). He was also featured alongside Chevy Chase and John Belushi in the Off-Broadway revue National Lampoon's Lemmings. One of his earliest films includes a bit part as a uniformed police officer in Death Wish 1974 starring Charles Bronson.

1980s

Along with Martin Short, Billy Crystal and Harry Shearer, Guest was hired as a one-year only cast member for the 1984-85 season on NBC's Saturday Night Live. Recurring characters on SNL played by Guest include: Frankie, of Willie and Frankie (two co-workers who recount in detail physically painful situations in which they've found themselves); Herb Minkman, a shady novelty toymaker with a brother named Al (played by Crystal); Rajeev Vindaloo, an eccentric foreign man in the same vein as Andy Kaufman's Latka character from Taxi; and Senor Cosa, a Spanish ventriloquist often seen on the recurring spoof of The Joe Franklin Show. He also experimented behind the camera with pre-filmed sketches, notably directing a documentary-style short starring Shearer and Short as synchronized swimmers. In another short film from SNL, Guest and Crystal appear as retired Negro-League baseball players, "The Rooster and the King."

He has also appeared as Count Rugen in The Princess Bride, Charley Ford in The Long Riders, Lord Cromer in Mrs Henderson Presents and Dr. Stone in A Few Good Men. He had a cameo role as Dylan, a smarmy pedestrian, in the 1986 remake of The Little Shop of Horrors. As a co-writer and director, Guest made the Hollywood satire The Big Picture.

Guest's biggest role of the first two decades of his career, however, is likely that of Nigel Tufnel in the 1984 "rockumentary" film This Is Spinal Tap. Amplifier manufacturers actually began to produce amps with knobs going up to 11 (rather than the traditional scale of 10), as a result of a popular scene where a benighted Tufnel proudly shows off such an amp, believing it to be louder. "This one goes to 11!" has become something of a mantra among musicians ever since. Guest made his first appearance as Tufnel on the 1978 sketch comedy program The TV Show, and appears as Tufnel most recently in a television ad for Volkswagen.

1990s-present

The experience of having made Spinal Tap would directly inform the second phase of his career. Starting in 1996, Guest began writing, directing and acting in his own series of heavily improvised films. Many of them would come to be definitive examples of what came to be known as "mockumentaries."

His frequent writing partner is Eugene Levy. Together, Levy, Guest and a small band of other actors have formed a loose repertory group, which appear across the several films. These include Catherine O'Hara, Michael McKean, Parker Posey, Jane Lynch, John Michael Higgins, Harry Shearer, Ed Begley, Jr. and Fred Willard. Guest and Levy write backgrounds for each of the characters and notecards for each specific scene, outlining the plot, and then leave it up to the actors to improvise the dialogue, which is supposed to result in a much more natural conversation than scripted dialogue would. Each of these movies also shares a hallmark plot development, where the movie leads up to some kind of a highly anticipated performance, or the outcome of a performance. This could reflect Guest's background in theater, and simply a kind of meta-commentary, as a real performance is of course what is being improvised for the duration. Notably, everyone who appears in these movies receives the same fee, and the same portion of profits.

Despite making a number of mockumentaries, Guest himself dislikes the term. He maintains that his intention is not to mock anyone, but to explore insular, perhaps obscure communities through his method of filmmaking. When pressed in a 2003 interview by Charlie Rose, however, he could not provide a word to substitute for "mockumentary."

He had a guest voice-over role in the animated comedy series SpongeBob SquarePants as SpongeBob's cousin, Stanley.

Guest will appear in the upcoming 2009 comedy The Invention of Lying.

He is also currently a member of the musical group The Beyman Bros, which he formed with his childhood friend David Nichtern and Spinal Tap's current keyboardist CJ Vanston. Their debut album Memories of Summer as a Child was released on January 20, 2009.

Off-stage demeanor

Guest is sometimes off-putting in interviews and promotional appearances (having been described by reviewer Warren Etheredge as, "rude, condescending and intolerable"), as well as with people who have met him outside of the work environment because contrary to expectations of him as a comedian he often seems deadpan, even dour. Of this, Guest has said, "People want me to be funny all the time. They think I'm being funny no matter what I say or do and that's not the case. I rarely joke unless I'm in front of a camera. It's not what I am in real life. It's what I do for a living."

Filmography

Girlfriends (1978) - as Eric

The Long Riders (1980) - as Charley Ford

This Is Spinal Tap (1984) - as Nigel Tufnel (Also Writer)

Little Shop of Horrors (1986) - as The First Customer

Beyond Therapy (1987) - as Bob

The Princess Bride (1987) - as Count Tyrone Rugen, the six-fingered man

The Big Picture (1989) - (Writer/Director only)

A Few Good Men (1992) - as Dr. Stone

Waiting for Guffman (1996) - as Corky St. Clair (Also Writer/Director)

Almost Heroes (1998) (Director only)

Small Soldiers (1998) - Slamfist/Scratch-It (Voice only )

Best in Show (2000) - as Harlan Pepper (Also Writer/Director)

A Mighty Wind (2003) - as Alan Barrows (Also Writer/Director)

Mrs Henderson Presents - as Lord Cromer

For Your Consideration (2006) - as Jay Berman (Also Writer/Director)

Spongebob Squarepants (2007) - as Stanley S. SquarePants (Voice only)

Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009) - as Ivan the Terrible

The Invention of Lying (2009)

Family Tree (2013) - Plays an American Civil War Reenactor

References

^ a b Witchel, Alex (2006-11-12). "The Shape-Shifter". The New York Times. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.

^ a b Rosen, Steven (2006-11-16). "Want to spoof Purim and the Oscars? Be our Guest!". The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles 21 (39). Retrieved on 2006-11-16.

^ "A genealogical survey of the peerage of Britain as well as the royal families of Europe". thePeerage.com. 2006-11-12. Retrieved on 2006-11-16.

^ Guest, Christopher (1989-09-14). "interview with Terry Gross". Fresh Air, National Public Radio, WHYY, Philadelphia.

^ a b c Charlie Rose interview with Christopher Guest, 2003

^ http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=100007776

^ Dizon, Dristin (March 30, 2007). "If it's happening in Seattle, you can bet movie lover Warren Etheredge is in the loop". SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER. Retrieved on 2007-07-10.

^ Hobson, Louis B (October 10, 2000). "Guest Shots". canoe.ca. Retrieved on 2007-08-29.

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Christopher Haden-Guest, 5th Baron Haden-Guest's Timeline

1948
February 5, 1948
New York, NY, United States