Marc Maron

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Marc Maron
Maron in 2015
Birth nameMarc David Maron[1]
Born (1963-09-27) September 27, 1963 (age 60)
Jersey City, New Jersey, U.S.
MediumStand-up, podcast, television, film
Alma materBoston University
Years active1987–present
GenresAlternative comedy, black comedy, self-deprecation, cringe comedy, satire, observational comedy
Spouse
Kimberly Reiss
(m. 1997; div. 2001)
(m. 2004; div. 2007)
Partner(s)Lynn Shelton (2019–2020; her death)
Notable works and rolesMorning Sedition
WTF with Marc Maron
The Marc Maron Show
Maron
Glow
Websitewtfpod.com

Marcus David Maron (born September 27, 1963) is an American stand-up comedian,

podcaster
, writer, actor, and musician.

In the 1990s and 2000s, Maron was a frequent guest on the

Breakroom Live.[6]

In September 2009, following the cancellation of Breakroom Live, Maron began hosting the twice-weekly

Highland Park, Los Angeles. Highlights include a 2010 episode with Louis C.K. that was rated the No. 1 podcast episode of all time by Slate magazine,[7] a 2012 interview with comedian Todd Glass in which Glass publicly revealed that he was gay,[8] and a 2015 interview with President Barack Obama.[2]

From 2013 to 2016, he starred in his own IFC television comedy series, Maron, for which he also served as executive producer and an occasional writer. From 2017 to 2019, he co-starred in the Netflix comedy series GLOW. He also had a minor role in 2019's Joker and provided the voice of Mr. Snake in the DreamWorks Animation film The Bad Guys (2022).

Early life

Maron was born in

orthopedic surgeon.[9][10][11][12][1] He has a younger brother, Craig.[13]

Maron is from a

medical residency in Alaska, and so Maron and his family moved there. When his father left the Air Force, he moved the family to Albuquerque, New Mexico and started a medical practice.[2] Maron lived in Albuquerque from third grade through high school.[17] He graduated from Highland High School.[18]

In 1986, Maron graduated from Boston University with a B.A. in English literature.[19][20]

Career

Maron first performed stand-up in 1987 when he was 24 years old.[21] His professional comedy career began at The Comedy Store in Los Angeles, where he became an associate of Sam Kinison.[22][23] He later moved to New York City and became part of the New York alternative comedy scene. During the summer of 1994, he appeared several times on Monday open-mic night, coordinated by Tracey Metzger, at the now-closed Greenwich Village location of the Boston Comedy Club. He auditioned unsuccessfully for the 1995 Saturday Night Live cast overhaul and attributes being passed over to being high during a meeting with show creator and producer Lorne Michaels.[2][24][25]

Maron continued to be a stand-up comedian and also began to appear on television; his voice was used in episodes of Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist,[26] and he hosted Short Attention Span Theater for a time.[6] He also recorded half-hour specials for HBO and Comedy Central Presents as well as comedy showcases like the Cam Neely Foundation fundraiser, which also featured performers such as Jon Stewart, Denis Leary and Steven Wright. He frequently appeared in the live alternative stand-up series he had organized with Janeane Garofalo called Eating It, which used the rock bar Luna Lounge in New York's Lower East Side as its venue, from the 1990s until the building was razed in 2005.[27]

His first one-man show, Jerusalem Syndrome, had an extended off-Broadway run in 2000 and was released in book form in 2001. In 2009, he began workshopping another one-man show, Scorching the Earth. According to Maron (in Scorching The Earth), these two shows "bookend" his relationship with his second wife, comic Mishna Wolff, which ended in a bitter divorce.[28][29]

Maron performing in 2010

In May 2008, he toured with Eugene Mirman and Andy Kindler in Stand Uppity: Comedy That Makes You Feel Better About Yourself and Superior to Others. In January 2009, a collaboration with Sam Seder, which had begun in September 2007 as a weekly hour-long video webcast became Breakroom Live with Maron & Seder, produced by Air America.[30] Until its cancellation in July 2009, the show was webcast live weekdays at 3 p.m. Eastern, with episodes archived for later viewing. In its final incarnation, the show was informal, taking place in the actual break room of Air America Media, with the cafeteria vending machines just off-camera. This meant occasional distractions when Air America staff and management alike would occasionally come in for food and drink. Maron and Seder held court in an online "post-show chat" with viewers, in an even less formal continuation of each webcast, after the credits had rolled.

Doug Loves Movies
podcast at the 2012 Los Angeles Podcast Festival

Maron's stand-up act is marked by his commitment to self-revelation and cultural analysis. He is particularly known for relentless on-stage exploration of his own relationships with family, girlfriends, and other stand-up comedians whom he has known and befriended over his years in the business.[31] In October 2013, Maron released his first hour-long special through Netflix, Marc Maron: Thinky Pain.[32] Maron would follow this with another special, More Later, which was released in December 2015 through Epix.[33]

Kliph Nesteroff's 2015 book The Comedians: Drunks, Thieves, Scoundrels and the History of American Comedy is dedicated to Maron.[34]

His 2023 special From Bleak to Dark was named New York magazine's "No. 1 Best Comedy Special of 2023."[35]

Radio

From almost the first day of the

radio show with Mark Riley that aired weekdays from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. Eastern time.[36] The show was unique in the Air America lineup in its heavy reliance on both live and pre-produced sketch comedy, utilizing the talents of staff writers as well as the on-air hosts. The format was a left-leaning near-satire of typical morning "Buddy" radio programs, including recurring characters, interviews and listener call-in segments, and it attracted a loyal fan base.[37]

As 2005 came to an end, it became known that Maron's contract would not be renewed on its December 1, 2005, end date because of problems with then Air America executive Danny Goldberg. Goldberg reportedly did not "get" the comedy or agree with the satiric and often angry tone set by Maron and other writers (Jim Earl and Kent Jones) for a morning drive-time show. On November 28, 2005, it was officially announced that Maron's contract had not been renewed. His last Morning Sedition broadcast was on December 16, 2005, and the show was discontinued shortly thereafter.[36]

On February 28, 2006, Maron began hosting a nighttime radio program with Jim Earl as a sidekick for KTLK Progressive Talk 1150AM in Los Angeles called The Marc Maron Show from 10:00 pm until midnight PST. The program was frequently delayed (sometimes for over an hour) owing to KTLK's contractual agreement to broadcast local sports events that would often go into overtime. The Marc Maron Show was never nationally syndicated by Air America despite reported contractual clauses promising such. The show was streamed online live, but the show was not publicized, and the existence of the stream was not well promoted.[citation needed]

On July 5, it was announced that Maron's final episode would be on July 14. A few days before that date, Maron bluntly discussed his long struggle with Air America Radio's executives on-air. In 2008, Marc and

The Sound of Young America.[42]

On the final Breakroom Live webcast, Maron said that this marked the third time since 2005 he'd been told by an executive at the network that his services would not be required in the immediate future. Co-host Sam Seder pointed out that this would be the end of his fourth show at Air America since the troubled network's inception.[43]

WTF with Marc Maron podcast

Due to a precarious state in his comedic career, on September 1, 2009, Maron began a twice-weekly podcast called WTF with Marc Maron in what Maron would later describe in a 2015 interview as a "Hail Mary pass"; his first-ever guest was fellow stand-up Jeff Ross.[44][45] In a free-form discussion, Maron and his guests touch on topics like the arc of the interviewees' careers, their shared past experiences, and stories from the road.[38] As of 2024, Maron has released more than 1,500 episodes of the show, garnering critical acclaim and more than 600 million downloads;[46][47][48] notable guests include President Barack Obama, Sir Paul McCartney, Robin Williams, Jerry Seinfeld, Chris Rock, Lorne Michaels, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Brad Pitt. The show has been noted for its influence on other long-form interview podcasts that emerged after its debut.[49][50][51] In April 2021, it was announced that Maron and his producer Brendan McDonald would be the recipients of the first-ever Governors Award by the Podcast Academy for Excellence in Audio (The Ambies) for their work on WTF.[52] The success of Maron's podcast opened up numerous other avenues on film and TV as well as giving him a massive boost to audience attendance at his stand-up shows.

Film and television

His only major film credit for many years was a small part credited as "angry promoter" in the 2000

Johnny Flynn's young David Bowie in the movie Stardust.[56]

In 2012, he provided the voice of Magnus Hammersmith in three episodes of Metalocalypse. Maron has made two guest appearances as himself on his longtime friend Louis C.K.'s show Louie, first in the third-season episode "Ikea/Piano Lesson"[57] and then again in the fourth season episode "Pamela: Part 3".[58]

Maron, a television series created by and starring Maron for a 10-episode first season, premiered on IFC on May 3, 2013.[59] The show is loosely autobiographical, revolving around Maron's life as a twice-divorced sober comedian running a comedy podcast out of his garage but establishing many differences between the real-life Maron and the version of him on TV. As the executive producer and star of Maron, Maron appeared in all 51 episodes of the show from 2013 to 2016, portraying a fictionalized version of himself.[60] The show ended in 2016 after four seasons on IFC.[61] Maron directed two episodes of the show, "The Joke" and "Ex-Pod."

Maron played a supporting role in Todd Phillips's Joker origin story film Joker, starring Joaquin Phoenix as the title character, alongside Robert De Niro and Zazie Beetz.

In addition to his own show, Maron was the voice of the raccoon Randl on 12 episodes of the Nickelodeon show Harvey Beaks in 2015 and 2016.[62] He appeared in the Netflix series Easy, playing a graphic novelist, Jacob Malco.[63][64][65] Maron also appeared on two episodes of Girls in season four in 2015, playing New York City councilman Ed Duffield.

From 2017 to 2019, Maron co-starred in the Netflix comedy GLOW, for which he was nominated for multiple awards.[66]

He was cast in a supporting role for the 2022 film To Leslie, playing alongside Andrea Riseborough.

He played the role of landlord Gideon Perlman in the Amazon web series The Horror of Dolores Roach.[67]

Music

In 2013, Maron played a

2013 global surveillance disclosures, "Party at the NSA" critiques the state of governmental surveillance programs in the United States. Proceeds from the single benefit the international non-profit digital rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation.[68][69] Previously, Maron said he was a fan of the band.[70]

In an interview with KCRW, Maron stated, "I have no idea why they asked me to play guitar on the track. I'm only good at one thing on the guitar. It just so happens it was exactly the thing they needed."[71]

Reviews for the solo were positive. IFC's Melissa Locker said "Marc Maron plays a mean guitar."[72] Spin's Chris Martins called the guitar solo a "shredfest" as well as "angular."[73] The Stranger called it "a frequency-fraying guitar solo that's better than you'd expect, although it won't make J Mascis jealous."[74]

Maron wrote and performed on the score for his film Sword of Trust.[75]

Personal life

Maron lived in

Glendale, Los Angeles, with his two cats, Buster and Sammy.[78]

Maron has spoken openly, both in his act and on his podcast, about his alcohol and drug abuse during the 1990s. Maron has been sober since August 9, 1999, but says he has struggled with an eating disorder he developed during childhood.

Louis CK
but publicly disavowed CK after the November 2017 confirmation of CK's sexual misconduct, stating that CK had lied to him about the allegations in the past.

Maron has been married twice, once to Kimberly Reiss and once to

Edinburgh Fringe
festival in 2007, Maron riffed on his then-recent separation and divorce from Wolff.

On the October 14, 2013, episode of his podcast, Maron announced that he had broken up with his former fiancée, Jessica Sanchez.[80] He then had a five-month relationship with Moon Zappa.[81] More recently, he dated visual artist Sarah Cain for several years, breaking up with her in early 2019.

Starting in late 2019, he began making reference to his relationship with director Lynn Shelton. She was a guest on his podcast in both 2015 and 2018, and she directed the 2019 film Sword of Trust, which stars Maron and Michaela Watkins. Maron and Shelton were together until Shelton's unexpected death in May 2020.[82]

Works or publications

Books

  • Maron, Marc. The Jerusalem Syndrome: My Life As a Reluctant Messiah. New York: Broadway Books, 2001.
  • Maron, Marc. Attempting Normal. New York: Spiegel & Grau, 2014.
  • Maron, Marc and Brendan McDonald.

Comedy albums

Comedy Specials

Podcasts

Filmography

Marc Maron film work
Year Title Credit Notes
Actor Writer Producer
1993 Caesar's Salad No No No Composer
1994 D2: The Mighty Ducks Yes No No Role: Valet (deleted scene)[92]
1997 Who's the Caboose? Yes No No Role: Comedian
1999 Los Enchiladas! Yes No No Role: Devin
2000 Almost Famous Yes No No Role: Angry Promoter
2002 Stalker Guilt Syndrome Yes No No Role: Marc
2008 A Bad Situationist Yes No No Role: Mikel
2012 Sleepwalk with Me Yes No No Role: Marc Mulheren
G. Redford Considers Yes No Yes Role: G. Redford (voice)
All Wifed Out Yes No No Role: Stan
2013 Bob Dylan: Like a Rolling Stone Yes No No Himself
Marc Maron: Thinky Pain No Yes Yes Comedy special; himself
2015 Flock of Dudes Yes No No Role: Richtman
Frank and Cindy Yes No No Role: Gilbert
Marc Maron: More Later No Yes Yes Comedy special; himself
2016
Get a Job
Yes No No Role: Hotel Manager
Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates Yes No No Role: Randy
2017 Marc Maron: Too Real No Yes Yes Comedy special; himself
2019 Sword of Trust Yes No No Role: Mel
Joker Yes No No Role: Gene Ufland
2020 Marc Maron: End Times Fun No Yes Yes Comedy special; himself
Worth Yes No No Role: Bart Cuthbert
Spenser Confidential Yes No No Role: Wayne Cosgrove
Stardust Yes No No Role: Ron Oberman
2021 Respect Yes No No Role: Jerry Wexler
2022 To Leslie[93] Yes No No Role: Sweeney
The Bad Guys Yes No No Role: Mr. Snake (voice)
DC League of Super-Pets Yes No No Role: Lex Luthor (voice)
2023 Marc Maron: From Bleak to Dark No Yes Yes Comedy special; himself
Genie Yes No No Role: Lenny
TBA The Order Yes No No
Marc Maron television work
Year Title Credit Notes
Actor Writer Producer Director
1993 Short Attention Span Theater No No No No Role: Himself (host)
1996 Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist Yes Yes No No 2 episodes
Role: Marc (voice)
2002 Never Mind the Buzzcocks No No No No 5 episodes
Role: Himself (host)
2004 Pilot Season Yes No No No 2 episodes
Role: Marc Victor
2010–2011 The Life & Times of Tim Yes No No No 2 episodes
Role: Various roles (voices)
2012 Metalocalypse Yes No No No 3 episodes
Role: Magnus Hammersmith (voice)
2012 Adventure Time Yes No No No Episode: "Up a Tree"
Role: Squirrel (voice)
2012–2014 Louie Yes No No No 2 episodes
Role: Himself
2013–2016 Maron Yes Yes Yes Yes 51 episodes
Role: Marc Maron
2015 Girls Yes No No No 2 episodes
Role: Ted Duffield
2015–2016 Harvey Beaks Yes No No No 14 episodes
Role: Randl (voice)
2016
Animals.
Yes No No No Episode: "Rats."
Role: Marc (voice)
Roadies Yes No No No Episode: "Longest Days"
Role: Himself
2016–2019 Easy Yes No No No 3 episodes
Role: Jacob
2017–2019 GLOW Yes No No No 28 episodes
Role: Sam Sylvia
2017 Penn Zero: Part-Time Hero Yes No No No 2 episodes
Role: Piv (voice)
2019 The Simpsons Yes No No No Episode: "The Clown Stays in the Picture"
Role: Himself (voice)
2022 Reservation Dogs Yes No No No Episode: "Stay Gold Cheesy Boy"
Role: Gene
2023 The Horror of Dolores Roach Yes No No No 2 episodes
Role: Gideon Pearlman
Adventure Time: Fionna and Cake Yes No No No 2 episodes
Role: Squirrel (voice)
Marc Maron music video work
Year Title Artist(s) Ref.
2012 "Sensitive Man" Nick Lowe
2013 "Like a Rolling Stone" Bob Dylan [94]

Accolades

In 2022, Maron's WTF podcast episode featuring Robin Williams from April 26, 2010, was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."[95]

Marc Maron award nominations[96]
Year Award Category Nominated work Result
2018 Gold Derby Awards Comedy Supporting Actor GLOW Nominated
Ensemble of the Year
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series
Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Comedy Series
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series
2019
Gijón International Film Festival Best Actor[97] Sword of Trust Won
2021
Critics' Choice Television Awards
Best Comedy Special End Times Fun (Netflix) Nominated
2021 Inaugural Governors Award by the Podcast Academy Excellence in Audio[52] WTF with Marc Maron Won
2023 Good Grief Award from Our House Grief Support Center Honors individuals who portray the grief process with honesty and dignity[98] From Bleak to Dark Won

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  94. ^ "National Recording Registry Inducts Music from Alicia Keys, Ricky Martin, Journey and More in 2022". Library of Congress. Retrieved February 16, 2023.
  95. ^ "Marc Maron: Nominations and awards - The Los Angeles Times". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  96. ^ "Palmarés 57 edición". Ayuntamiento de Gijón (in Spanish). Retrieved November 30, 2019.
  97. ^ "House of Hope Gala". Retrieved December 12, 2023.

Further reading

  • Daniel, Kane (September 2014). "Marc Maron". Opinion. Smith Journal. 12: 44.

External links