Harland Williams Biography, Age, Height, Sons, Children, Net Worth, Wife

Harland Williams Biography

Harland Williams is a Canadian-American actor, comedian, author, artist, musician, and radio personality. He is the middle child of five with two older and two younger sisters.

Harland Williams Age

He was born on  14 November 1962 in Toronto, Canada. (He is 56 years old as old 2018)

Harland Williams Height

He stands at a height of  1.87 m

harland williams photo
harland williams photo

Harland Williams Net Worth

He has an estimated net worth of $6.5 million dollars.

Harland Williams Parents

He was born to John Reesor Williams (father) and Lorraine Williams (mother)

Harland Williams Siblings

He has a brother Steve Williams, who is also a Canadian special effects artist and animator

Harland Williams Wife

He was previously married to Wendi Kenya. who is an actress and appeared on several TV shows like 7th Heaven and Lie to me.

Harland Williams Children

They are five children and he is the middle child of two older and two younger sisters.

Harland Williams Education

He attended Senator O’Connor College School and again joined Sheridan College.

Harland Williams Books

  • The kid with too many pets
  • The Things You Don’t Know You Don’t Know
  • Crazy Creatures
  • Lickety Split, Who Are You?
  • Lickety Split Meets the Fire Puffin
  • You’Ve Lost Your Marvels Lickety Split
  • My Travel Book
  • My Birthday Book
  • Chuckle Mountain
  • Lickety Split and His Adventure Through Time
    World of Reading: Puppy Dog Pals Pups on a Mission (Level 1 Reader Plus Fun Facts)

Harland Williams Career

Year
Film
Role
1994
Dumb and Dumber
State Trooper
1996
Down Periscope
E.T. “Sonar” Lovacelli
1997
RocketMan
Fred Z. Randall
Wag the Dog
Pet Wrangler
Space Ghost Coast to Coast
Himself
1998
Half Baked
Kenny Davis
There’s Something About Mary
Hitchhiker (uncredited)
Dog Park
Callum
Ned’s Newt
Newton (voice)
Mr. Headmistress
Tucker
1999
Superstar
Slater
2000
The Whole Nine Yards
Special Agent Steve Hanson
Big Money Hustlas
Officer Harry Cox
Becoming Dick
Richard Breggs
2001
Freddy Got Fingered
Darren
Gary & Mike
Mike Bonner (voice)
2002
Back by Midnight
Sheriff Hubbard
Sorority Boys
Doofer/Roberta
2003
Family Tree
Jake
Kart Racer
Zee
2005
Lucky 13
Blackman
Because of Winn-Dixie
Policeman
Robots
Lugnut (voice)
2006
An employee of the Month
Russell Porpis-Gunders
Surf School
Rip
2007
Meet the Robinsons
Carl (voice)
The Dukes of Hazzard: The Beginning
Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane
2008
Bachelor Party 2: The Last Temptation
Derek
Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa
Giraffe (voice)
2009
Fudgy Wudgy Fudge Face
Elmore P. Fudge
My Life in Ruins
Big Al Sawchuck
2009
The Haunted World of El Superbeasto
Gerard the Exterminator (voice)
2011
Spooky Buddies
Warwick the Warlock
Lloyd the Conqueror
Vulcan
Dahmer Vs. Gacy
God
Dan Vs.
Hiram
Robot Chicken
Professor Cornelius Q. Quibblefingers (voice)
2012
The High Fructose Adventures of Annoying Orange
Apple (voice)
Robot and Monster
Monster (voice)
2014
Back in the Day
Skunk
2015
Jake and the Never Land Pirates
Captain Frost (voice)
Penn Zero: Part-Time Hero
Helper Hue (voice)
2016
Sausage Party
Ketchup Bottle/Drug Dealer/Baba Ganoush (voice)
Skylanders Academy
Hugo (voice)
2017–present
Puppy Dog Pals
Bob (voice)

Harland Williams Twitter

Harland Williams Instagram

https://www.instagram.com/p/BvzynkbAJrr/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Harland Williams Interview

Harland Williams Latest News

Jimmy Kimmel has seized the moment, and also unleashed his shirtless sidekick, Guillermo Rodriguez, in his week in VegasVille.

Some highlights from Kimmel’s ABC late-night show, and also his upcoming comedy haunt:

JKCC opening announced

Harland Williams is the first headliner at Jimmy Kimmel’s Comedy Club, set to open for previews at Linq Promenade on May 2-8, with a more celebrated premiere in June. Williams played the luckless, urine-drinking patrolman in “Dumb & Dumber” and the “seven-minute abs!” hitchhiker in “There’s Something About Mary.”

Fahim Anwar headlines May 16-19, John Heffron from May 30-June 2, Beth Stilling from June 6-9, and Gina Brillon from June 13-16. The bar at the club, just a somersault across from Brooklyn Bowl, opens at 4 p.m. Shows are 8 p.m. Thursdays through Sundays, with additional performances 10 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays (for tickets and info, go to www.kimmelscomedyclub.com).

Kimmel promises surprise guests, “high-end, casual cuisine” and memorabilia. This is a two-level, 8,000-square-foot venue with a 300-seat capacity for ages 18 and older. Kimmel has said he plans to occasionally appear at the club on the same night he tapes his show in L.A.

“We are going to have fun with it, some of the things we will figure out along the way. We tape the show from 5 to 6 in L.A., so I can get on a plane at 7 o’ clock and be here for the show on a weeknight if I feel like it,” he said during an interview at Linq Promenade on March 16. “But we also want to put comedians on the show from Las Vegas. Rather than performing in front of a studio audience on television, they will be performing in front of a real comedy club audience.”

Lopez shines

Jerry Lopez joined Cleto and the Cletones for the full show Wednesday. It was a natural fit, artistically and musically. Lopez has known Kimmel sincere he was a kid, and Cleto Escobedo III since Escobedo was a teen sensation on the Vegas entertainment scene.

“He was in a band called the Indigos at the Hilton lounge, and I passed by and heard this kid singing and playing the sax,” Lopez says, remembering the space that is now Westgate Cabaret at Westgate Las Vegas. “He was fantastic, and I realized who he was and it made sense.”

Escobedo’s father, Cleto Jr., was a hero of Lopez’s who was in a great band out of Texas, Los Blues. “They were just like the equivalent of Santa Fe & The Fat City Horns,” Lopez says. “We all became really close. I still talk to Cleto regularly.”

The younger Escobedo asked Lopez to join him onstage this week. The elder Escobedo still catches Santa Fe on Monday night at the Copa Room at Bootlegger Bistro.

“It was great,” says Lopez, who sang “Lucretia Macevil” by Blood Sweat & Tears, Elvis’s “Burning Love” and “Ain’t That Peculiar,” by Marvin Gaye. “Every one of those guys in the band is virtuosos, as good as anyone on the planet. It was really fun.”

Guillermo’s strip show

Rodriguez was in a showgirl outfit with the dancers from “Vegas! The Show” at V Theater at Miracle Mile Shops at Planet Hollywood on Monday, visited “Chippendale’s” at the Rio for Tuesday’s show, and also shed his shirt at Barbershop Cuts and Cocktails at the Cosmopolitan for Wednesday’s telecast. He was later shown apparently passed out and sprawled across two seats at the slots at the Cosmo.

Maybe it was an act or a mix of performance art and reality. On Wednesday, Kimmel asked Rodriguez how he really felt, and Rodriguez said, “To be honest, I feel terrible.”

Kimmel’s producers dug deep for some quintessential Vegas guests. They tracked down Vegas lounge icon Cook E. Jarr at Napoleon’s at Paris Las Vegas for one of the show’s guest intros. Kimmel loves the Jarr and featured him in a cut-away performance several years ago.

Also, he lassoed longtime Vegas psychic reader and astrologist “Mystic Mona” Van Joseph. He pulled her along as he commandeered a bachelorette party that stopped at “Stripper 101” at V Theater, and then the Chipps show, where Rodriguez danced a number while impressively shirtless.

Gotta say he handled the task more ably than did onetime “Chipps” guest star Antonio Sabato Jr.

Seven-minute ads

Kimmel unloaded a series of local TV spots from his youth for Wednesday’s telecast. He peppered his monologue with spots from Happy Harry of Quality Liquidators furniture outlets and Ben Stepman Yugo, “In Henderson, of course!”

Kimmel also revived a great clip featuring Runnin’ Rebel great Larry Johnson, the L.A. Lakers’ Michael Cooper and heavyweight champ Larry Holmes, all appearing with local bauble icon Mordechai Yerushalmi of The Jewelers of Las Vegas.

As Mordechai famously claimes he has the best prices in town “or I will refund the difference,” Holmes calls out, “And he’s not pulling any punches!” He then fires a jab at the camera.

“You don’t know this unless you live here, but we have the best — and by best, I mean worst — local advertisements of any city in America,” Kimmel said. “This has been the case since I was a kid, and I was pleased to learn when I turned the TV on, this is still the case.”

John Katsilometes’ column runs daily in the A section. His PodKats podcast can be found at reviewjournal.com/podcasts.Contact him at [email protected] Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @JohnnyKats1 on Instagram.

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