Leslie Jordan

Leslie Jordan

actor, writer, producer

Leslie Jordan was born on Apr 29, 1955 in USA. Leslie Jordan's big-screen debut came with Frankenstein General Hospital directed by Deborah Sahagun in 1988, strarring Iggy. Leslie Jordan is known for Hank the Cowdog directed by Jeff Nichols, Matthew McConaughey stars as Hank and Jesse Plemons as Drover. Leslie Jordan has got 4 awards and 5 nominations so far. The most recent award Leslie Jordan achieved is Gold Derby Awards. The upcoming new movie Leslie Jordan plays is Until We Meet Again which will be released on Feb 15, 2022.

For such a diminutive (4' 11") frame, character actor Leslie (Allen) Jordan had a tall talent for scene-stealing. Hailing from the South, as his dead-giveaway drawl quickly exposed, he was born in Memphis, Tennessee, on April 29, 1955, and raised in a highly conservative, deeply religious atmosphere in Chattanooga, Tennessee. His father, a Lieutenant Colonel with the Army, was killed in a plane crash when he was only 11.Uncertain about his direction in life, an inescapable propensity for comedy and high camp, not to mention an impish mug and pocket-sized structure, led him straight to Los Angeles in an attempt to break into commercials and on-camera work. Following training with acting coach Carolyne Barry, who ran the Professional Artist's Group during the 80s, Leslie soon found himself highly marketable in commercial spots (Doritos, Fosters Beer, etc.). TV would invariably be the next step, finding him progressively better parts on such programs as "The Fall Guy," "The Wizard," "Night Court," "Newhart" and "Midnight Caller." He then earned a regular role on the short-lived comedy-fantasy series The People Next Door (1989) starring Alan Parker. Inspired by "The Far Side" comic strip, the show starred Jeffrey Jones as a cartoonist who could materialize his wild imagination.Leslie began in films in the late 1980s with a bit part in the Richard Pryor comedy Moving (1988) and followed it with the role of Iggy, a hunch-backed Igor counterpart, in the whacked horror spoof Frankenstein General Hospital (1988) starring comic actor Mark Blankfield as the mad doctor. In primarily low-budget film projects at the onset, Leslie was part of such off-the-wall material as Ski Patrol (1990), Missing Pieces (1991), Héros malgré lui (1992), Jason va en enfer (1993), Barcelona (1994), Amour, délice et petits plats (1997) and Black Velvet Pantsuit (1995), to name a few.Into the 1990s, Leslie involved himself more and more into writing. Avid L.A. theatergoers would recognize him for such prone-to-misfit characters as Brother Boy, an institutionalized drag queen, in "Sordid Lives," and Peanut, a habitual barfly, in "Southern Baptist Sissies." His own one-man testimonials, such as the off-Broadway "Hysterical Blindness" and "Like a Dog on Linoleum," display his adeptness at baring his soul and exposing his childhood agonies on stage amid laughter and tears. These highly introspective shows, however, came at a price. A self-proclaimed substance abuser and sexaholic, Jordan finally faced his inner demons and reached full recovery in 1996.TV was an exceptionally inviting medium over the years with a number of offbeat roles coming his way. Noted for his catchy guest work on such shows as Murphy Brown (1988), Lois & Clark: Les nouvelles aventures de Superman (1993), Caroline in the City (1995), Star Trek: Voyager (1995), and Code Lisa (1994), among many others, he was also a supporting regular on various series including the comedy Top of the Heap (1991) starring Joseph Bologna and pre-Friends (1994), Matt LeBlanc; the legal series La voix du silence (1991) in a season (1992-1993) as an assistant public defender; the crime drama Enquête privée (1992) starring Jennifer Hortin and George Clooney; and the John Ritter/Markie Post romantic comedy Hearts Afire (1992).Into the millennium, he got to experienced the joy of seeing one of his own writing projects come to full fruition with the semi-autobiographical film Lost in the Pershing Point Hotel (2000). He was also given the chance to recreate his "Big Brother" role in Sordid Lives (2000) to the big screen. The work continued to flow in such film supports as John John in the Sky (2000), The Gristle (2001), Moving Alan (2003), the short film Farm Sluts (2003), Madhouse (2004), another short film Sissy Frenchfry (2005), Undead or Alive: A Zombedy (2007), Eating Out: All You Can Eat (2009), Mangus! (2011), the critically-acclaimed [link=tt1454029, his stage role as "Peanut" in the gay-themed Southern Baptist Sissies (2013) written and directed by Del Shores, another co-star role as an HOA "dictator" in Whoa! (2013), Un chien très chanceux (2015), Fear, Inc. (2016), the "Sordid Lives" sequel A Very Sordid Wedding (2017) and the romantic film Until We Meet Again (2022).TV was even better to him with both delightful and sadly touching work on such series as Ally McBeal (1997), Boston Public (2000), Amy (1999), Monk (2002), Reba (2001), Boston Justice (2004), Ugly Betty (2006), Desperate Housewives (2004), Raising Hope (2010), and American Horror Story (2011). The topper, however, was Leslie's dryly cynical, part-time role as mincing elitist Beverley Leslie, the tiny thorn in Megan Mullally's backside on the resoundingly popular sitcom Will & Grace (1998). Leslie went on to earn an Emmy trading wicked barbs with Mullally's Karen character, playing the hilarity up for all its worth. He also appeared in the cult TV movie The Last Sharknado: It's About Time (2018).

  • Birthday

    Apr 29, 1955
  • Place of Birth

    Memphis, Tennessee, USA
  • Also known

    Leslie Allen Jordan

Known For

Awards

4 wins & 5 nominations

Gold Derby Awards
2010
Comedy Guest Actor of the Decade
Winner - Gold Derby TV Award
2006
Comedy Guest Actor
Winner - Gold Derby TV Award
Primetime Emmy Awards
2006
Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series
Winner - Primetime Emmy
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Movies & TV Shows

All
Movies
TV Shows