Billy Crystal is a former cast member of
Saturday Night Live, the star of such comedies as
When Harry Met Sally... (1989, with
Meg Ryan) and
Analyze This (1999, co-starring
Robert DeNiro) and a frequent host of the Academy Award telecasts. Crystal grew up around show business (his dad was a concert promoter) and got his start as a stand-up comedian who was shortish, Jewish, and Long Islandish. During the 1970s he did guest spots on TV talk shows and became famous for his (then-daring) role as a gay man on the controversial comedy series
Soap (1977-81). He spent only one season on
SNL (1984-85), but many of his characters became weekly staples, and Crystal catchphrases (including the smarmy "You look maahr-ve-lous!") made their way into the pop culture lexicon. In the early 1990s he established himself as a warm-hearted leading man in comedy films like
City Slickers (1991, with
Jack Palance) and
Forget Paris (1995), and was a popular and irreverent host of the Academy Awards. He made his directorial debut with 1992's
Mr. Saturday Night. His other films include
The Princess Bride (1987),
Monsters, Inc. (2001), the sequel
Analyze That (2002), and a small voice role in the animated film
Cars (2006). His one-man Broadway show,
700 Sundays, won a 2005 Tony Award as Best Special Theatrical Event. He published a book by the same title in 2005.
Extra credit: Crystal hosted the Academy Award telecast eight times: from 1990-93, then in 1997, 1998, 2000 and 2004... He is a longtime fan of the New York Yankees baseball team. He directed the 2001 HBO movie
61*, about the 1961 seasons of Yankees teammates
Roger Maris and
Mickey Mantle... The title
700 Sundays refers to Crystal's childhood weekends with his father, who died when Crystal was 15.
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