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Mike MacRae
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Mike MacRae (born July 29, 1977) is an American actor, stand-up comedian, producer, director and writer.
Key Information
Early life and career
[edit]A native of St. Louis, Missouri, MacRae moved to Houston, Texas, in 1995 where he graduated from Rice University in 1999 and started performing in The Laff Stop.[1] He appeared on television for the first time in 2001 with Comedy Central's Premium Blend and is a regular on The Bob & Tom Show.[1] In 2007, he released his first comedy album Hovercraft.[2]
As an actor, he has appeared in feature films and television series including Balls Out, Bird-Scorpion, I Love You, Will Smith, Keith & Heath, Punching the Clown, Rooster Teeth Shorts, Taste in Powder, The Man Who Never Cried and 2009: Lost Memories. He has done voice work for ADV Films and dubbed characters in many English language versions of anime.[3] In addition, he has also voiced the Disney/Pixar character Buzz Lightyear in Toy Story video games.[4]
MacRae made his first appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman on May 2, 2007. He was a cast member on Frank TV, and in 2009 was part of the Just for Laughs festival in Montreal, Quebec. MacRae also contributes voice impersonations to The Jimmy Dore Show on KPFK in Los Angeles.[5] In the fall of 2012, he began appearing on The Howard Stern Show on Sirius XM, doing his impersonation of Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney.[1] Since 2011, he has taken his multi-voice talent to the Jimmy Dore Show where he is a regular, impersonating dozens of political figures.[1]
Filmography
[edit]Film
[edit]- Balls Out - Doctor
- Bird-Scorpion - Cop
- I Love You, Will Smith - Randal
- Keith & Heath - Unseen Narrator (voice)
- Punching the Clown - Car Heckler
- Taste in Powder - Cochise
- The Man Who Never Cried - Narrator (voice)
- Washingtonia - Unknown role (voice)
- 2009: Lost Memories - JBI 2nd-in-Command (voice)
- Facing Nolan - Narrator (voice)
Television
[edit]- Colorful - Anchorman
- Frank TV - Various[1]
- Late Show with David Letterman - Himself/Guest[1]
- Let's Be Real - Charlie Rose (voice)
- Premium Blend - Himself/Guest[1]
- Sketchy - Unknown role
- Knight Rider / Trust Doesn't Rust S1E9 - Tony
Anime
[edit]- Appleseed Ex Machina - Manuel Aeacus
- Cromartie High School - Pootan
- Diamond Daydreams - Takeda
- Excel Saga - That Man
- Full Metal Panic! - Gauron
- Kaleido Star: New Wings - Leon Oswald
- Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi - Taro Hayashi, Taro Imamiya
- Martian Successor Nadesico: The Prince of Darkness - Hokushin
- Mezzo - Omabari
- Neo Ranga - Haseoka
- Pani Poni Dash! - Alien Captain (Ep. 1-14)
- Papuwa - Harlem
- Peacemaker Kurogane - Toshizo Hijikata
- Saint Seiya - Phoenix Ikki, Black Phoenix
- Saiyuki - Dokugakuji (Episode 21-50, after Jason Miesse)
- Samurai Gun - Rekkai
- Steel Angel Kurumi - Dr. Ayanokouji
- Super GALS! - Gunjo
- The Super Milk-chan Show - The President
- Yumeria - Kurofuku
Animation
[edit]- Lady Death: The Motion Picture as Asmodeus, Large Torture Troll
- Mike Tyson Mysteries - Charlie Rose[1]
- Our Cartoon President - Mitt Romney, Joe Manchin[1]
- Viva Piñata - Prewitt Profitamole
Video games
[edit]- Disney Infinity - Buzz Lightyear[4]
- Disney Infinity 2.0 - Buzz Lightyear[4]
- Disney Infinity 3.0 - Buzz Lightyear[6][4]
- Kinect Disneyland Adventures - Buzz Lightyear[4]
- Kinect Rush: A Disney–Pixar Adventure - Buzz Lightyear[4]
- Toy Story 3: The Video Game - Buzz Lightyear[4][1]
- Kingdom Hearts III - Buzz Lightyear[1][4]
- Where the Water Tastes Like Wine - August[1]
- Wizard101 - Old One/Dasein, Bartleby
Web
[edit]- Rooster Teeth Shorts - Mr. Sprinklestein[1]
Radio
[edit]- The Bob & Tom Show - Himself/Guest[1]
- The Howard Stern Show - Himself[1]
Impressions on Frank TV
[edit]Discography
[edit]- Hovercraft (2007)
Crew work
[edit]- Mitt Romney's Brain Gets Hacked - Director, producer, writer
- Taste in Powder - Director, producer, writer
- The Jimmy Dore Show (YouTube series) - Writer
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Corporate Austin Comedian Mike MacRae". mikemacrae.com.
- ^ "Artists. Mike MacRae". DO512. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
- ^ "Mike MacRae". www.thevelveetaroom.com. Retrieved February 9, 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Brently, Heilborn (May 26, 2017). "Six comedy shows that will have you in stitches in June". Statesman. Retrieved June 14, 2020.
- ^ "Jimmy Dore Show". Kpfk.org. Retrieved January 27, 2012.
- ^ Avalanche Software. Disney Infinity 3.0. Scene: Closing credits, 5:39 in, Featuring the Voice Talents of.
External links
[edit]- Official website
- Mike MacRae at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Mike MacRae at IMDb
Mike MacRae
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Childhood in St. Louis
Mike MacRae was born on July 29, 1977, in St. Louis, Missouri.[1] As a child in St. Louis, MacRae began developing his talent for impressions, drawing inspiration from Saturday Night Live and mimicking characters' voices to amuse his friends.[4] During his high school years in the city, he expanded this skill by playfully impersonating teachers, which evolved into formal performances at school assemblies and marked his initial exposure to comedic delivery before audiences.[4] A notable incident from his youth involved peers pressuring him to impersonate a school administrator to trigger a false snow day announcement through the district's phone chain system—a manual notification process beginning with the principal calling select staff—but MacRae declined, citing the risk of expulsion.[4] This reflected the local practice for handling winter weather closures in St. Louis public schools during his upbringing.[4]Education and initial interests
MacRae attended Rice University in Houston, Texas, after moving there from St. Louis, Missouri, in 1995.[3] He graduated in 1999 with degrees in civil engineering and history. During his time at the university, MacRae developed an interest in stand-up comedy, performing amateur sets that incorporated impressions, a style he later refined professionally.[4] Following graduation, MacRae initially pursued a career in engineering, securing employment in the field, but found it incompatible with his growing commitment to comedy, as the demands of the job conflicted with his performance schedule.[4] This tension prompted him to prioritize stand-up, debuting professionally at Houston's Laff Stop comedy club in 1999, where he began blending observational humor with character impressions.[2] His early comedic pursuits were self-driven, stemming from personal enjoyment rather than formal training, and focused on vocal mimicry honed through practice rather than academic study.[5]Stand-up comedy career
Debut and development in the late 1990s
Following his graduation from Rice University in Houston in 1999, MacRae entered the stand-up comedy scene by participating in local open mic nights.[4] His debut occurred in late 1999 at the Monday night open mic at The Laff Stop, a prominent Houston comedy club, where sessions extended from 7:30 p.m. until 2:00 a.m.[4] This marked the transition from informal impressions performed during his youth—such as mimicking Saturday Night Live characters and high school teachers at assemblies—to structured professional performances.[4] MacRae rapidly immersed himself in Houston's comedy ecosystem, frequently attending main room shows at The Laff Stop after his open mic sets and committing to nightly performances while holding a day job to support himself.[4] This intensive routine fostered his growth as a performer, allowing him to refine material through consistent audience feedback in a competitive environment.[6] Over the subsequent months, MacRae honed a distinctive style that integrated precise impressions with traditional stand-up elements, including storytelling and social observation, setting the foundation for his impressionist reputation.[2] [4] By early 2002, having built experience primarily in late 1999 and 2000, he had progressed to headlining his own shows at The Laff Stop, demonstrating rapid development from novice to established local act.[7]Notable live performances and tours
MacRae gained prominence through performances at major comedy festivals, beginning with the Master's Showcase at the Montreal Just for Laughs Comedy Festival in 2009, where he delivered sets featuring his signature impressions.[2][3] He subsequently appeared at the SXSW Comedy Festival, the Moontower Comedy Festival—including a 2015 backstage-highlighted set—and the Limestone Comedy Festival, often emphasizing character-driven stand-up and vocal mimicry.[2][8] As a frequent contributor to the nationally syndicated Bob and Tom Show, MacRae toured theaters across the United States as part of their All-Stars Comedy Tour, performing in venues nationwide starting around 2011.[2][9] He has also served as an opener for established acts, including tours by Patton Oswalt and Mike Birbiglia, adapting his impression-heavy routines to larger audiences.[2] Specific live engagements include a 2021 Houston show at The Riot, where he performed an Indiana Jones impression across two sets on May 8.[10] These appearances underscore MacRae's reliance on club circuits, radio-affiliated tours, and festival circuits rather than extended solo headlining tours, with his live work frequently incorporating impressions of celebrities and characters from film and television.[2][6]Television and media appearances
Frank TV impressions (2007–2008)
Mike MacRae served as a recurring cast member on Frank TV, a TBS sketch comedy series hosted by impressionist Frank Caliendo that premiered on November 20, 2007, and continued into 2008.[11] Initially featuring Caliendo as the sole performer in its early episodes, the show expanded its ensemble in 2008 by adding MacRae and fellow comedian Freddy Lockhart as regulars to support sketches centered on celebrity impressions and satirical bits.[12] MacRae appeared in 10 episodes during 2008, credited in the role of "Various" for his contributions to the program's impression-heavy format.[13] In these appearances, MacRae showcased his impressionist skills alongside Caliendo's established portrayals of figures like John Madden and Dr. Phil, performing characters that highlighted his vocal versatility and comedic timing.[14] Notable impressions included those of Harrison Ford, Ozzy Osbourne, Mel Gibson, and Bill O'Reilly, which were integrated into sketches exploring pop culture and media satire.[15] These performances aligned with MacRae's prior recognition for impressions, such as his May 2007 guest spot on The Late Show with David Letterman during Impressionist Week, and helped expand the show's ensemble dynamic beyond Caliendo's solo efforts.[15] The addition of MacRae contributed to Frank TV's evolution into a collaborative sketch outlet, with episodes like "Mocha Latte Frankachino" and "Franks for the Memories" featuring group impression sequences involving high-profile figures such as Sean Connery.[16] Despite the show's focus on homage rather than mockery in its impressions, MacRae's segments emphasized exaggerated vocal mimicry to lampoon celebrity personas within structured comedic narratives.[17] His tenure ended with the series' conclusion after 24 episodes on December 9, 2008, marking a brief but pivotal phase in his early television career.[18]Guest spots on late-night and radio shows
Mike MacRae performed impressions on The Late Show with David Letterman on May 17, 2007, as part of the program's "Impressionist Week" segment, featuring quick shifts between celebrity voices such as Morgan Freeman and Jeff Bridges.[19] His set highlighted his rapid-fire style, drawing on vocal mimicry honed through stand-up.[2] On radio, MacRae has guested on The Bob & Tom Show, delivering impressions including a 2009 take on President Barack Obama that emphasized the politician's cadence and phrasing.[20] He appeared on The Howard Stern Show, contributing character bits amid the program's unscripted format.[21] Additional spots include The Jimmy Dore Show, where he performed sketches like a Bill O'Reilly impersonation in 2011, focusing on the commentator's bombastic delivery during a call-in segment.[22] These radio outings often leveraged his voice work for comedic drops and recurring characters.[6]Voice acting and animation
Early dubbing work in anime
MacRae's entry into anime dubbing occurred in the early 2000s through ADV Films, a Houston-based company where he recorded voices for English-language adaptations of Japanese series, often in supporting or additional capacities.[3] His work aligned with ADV's production of dubs for titles originally aired in the 1980s and 1990s, as well as newer releases, leveraging the studio's Texas facilities during a period when MacRae was establishing his comedy career in the region.[23] Among his earliest credited roles was the 3WA Chief in the Dirty Pair: Affair on Nolandia OVA, dubbed by ADV in 2003, marking one of the studio's efforts to revisit classic anime properties.[23] That same year, he voiced Gauron, a terrorist antagonist, in Full Metal Panic? Fumoffu, the comedic spin-off to the mecha series Full Metal Panic!, which ADV dubbed starting in 2003; Gauron recurs as a recurring villain across the franchise's early English releases.[24] These roles showcased MacRae's versatility in delivering authoritative or menacing tones suited to military and sci-fi narratives.[24] By 2004, MacRae expanded into additional voices for All Purpose Cultural Cat Girl Nuku Nuku and supporting characters like Daichi Nozaki in Gantz, as well as the Man in Black in Yumeria, reflecting ADV's broadening slate of action and supernatural titles.[25] He also contributed to Kaleido Star as Leon Oswald, a performer in the circus-themed series dubbed around 2004, highlighting his range in dramatic interpersonal dynamics.[1] These early assignments typically involved ensemble casts, with MacRae filling out minor antagonists, narrators, or ensemble parts amid ADV's high-volume output, prior to the company's financial challenges in the mid-2000s.[26]Roles in Western animation and video games
MacRae voiced political figures in the adult animated satire series Our Cartoon President (2018–2020), including Mitt Romney and Joe Manchin across multiple episodes.[23] He also lent his voice to Charlie Rose in the animated mystery comedy Mike Tyson Mysteries (2014), appearing in episodes of the Adult Swim production.[24] In direct-to-video Western animation, MacRae portrayed Asmodeus in the fantasy film Lady Death (2004).[25] In video games, MacRae reprised the role of Buzz Lightyear, originally from the Disney/Pixar Toy Story franchise, in Toy Story 3: The Video Game (2010) and Kingdom Hearts III (2019).[1] [27] He voiced August, a sailor character tied to themes of memory and the past, in the narrative-driven adventure Where the Water Tastes Like Wine (2018). MacRae provided the voice for Hades in the massively multiplayer online game DC Universe Online (2011–present), contributing to the character's appearances in episodes and updates.[28] Earlier, he voiced Clyde Blackstorm and members of the Knights of the Round Table in the role-playing game Unlimited Saga (2003).[25]Film and other on-screen work
Live-action film roles
Mike MacRae's live-action film appearances are limited, consisting mainly of minor supporting roles in independent comedies and self-produced shorts, often leveraging his comedic and impressionist skills.[1] In the 2009 independent comedy Punching the Clown, directed by Gregori Viens, MacRae portrayed the Heckling Driver, a brief but disruptive character who confronts the protagonist, a struggling comedian, during a road encounter. The film, which premiered at the Los Angeles Comedy Festival and explores themes of artistic perseverance amid public heckling, featured MacRae in a role that aligned with his stand-up background of handling audience interruptions.[29][30] MacRae played a doctor in the 2014 sports comedy Balls Out: Gary the Tennis Coach, directed by Andrew Jay Cohen and Brendan O'Brien, where his character provides medical counsel in a narrative centered on an underdog tennis team at a conservative academy. The film, released theatrically by Paramount Pictures on May 30, 2014, received mixed reviews for its raunchy humor but highlighted MacRae's utility in ensemble casts requiring authoritative yet comedic authority figures.[31] In the 2012 satirical short Mitt Romney's Brain Gets Hacked, which MacRae directed, produced, and wrote, he starred as the titular Mitt Romney in a politically charged skit depicting a hacker infiltrating the politician's mind during the 2012 U.S. presidential campaign. Released online on September 18, 2012, via platforms like YouTube, the approximately 5-minute piece utilized MacRae's impressionist talents for Romney's likeness and mannerisms, blending live-action performance with exaggerated digital effects to critique campaign rhetoric.[32][33] Additionally, MacRae appeared as Cochise in the short film Cochise (circa 2010s), a lesser-known production emphasizing his on-screen presence in narrative-driven comedy shorts, though details on release and plot remain sparse beyond credits.[34]Web series and additional media
MacRae has served as a writer and performer on The Jimmy Dore Show, a political comedy program originating as a radio broadcast but prominently featured on YouTube, since 2011. In this capacity, he specializes in voice impersonations of public figures, often in scripted comedic phone call segments that satirize political events and personalities.[2] His sketches and impression-based content have appeared on online platforms including HuffPost Comedy, where they showcase his parody work.[2] MacRae maintains a personal YouTube channel launched around 2009, containing 27 videos as of recent counts, primarily compilations of his television appearances, standalone impression reels (such as those mimicking Barack Obama and Bill O'Reilly), and promotional commercials.[35] Additional online contributions include guest spots and voice work for web-distributed programs like The Young Turks and podcast-style shows such as Doug Loves Movies, extending his impressionist repertoire to digital audiences.[2]Music and audio projects
Stand-up albums and discography
Mike MacRae's stand-up discography consists primarily of audio albums featuring his live performances and impressions, distributed through platforms such as Spotify. His earliest release, Hovercraft, appeared in 2007 and includes tracks like "Madonna's Adoption Woes" and "The Osbournes," showcasing his comedic routines on pop culture and celebrity satire.[36] Another 2007 album, Overconfident, followed closely, emphasizing his over-the-top character work and observational humor.[37] Subsequent releases include Smart Setups, Stupid Punchlines in 2010, which highlights punchline-driven bits and linguistic play.[37] In 2013, You Were Good Too was issued, incorporating crowd work and impression segments.[37] His most recent album, Unscripted: Live From The Comedy Inn, came out in 2016 and captures improvisational sets from live venues.[37] These recordings align with MacRae's touring career but have not resulted in widely distributed physical media or major label backing beyond digital streaming.[38]| Album Title | Release Year |
|---|---|
| Hovercraft | 2007 |
| Overconfident | 2007 |
| Smart Setups, Stupid Punchlines | 2010 |
| You Were Good Too | 2013 |
| Unscripted: Live From The Comedy Inn | 2016 |
