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This adorable actor was born in 1965 in Manhattan, N.Y., and first appeared onscreen at the age of five in a film directed by his father. Sadly, his father was the catalyst for his lifelong issues with substance abuse, first offering him marijuana at the age of six.
Although heavy drug use affected his professional and personal life, this actor was consistently a fan favorite and was always given second chances by studios following his many stints in rehab. Thankfully, this actor finally got clean in the early 2000s after years of trying, and has become one of the highest paid and most successful actors in Hollywood.
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Caryn Elaine Johnson was born in 1955 in Manhattan, N.Y. and is known for her work as a comedian, actress and talk show host. She made her film debut in 1985 and received an Academy Award nomination for her performance as Celie, a mistreated black woman in the Deep South.
-She been nominated for 13 Emmy Awards for her work in television.
-She became a grandmother at the age of 34.
-She is one of a select group of people to win an Oscar, a Grammy, a Tony, and an Emmy award.
-She has been seen in more than 150 films, and during a period in the 1990s she was the highest-paid actress of all time.
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This “Real Stud” was born in 1970 in Minooka, Ill. and moved to Chicago after college to try his hand at comedy and theater. After founding the Defiant Theatre in 1993 with his college friends, he became acquainted with other up and coming stars such as SNL alum Amy Poehler, who was heavily involved with the Chicago improv comedy scene.
His big break came in 2009 when he was offered the regular supporting role of a character that he closely relates to in real life.
Pro tip: His wife is also a famous actor and television personality, but plays his ex-wife on TV.
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Via: www.bestweekever.tv

Issur Danielovitch was born in 1916 in Amsterdam, N.Y., and established his image as a tough guy actor after starring in his eighth film, “Champion,” a 1949 film noir drama about a selfish boxer struggling with inner demons. From then on, he made a career of playing “sons of b*tches” and was quoted as saying: “I don’t think I’d be much of an actor without vanity. And I’m not interested in being a ‘modest actor.’”
-He is No.17 on the American Film Institute’s list of the greatest male American screen legends of all time.
-He received the Academy Honorary Award “for 50 years as a creative and moral force in the motion picture community” in 1996.
-He is one of the few personalities (along with James Stewart, Gregory Peck, and Gene Autry) whose Hollywood Walk of Fame star has been stolen and later replaced.
-He has a very successful son who, like his father, is known for playing “sons of b*tches” and was one of the biggest actors of the ’80s and ’90s.
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Mary Cathleen Collins was born in 1956 in Long Beach, Calif. After receiving some success as a model, Collins secured a Hollywood agent and appeared in the 1977 ‘B movie’ bomb “Orca: The Killer Whale” before gaining international stardom and sex symbol status in 1979.
-She has appeared numerous times in “Playboy” magazine, first photographed by her husband John and published in March of 1980.
-She won a Golden Raspberry Worst Actress Award for “Tarzan, the Ape Man,” “Bolero” and “Ghosts Can’t Do It” and was nominated in 2000 as the “Worst Actress of the Century.”
-Her husband John was 30 years her senior. To avoid statutory rape charges, the couple fled to Germany for two years and didn’t return to the United States until shortly after Collins’ 18th birthday.
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Jacob Cohen was born on Long Island in the town of Deer Park in 1921, and was one of the most popular comedian/oddball actors of the 1980s, known for his catchy one-liners and self-deprecating sense of humor. His early career was riddled with failure, and at one point he left comedy to work as a salesman in order to support his family.
Realizing he lacked an image to distinguish himself from other comedians, Cohen developed a new persona based on Jack Benny’s “Everyman” brand of comedy, hoping to appeal to a wider range of audiences. After developing his act and reinventing himself as a vulnerable, unlucky, working class Joe, Cohen got his big break in 1967, filling in as a last minute guest on “The Ed Sullivan Show.”
After his success on “The Ed Sullivan Show,” Cohen began headlining shows all across the country, and opened his own comedy venue in 1969 that later helped launch the careers of other famous comedians, such as Jerry Seinfeld, Jim Carrey, Tim Allen, Roseanne Barr, Robert Townsend, Jeff Foxworthy, Sam Kinison, Bill Hicks, Rita Rudner, Andrew Dice Clay, Louie Anderson, and Bob Saget.
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