
Age: 66
male
Bradley Harold Gerstenfeld (born April 14, 1960), known professionally as Brad Garrett, is an American actor and stand-up comedian. Garrett was initially successful as a stand-up comedian in the early 1980s. Taking advantage of that success in the late 1980s, Garrett began appearing in television and film in minor and guest roles. His breakthrough role was Robert Barone on the CBS sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond. The series debuted on September 13, 1996, running for nine seasons, during which Garrett was nominated for five Emmy Awards for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series, winning three. He gave a sixth Emmy-nominated performance as Jackie Gleason in the television film Gleason (2002). Garrett's other television roles include Eddie Stark on the Fox sitcom 'Til Death (2006 - 2010) and Douglas Fogerty on the ABC sitcom Single Parents (2018 - 2020). He served as creator and executive producer for Disney+'s Big Shot (2021 - 2022) with David E. Kelley and Dean Lorey. Garrett is also a prolific voice actor. He has had main roles in animated series such as Hulk Hogan's Rock 'n' Wrestling (1985 - 1986) and 2 Stupid Dogs (1993 - 1995). From 2006 to 2014, he played the Easter Island Head in the Night at the Museum trilogy. Garrett has had other voice roles in five Pixar films in addition to many for Disney Animation and other studios. He remains prominent in stand-up comedy and owns Brad Garrett's Comedy Club at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, where he performs regularly.

Brad Garrett

Eeyore
for Eeyore in Cartoon All-Stars to the Rescue (Epic Version)
Suggested by jonathanahnberg2

At an age where cartoons are being remade into stupid CGI action blockbusters filled with explosions, offensive stereotypes, sex jokes and lazy fart jokes or bad generic "PG" kids films thanks to a horrible multi-billionaire director known as The Boomer (Parody of Michael Bay) Toontown's legendary cartoon characters settle aside their differences and team up to rescue their poor cartoon friends from The Boomer's empire of bad Hollywood production and stop bad cartoon remakes altogether! To describe this is more like a cartoon version of Justice League with Michael Bay explosions, it's hand-drawn animated characters (and some CG like Shrek) going up against bad Hollywood representations of their former selves in the Live-Action world. It's a satire of most dark gritty superhero films only this one is more family friendly and colorful.
