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Was Wayne Brady considered a guest star on “Whose Line Is It Anyway?”
Why was Hugh Laurie credited as a Guest star in Friends?What was the first tv show that successfully continued after losing a co-star from an established pair of characters?Was Will Smith really considered for the role of “Mr. Smith?
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The show Whose Line Is It Anyway? had a run which aired for 8 seasons from 1999-2008. Each episode had 4 comedians doing improv. Two of them were always Collin Mocherie and Ryan Stiles, of the other two, it seemed like Wayne Brady was on at least 80% of the time and then for the other comedian there was an alternating guest slot which rotated between different repeating guest stars. But on the times when Wayne Brady wasn't on, there would be two alternate guest stars.
So I'm wondering what exactly was Wayne's official status on the show? Was he a co-star or a guest artist? He definitely seemed like more than just a slot filler for the alternating guests, and arguably was an intricate part of why the show was so successful with his amazing ability to improv musical styles.
casting whose-line-is-it-anyway
|
show 2 more comments
The show Whose Line Is It Anyway? had a run which aired for 8 seasons from 1999-2008. Each episode had 4 comedians doing improv. Two of them were always Collin Mocherie and Ryan Stiles, of the other two, it seemed like Wayne Brady was on at least 80% of the time and then for the other comedian there was an alternating guest slot which rotated between different repeating guest stars. But on the times when Wayne Brady wasn't on, there would be two alternate guest stars.
So I'm wondering what exactly was Wayne's official status on the show? Was he a co-star or a guest artist? He definitely seemed like more than just a slot filler for the alternating guests, and arguably was an intricate part of why the show was so successful with his amazing ability to improv musical styles.
casting whose-line-is-it-anyway
1
The show ran for 8 seasons but eight season was made from cuts from other 7. There are also episodes that were never aired that included two guests. So when the episodes were recorded Wayne Brady was on 50% of the episodes.
– SZCZERZO KŁY
Sep 30 at 10:18
19
Nitpick: This is the original TV series.
– chepner
Sep 30 at 14:04
Is the "new" series even still in production? Last time I saw it, the improv seemed to have kinda taken a one-track vein and wasn't nearly as fresh anymore.
– David W
Sep 30 at 14:18
1
Pretty Sure I saw WLIIA in the late eighties. How can you say it originally ran from 1999?
– AlwaysLearning
Oct 1 at 13:48
3
Thanks everyone for kindly pointing out my error in thinking this was the original run of the show. I've edited my post to remove the word "original" so we can now focus on the actual question I asked :)
– sanpaco
Oct 1 at 14:30
|
show 2 more comments
The show Whose Line Is It Anyway? had a run which aired for 8 seasons from 1999-2008. Each episode had 4 comedians doing improv. Two of them were always Collin Mocherie and Ryan Stiles, of the other two, it seemed like Wayne Brady was on at least 80% of the time and then for the other comedian there was an alternating guest slot which rotated between different repeating guest stars. But on the times when Wayne Brady wasn't on, there would be two alternate guest stars.
So I'm wondering what exactly was Wayne's official status on the show? Was he a co-star or a guest artist? He definitely seemed like more than just a slot filler for the alternating guests, and arguably was an intricate part of why the show was so successful with his amazing ability to improv musical styles.
casting whose-line-is-it-anyway
The show Whose Line Is It Anyway? had a run which aired for 8 seasons from 1999-2008. Each episode had 4 comedians doing improv. Two of them were always Collin Mocherie and Ryan Stiles, of the other two, it seemed like Wayne Brady was on at least 80% of the time and then for the other comedian there was an alternating guest slot which rotated between different repeating guest stars. But on the times when Wayne Brady wasn't on, there would be two alternate guest stars.
So I'm wondering what exactly was Wayne's official status on the show? Was he a co-star or a guest artist? He definitely seemed like more than just a slot filler for the alternating guests, and arguably was an intricate part of why the show was so successful with his amazing ability to improv musical styles.
casting whose-line-is-it-anyway
casting whose-line-is-it-anyway
edited Oct 1 at 14:29
sanpaco
asked Sep 30 at 3:53
sanpacosanpaco
25.2k20 gold badges101 silver badges198 bronze badges
25.2k20 gold badges101 silver badges198 bronze badges
1
The show ran for 8 seasons but eight season was made from cuts from other 7. There are also episodes that were never aired that included two guests. So when the episodes were recorded Wayne Brady was on 50% of the episodes.
– SZCZERZO KŁY
Sep 30 at 10:18
19
Nitpick: This is the original TV series.
– chepner
Sep 30 at 14:04
Is the "new" series even still in production? Last time I saw it, the improv seemed to have kinda taken a one-track vein and wasn't nearly as fresh anymore.
– David W
Sep 30 at 14:18
1
Pretty Sure I saw WLIIA in the late eighties. How can you say it originally ran from 1999?
– AlwaysLearning
Oct 1 at 13:48
3
Thanks everyone for kindly pointing out my error in thinking this was the original run of the show. I've edited my post to remove the word "original" so we can now focus on the actual question I asked :)
– sanpaco
Oct 1 at 14:30
|
show 2 more comments
1
The show ran for 8 seasons but eight season was made from cuts from other 7. There are also episodes that were never aired that included two guests. So when the episodes were recorded Wayne Brady was on 50% of the episodes.
– SZCZERZO KŁY
Sep 30 at 10:18
19
Nitpick: This is the original TV series.
– chepner
Sep 30 at 14:04
Is the "new" series even still in production? Last time I saw it, the improv seemed to have kinda taken a one-track vein and wasn't nearly as fresh anymore.
– David W
Sep 30 at 14:18
1
Pretty Sure I saw WLIIA in the late eighties. How can you say it originally ran from 1999?
– AlwaysLearning
Oct 1 at 13:48
3
Thanks everyone for kindly pointing out my error in thinking this was the original run of the show. I've edited my post to remove the word "original" so we can now focus on the actual question I asked :)
– sanpaco
Oct 1 at 14:30
1
1
The show ran for 8 seasons but eight season was made from cuts from other 7. There are also episodes that were never aired that included two guests. So when the episodes were recorded Wayne Brady was on 50% of the episodes.
– SZCZERZO KŁY
Sep 30 at 10:18
The show ran for 8 seasons but eight season was made from cuts from other 7. There are also episodes that were never aired that included two guests. So when the episodes were recorded Wayne Brady was on 50% of the episodes.
– SZCZERZO KŁY
Sep 30 at 10:18
19
19
Nitpick: This is the original TV series.
– chepner
Sep 30 at 14:04
Nitpick: This is the original TV series.
– chepner
Sep 30 at 14:04
Is the "new" series even still in production? Last time I saw it, the improv seemed to have kinda taken a one-track vein and wasn't nearly as fresh anymore.
– David W
Sep 30 at 14:18
Is the "new" series even still in production? Last time I saw it, the improv seemed to have kinda taken a one-track vein and wasn't nearly as fresh anymore.
– David W
Sep 30 at 14:18
1
1
Pretty Sure I saw WLIIA in the late eighties. How can you say it originally ran from 1999?
– AlwaysLearning
Oct 1 at 13:48
Pretty Sure I saw WLIIA in the late eighties. How can you say it originally ran from 1999?
– AlwaysLearning
Oct 1 at 13:48
3
3
Thanks everyone for kindly pointing out my error in thinking this was the original run of the show. I've edited my post to remove the word "original" so we can now focus on the actual question I asked :)
– sanpaco
Oct 1 at 14:30
Thanks everyone for kindly pointing out my error in thinking this was the original run of the show. I've edited my post to remove the word "original" so we can now focus on the actual question I asked :)
– sanpaco
Oct 1 at 14:30
|
show 2 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
First, some history:
The Original series of "Whose Line Is It Anyway" was a 6-episode Radio Series on BBC Radio 4 in early 1988. It was hosted by Clive Anderson, with John Sessions and Stephen Fry as the 2 regular performers, joined by a pair of guest performers: Dawn French, Lenny Henry, Hugh Laurie, Enn Reitel, Nonny Williams, Jimmy Mulville, Kate Robbins, Griff Rhys Jones, John Bird, John Glover and Rory Bremner. Jimmy Mulville was the only guest performer to appear twice.
In September 1988, it moved to TV on Channel 4. Stephen Fry opted not to return, leaving John Sessions as the only regular performer. During the second season, John Sessions was phased out, in favour of a full roster of guest performers. By the eighth series, Ryan Stiles and Colin Mochrie had taken on the role of regular performers. The tenth series (filmed entirely in Hollywood, and consisting almost entirely of American comedians) failed to display much new talent, received low viewing figures, and the series was scrapped. Wayne Brady appeared in 5 of the of series ten.
(History lesson over)
Ryan Stiles then introduced the series to Drew Carey, who then successfully pitched an American version of the show to ABC. Drew Carey hosted the show, with Colin Mochrie and Ryan Styles as regular performers (appearing in every episode). Wayne Brady appeared as a recurring guest in 16 of 20 episodes in the first season. For the second through seventh series, he was a third regular performer (in every episode). For the eighth series, he was a recurring guest once more (17 of 21 episodes), and for the ninth through 15th series he has been a regular performer again.
(Also, while Colin Mochrie has appeared in every episode of the American series, Ryan Styles did not appear in 2 episodes of series ten, being replaced by Greg Proops)
5
Many thanks to LCIII for correcting my Freudian slip...
– Chronocidal
Oct 1 at 16:17
1
Note that Ryan Stiles, Colin Mochrie, and Wayne Brady are all Executive Producers as well as performers on the current series.
– Mohair
Oct 1 at 23:20
1
Fun fact: later when Stephen Fry started with QI, Clive was one of the frequent guests on the show.
– Mast
Oct 2 at 12:47
add a comment
|
According to this IMDB page which covers the 8 seasons from 1998-2007, Brady was in 212 episodes, only 8 less than Mocherie and Styles.
Wikipedia shows him as a recurring non-regular participant in 2 seasons and a 'main' performer for the other 13 seasons for the entire period of 1998-2019. He has performed in 329 episodes compared to 339 for Mocherie who has appeared in every show. That's 97% of episodes.
I'm not sure what you mean by 'official status' but with those statistics I don't think we could consider him a guest performer.
add a comment
|
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
First, some history:
The Original series of "Whose Line Is It Anyway" was a 6-episode Radio Series on BBC Radio 4 in early 1988. It was hosted by Clive Anderson, with John Sessions and Stephen Fry as the 2 regular performers, joined by a pair of guest performers: Dawn French, Lenny Henry, Hugh Laurie, Enn Reitel, Nonny Williams, Jimmy Mulville, Kate Robbins, Griff Rhys Jones, John Bird, John Glover and Rory Bremner. Jimmy Mulville was the only guest performer to appear twice.
In September 1988, it moved to TV on Channel 4. Stephen Fry opted not to return, leaving John Sessions as the only regular performer. During the second season, John Sessions was phased out, in favour of a full roster of guest performers. By the eighth series, Ryan Stiles and Colin Mochrie had taken on the role of regular performers. The tenth series (filmed entirely in Hollywood, and consisting almost entirely of American comedians) failed to display much new talent, received low viewing figures, and the series was scrapped. Wayne Brady appeared in 5 of the of series ten.
(History lesson over)
Ryan Stiles then introduced the series to Drew Carey, who then successfully pitched an American version of the show to ABC. Drew Carey hosted the show, with Colin Mochrie and Ryan Styles as regular performers (appearing in every episode). Wayne Brady appeared as a recurring guest in 16 of 20 episodes in the first season. For the second through seventh series, he was a third regular performer (in every episode). For the eighth series, he was a recurring guest once more (17 of 21 episodes), and for the ninth through 15th series he has been a regular performer again.
(Also, while Colin Mochrie has appeared in every episode of the American series, Ryan Styles did not appear in 2 episodes of series ten, being replaced by Greg Proops)
5
Many thanks to LCIII for correcting my Freudian slip...
– Chronocidal
Oct 1 at 16:17
1
Note that Ryan Stiles, Colin Mochrie, and Wayne Brady are all Executive Producers as well as performers on the current series.
– Mohair
Oct 1 at 23:20
1
Fun fact: later when Stephen Fry started with QI, Clive was one of the frequent guests on the show.
– Mast
Oct 2 at 12:47
add a comment
|
First, some history:
The Original series of "Whose Line Is It Anyway" was a 6-episode Radio Series on BBC Radio 4 in early 1988. It was hosted by Clive Anderson, with John Sessions and Stephen Fry as the 2 regular performers, joined by a pair of guest performers: Dawn French, Lenny Henry, Hugh Laurie, Enn Reitel, Nonny Williams, Jimmy Mulville, Kate Robbins, Griff Rhys Jones, John Bird, John Glover and Rory Bremner. Jimmy Mulville was the only guest performer to appear twice.
In September 1988, it moved to TV on Channel 4. Stephen Fry opted not to return, leaving John Sessions as the only regular performer. During the second season, John Sessions was phased out, in favour of a full roster of guest performers. By the eighth series, Ryan Stiles and Colin Mochrie had taken on the role of regular performers. The tenth series (filmed entirely in Hollywood, and consisting almost entirely of American comedians) failed to display much new talent, received low viewing figures, and the series was scrapped. Wayne Brady appeared in 5 of the of series ten.
(History lesson over)
Ryan Stiles then introduced the series to Drew Carey, who then successfully pitched an American version of the show to ABC. Drew Carey hosted the show, with Colin Mochrie and Ryan Styles as regular performers (appearing in every episode). Wayne Brady appeared as a recurring guest in 16 of 20 episodes in the first season. For the second through seventh series, he was a third regular performer (in every episode). For the eighth series, he was a recurring guest once more (17 of 21 episodes), and for the ninth through 15th series he has been a regular performer again.
(Also, while Colin Mochrie has appeared in every episode of the American series, Ryan Styles did not appear in 2 episodes of series ten, being replaced by Greg Proops)
5
Many thanks to LCIII for correcting my Freudian slip...
– Chronocidal
Oct 1 at 16:17
1
Note that Ryan Stiles, Colin Mochrie, and Wayne Brady are all Executive Producers as well as performers on the current series.
– Mohair
Oct 1 at 23:20
1
Fun fact: later when Stephen Fry started with QI, Clive was one of the frequent guests on the show.
– Mast
Oct 2 at 12:47
add a comment
|
First, some history:
The Original series of "Whose Line Is It Anyway" was a 6-episode Radio Series on BBC Radio 4 in early 1988. It was hosted by Clive Anderson, with John Sessions and Stephen Fry as the 2 regular performers, joined by a pair of guest performers: Dawn French, Lenny Henry, Hugh Laurie, Enn Reitel, Nonny Williams, Jimmy Mulville, Kate Robbins, Griff Rhys Jones, John Bird, John Glover and Rory Bremner. Jimmy Mulville was the only guest performer to appear twice.
In September 1988, it moved to TV on Channel 4. Stephen Fry opted not to return, leaving John Sessions as the only regular performer. During the second season, John Sessions was phased out, in favour of a full roster of guest performers. By the eighth series, Ryan Stiles and Colin Mochrie had taken on the role of regular performers. The tenth series (filmed entirely in Hollywood, and consisting almost entirely of American comedians) failed to display much new talent, received low viewing figures, and the series was scrapped. Wayne Brady appeared in 5 of the of series ten.
(History lesson over)
Ryan Stiles then introduced the series to Drew Carey, who then successfully pitched an American version of the show to ABC. Drew Carey hosted the show, with Colin Mochrie and Ryan Styles as regular performers (appearing in every episode). Wayne Brady appeared as a recurring guest in 16 of 20 episodes in the first season. For the second through seventh series, he was a third regular performer (in every episode). For the eighth series, he was a recurring guest once more (17 of 21 episodes), and for the ninth through 15th series he has been a regular performer again.
(Also, while Colin Mochrie has appeared in every episode of the American series, Ryan Styles did not appear in 2 episodes of series ten, being replaced by Greg Proops)
First, some history:
The Original series of "Whose Line Is It Anyway" was a 6-episode Radio Series on BBC Radio 4 in early 1988. It was hosted by Clive Anderson, with John Sessions and Stephen Fry as the 2 regular performers, joined by a pair of guest performers: Dawn French, Lenny Henry, Hugh Laurie, Enn Reitel, Nonny Williams, Jimmy Mulville, Kate Robbins, Griff Rhys Jones, John Bird, John Glover and Rory Bremner. Jimmy Mulville was the only guest performer to appear twice.
In September 1988, it moved to TV on Channel 4. Stephen Fry opted not to return, leaving John Sessions as the only regular performer. During the second season, John Sessions was phased out, in favour of a full roster of guest performers. By the eighth series, Ryan Stiles and Colin Mochrie had taken on the role of regular performers. The tenth series (filmed entirely in Hollywood, and consisting almost entirely of American comedians) failed to display much new talent, received low viewing figures, and the series was scrapped. Wayne Brady appeared in 5 of the of series ten.
(History lesson over)
Ryan Stiles then introduced the series to Drew Carey, who then successfully pitched an American version of the show to ABC. Drew Carey hosted the show, with Colin Mochrie and Ryan Styles as regular performers (appearing in every episode). Wayne Brady appeared as a recurring guest in 16 of 20 episodes in the first season. For the second through seventh series, he was a third regular performer (in every episode). For the eighth series, he was a recurring guest once more (17 of 21 episodes), and for the ninth through 15th series he has been a regular performer again.
(Also, while Colin Mochrie has appeared in every episode of the American series, Ryan Styles did not appear in 2 episodes of series ten, being replaced by Greg Proops)
edited Sep 30 at 16:51
LCIII
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answered Sep 30 at 16:10
ChronocidalChronocidal
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5862 silver badges6 bronze badges
5
Many thanks to LCIII for correcting my Freudian slip...
– Chronocidal
Oct 1 at 16:17
1
Note that Ryan Stiles, Colin Mochrie, and Wayne Brady are all Executive Producers as well as performers on the current series.
– Mohair
Oct 1 at 23:20
1
Fun fact: later when Stephen Fry started with QI, Clive was one of the frequent guests on the show.
– Mast
Oct 2 at 12:47
add a comment
|
5
Many thanks to LCIII for correcting my Freudian slip...
– Chronocidal
Oct 1 at 16:17
1
Note that Ryan Stiles, Colin Mochrie, and Wayne Brady are all Executive Producers as well as performers on the current series.
– Mohair
Oct 1 at 23:20
1
Fun fact: later when Stephen Fry started with QI, Clive was one of the frequent guests on the show.
– Mast
Oct 2 at 12:47
5
5
Many thanks to LCIII for correcting my Freudian slip...
– Chronocidal
Oct 1 at 16:17
Many thanks to LCIII for correcting my Freudian slip...
– Chronocidal
Oct 1 at 16:17
1
1
Note that Ryan Stiles, Colin Mochrie, and Wayne Brady are all Executive Producers as well as performers on the current series.
– Mohair
Oct 1 at 23:20
Note that Ryan Stiles, Colin Mochrie, and Wayne Brady are all Executive Producers as well as performers on the current series.
– Mohair
Oct 1 at 23:20
1
1
Fun fact: later when Stephen Fry started with QI, Clive was one of the frequent guests on the show.
– Mast
Oct 2 at 12:47
Fun fact: later when Stephen Fry started with QI, Clive was one of the frequent guests on the show.
– Mast
Oct 2 at 12:47
add a comment
|
According to this IMDB page which covers the 8 seasons from 1998-2007, Brady was in 212 episodes, only 8 less than Mocherie and Styles.
Wikipedia shows him as a recurring non-regular participant in 2 seasons and a 'main' performer for the other 13 seasons for the entire period of 1998-2019. He has performed in 329 episodes compared to 339 for Mocherie who has appeared in every show. That's 97% of episodes.
I'm not sure what you mean by 'official status' but with those statistics I don't think we could consider him a guest performer.
add a comment
|
According to this IMDB page which covers the 8 seasons from 1998-2007, Brady was in 212 episodes, only 8 less than Mocherie and Styles.
Wikipedia shows him as a recurring non-regular participant in 2 seasons and a 'main' performer for the other 13 seasons for the entire period of 1998-2019. He has performed in 329 episodes compared to 339 for Mocherie who has appeared in every show. That's 97% of episodes.
I'm not sure what you mean by 'official status' but with those statistics I don't think we could consider him a guest performer.
add a comment
|
According to this IMDB page which covers the 8 seasons from 1998-2007, Brady was in 212 episodes, only 8 less than Mocherie and Styles.
Wikipedia shows him as a recurring non-regular participant in 2 seasons and a 'main' performer for the other 13 seasons for the entire period of 1998-2019. He has performed in 329 episodes compared to 339 for Mocherie who has appeared in every show. That's 97% of episodes.
I'm not sure what you mean by 'official status' but with those statistics I don't think we could consider him a guest performer.
According to this IMDB page which covers the 8 seasons from 1998-2007, Brady was in 212 episodes, only 8 less than Mocherie and Styles.
Wikipedia shows him as a recurring non-regular participant in 2 seasons and a 'main' performer for the other 13 seasons for the entire period of 1998-2019. He has performed in 329 episodes compared to 339 for Mocherie who has appeared in every show. That's 97% of episodes.
I'm not sure what you mean by 'official status' but with those statistics I don't think we could consider him a guest performer.
edited Oct 1 at 20:28
answered Sep 30 at 5:41
iandotkelly♦iandotkelly
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38.5k8 gold badges148 silver badges175 bronze badges
add a comment
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add a comment
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1
The show ran for 8 seasons but eight season was made from cuts from other 7. There are also episodes that were never aired that included two guests. So when the episodes were recorded Wayne Brady was on 50% of the episodes.
– SZCZERZO KŁY
Sep 30 at 10:18
19
Nitpick: This is the original TV series.
– chepner
Sep 30 at 14:04
Is the "new" series even still in production? Last time I saw it, the improv seemed to have kinda taken a one-track vein and wasn't nearly as fresh anymore.
– David W
Sep 30 at 14:18
1
Pretty Sure I saw WLIIA in the late eighties. How can you say it originally ran from 1999?
– AlwaysLearning
Oct 1 at 13:48
3
Thanks everyone for kindly pointing out my error in thinking this was the original run of the show. I've edited my post to remove the word "original" so we can now focus on the actual question I asked :)
– sanpaco
Oct 1 at 14:30