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Martin Mull, the comedic actor best known for his roles in âClue,â âRoseanne,â âArrested Developmentâ and âSabrina the Teenage Witch,â died Thursday. He was 80.
His daughter, TV writer and producer Maggie Mull, shared the news on Instagram.
âHe was known for excelling at every creative discipline imaginable and also for doing Red Roof Inn commercials,â she wrote. âHe would find that joke funny. He was never not funny. My dad will be deeply missed by his wife and daughter, by his friends and coworkers, by fellow artists and comedians and musicians, and â the sign of a truly exceptional person â by many, many dogs.â
Mull, who was also a singer-songwriter, rose to fame in the 1970s on Norman Learâs satirical soap opera âMary Hartman, Mary Hartmanâ and its spinoffs, âFernwood 2 Nightâ and âAmerica 2-Night.â
The dry-witted comic played Colonel Mustard in the 1985 comedy âClueâ and Teri Garrâs boss in 1983âs âMr. Mom.â He was Roseanneâs boss, Leon Carp, on her titular sitcom, private detective Gene Parmesan on âArrested Developmentâ and âSabrina the Teenage Witchâsâ nosy Principal Kraft, in addition to voicing characters on animated shows, including âAmerican Dad!â and âThe Simpsons.â
The actor appeared in more than 200 Los Angeles Times articles across four decades. most recently in December. Following the death of Lear, a Times roundup of seven essential Lear shows noted Mullâs contributions to the oddball gallery of characters in âMary Hartman, Mary Hartman.â
Hereâs a sampling of headlines from Mullâs life as actor and as painter. A full Times appreciation is forthcoming.
âTruTV Comedy âIâm Sorryâ Offers Some Fresh Perspectiveâ
Mull is part of a praise-worthy sitcom cast that includes series creator Andrea Savage, Tom Everett Scott, Judy Greer and Kathy Baker. FULL STORY
ââTwo and a Half Menâ Welcomes Kutcher, Buries Sheenâ
Mull gets laughs as Charlie Sheenâs grandfather as Sheenâs character is famously laid to rest on the CBS sitcom. FULL STORY
âCatch That Celebrity Artist Momentâ
Times art critic Christopher Knight cheekily notes the trend of âcoast-to-coast Hollywood celebrity artâ filling museums but then acknowledges that âsome of this stuff is seriously worth looking at.â Case in point: âMullâs poignant paintings of suburban alienation.â (Alas, the article is archived in The Times internal library but does not appear to turn up in Google searches.)
Art review: Martin Mull at Samuel Freeman
Mull earns praise for his gallery show, the writer declaring: âThe strongest work here captures Mullâs trademark combination of ease and unease, economic boom and psychic bust through the simplest and cleanest of means.â FULL STORY
âComedy for Artâs Sakeâ
The Times interviewed Mull about his painting in advance of a talk at the Orange County Museum of Art. âThe paintings are your most intense, private moments. To put these intense moments in a situation so public. ... This is your dirty underwear hanging for God and everybody to see.â FULL STORY
âCall Him an Artist Who Happens to Actâ
Mull said that when people learned he was a painter in addition to being an actor, the conversation usually turned to other celebrity dabblers in the arts including, âGod forbid, Sly Stallone.â Mull emphasized that his TV and movie work is his âday job,â that painting is his first love, and that he only sells his work to people he likes. FULL STORY
A GLAAD Award for âRoseanneâ
GLAAD honors go to the ABC series âRoseanneâ for its inclusion of a recurring gay character played by Mull. FULL STORY
âMull in Montreal: Let the Comedy Beginâ
The Times interviewed Mull as he was preparing for âJust For Laughs: The Montreal International Comedy Festival,â to be held in the French Canadian city and scheduled to end with his musical number titled, âLetâs Not Say Au Revoir, Letâs Just Say Hors dâoeuvres.â FULL STORY
âMull stirs a waspsâ nestâ
Lawrence Christon sits down with Mull to discuss the success of âHistory of White People in America,â his Cinemax cable project in which âa fictional family of American Midwesterners is viewed with mock-anthropological bemusement,â documenting âthe Harrison familyâs taste in tuna casseroles and chenille toilet seats.â FULL STORY
âMulling Over âHistory of White Peopleââ
As âHistory of White People in Americaâ was headed for home video, a Times interviewer asked Mull if the series was racist. âI guess in a way it is,â Mull replied. âIt is sort of anti-white, so Iâd say itâs racist. ... Whites are always being racist. Itâs time they took their lumps.â FULL STORY
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.