Fereydun Robert Armisen (born December 4, 1966) is an American comedian, actor, musician, writer, and producer. With his comedy partner
Carrie Brownstein, he co-created and co-starred in the
IFC sketch comedy series Portlandia. He also co-created and starred in the
mockumentary IFC series Documentary Now! and the
Showtime comedy series Moonbase 8.
Armisen received a
Grammy Award nomination for
Best Comedy Album for Standup for Drummers in 2019. He has also won two
Peabody Awards, one in 2008 as part of the Saturday Night Live political satire cast[2] and one in 2011 for Portlandia.[3] From 2019 to 2022, he co-starred and served as writer and executive producer on the Spanish-language series Los Espookys, which he co-created.
Early life
Fereydun Robert Armisen was born in
Hattiesburg, Mississippi, on December 4, 1966, the son of schoolteacher Hildegardt Mirabal Level and
IBM employee Fereydun Herbert Armisen.[4] He moved with his family to New York as a baby,[5] and briefly lived in Brazil in his youth. He was raised in
Valley Stream, New York,[5] where he was a classmate of fellow SNL alumnus
Jim Breuer.[6] Armisen attended the
School of Visual Arts in
Manhattan[7] before dropping out to begin a career as a rock drummer.[5] He said that he was inspired to perform after seeing
The Clash and
Devo perform on television, and wanted to be a performer since he was a child.[8]
Armisen's mother was Venezuelan, born in
San Fernando de Apure,[9][10][11] while his father was born in
Soltau to a German mother and South Korean father.[11][12] For much of his life, Armisen thought his paternal grandfather Ehara Masami was Japanese; however, Masami (better known by his professional name Masami Kuni or birth name Park Yeong-in)[11][13] was actually South Korean and came from
Ulsan. He adopted a Japanese name and persona after the
massacre of Koreans in 1923 when he was a high school student.[14][11] Park studied aesthetics at
Tokyo Imperial University and became a professional dancer before moving to Germany.[15][13] After the war, he returned to Japan, and formed a premier modern dance company. He eventually emigrated to the US, where he taught dance at what is now
Cal State Fullerton from 1964 to 1975.[13][12] Park Yeong-in's family were members of the
Korean aristocracy, and Armisen's Korean lineage can be verifiably traced back to the 1600s.[12]
Career
Music
In 1984, Armisen played drums in a local band along with his high school friends in
Valley Stream, New York, but the group soon ended. In 1988, he moved to Chicago to play drums for the
punk rock band
Trenchmouth,[16] and in the 1990s he played background drums with
Blue Man Group.
While not playing with the band Trenchmouth, Armisen's interests switched to acting. In a January 2006 interview, he said, "I wanted to be on TV somehow. For some reason, I always thought it would be an indirect route; I didn't know that it would be comedy and Saturday Night Live. I just wanted to do something with performing that would lead me there."[25]
Since 2014, Armisen has been music director and sometimes bandleader and drummer on Late Night with Seth Meyers, for which he received positive reviews for his
deadpan comedy and especially for his interplay with the host.[33]
Armisen joined the cast of Saturday Night Live in
2002.[37] He was promoted to a repertory player in
2004. After 11 years as a cast member, he decided to leave the show. At the time of his
2013 departure from the show,[38][39] Armisen was the third-longest-tenured cast member (behind
Seth Meyers and
Darrell Hammond), and he appeared in the second-highest number of sketches (856) of any cast member. Since then, Armisen has come back for multiple cameo appearances on the show, including when he hosted the season 41 finale on May 21, 2016, with musical guest
Courtney Barnett.
The following is a partial list of notable roles Armisen has played in Saturday Night Live sketches.
Recurring characters
Billy Smith – a Native American stand-up comedian who tells Native-American-themed jokes that no one understands.
Leonard – the strange European host of the foreign music show Club Traxx.
Mackey – a senile drummer who often does rimshots at inappropriate moments and appears in the "
Rialto Grande" sketches.
Nooni Schoener – a quirky, foreign art dealer who appears with his wife Nuni Schoener (played by
Maya Rudolph) in "
the Schoeners" sketches.
Frondi – a mentally challenged character who criticizes
Ben Affleck's movie Gigli to Ben himself.
Manuel Ortiz – host of The Manuel Ortiz show on Television Dominicana where he "helps with whatever it is" his audience members are going through.
Nicholas Fehn – a political commentator whose mind wanders so much that he is incapable of finishing a sentence without starting a new one.
Roger A. Trevanti – a greedy studio head and
AMPTP member who rails against the
2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike. The character's only SNL appearance was on the last episode of season 33, before the show went on hiatus for the WGA strike, but he appeared in several Internet videos around the same time.
Rodger Brush – a producer of multiple "
Dr. Phil"-type talk shows, each focused on a different topic (teen, marital, sexual, and pregnancy issues), who fills in when the hosts are sick. He repeatedly tells guests relating their problems to speak up, and, unable to relate to their problems, offers them either useless advice based on his experience or no help at all.
Garth – part of Garth & Kat (with
Kristen Wiig), a musical duo who appear on Weekend Update unprepared and make up songs on the spot.
Giuseppe – the saxophone player for What's Up With That?
Stuart – homeowner from The Californians, a soap opera parody featuring Armisen,
Bill Hader, Kristen Wiig and others as wealthy blondes with
Valley girl accents.
One of the "Dictator's Two Best Friends from Growing Up" (with
Vanessa Bayer) who come to Weekend Update to secretly
trash-talk the various dictators (such as
Muammar al-Gaddafi and
Kim Jong-un) with whom they grew up.
Regine – a pretentious and condescending woman who exhibits blatant euphoric and erotic facial expressions when touched on certain parts of her body.
Ian Rubbish – A late-1970s/early-80s British punk rocker, a parody of
Sex Pistols'
John Lydon, who caught heat from his bandmates Derek Gash (played by Bill Hader) and Keith Grimshaw (played by
Taran Killam) and fans for writing and performing songs supporting Conservative Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher.
Celebrity impressions
Armisen's list of notable impressions has included:
Barack Obama – recurring in Season 33 and Season 34 episodes as the Democratic presidential candidate (Season 33), the Democratic nominee, President-elect, and President (Season 34), beginning on February 23, 2008. As of season 38,
Jay Pharoah replaced Armisen as Obama.
Prince – parody of the musician as the host of a talk show called The Prince Show, with
Beyoncé Knowles (played by
Maya Rudolph) as his co-host. Armisen, a fan of Prince since childhood, created the sketch as a way of improving his chances of meeting the musician.[25]
Steve Jobs –
Apple CEO who appears on Weekend Update to show off strange new technology. Armisen has stated that Steve Jobs is the celebrity he most enjoys portraying.[40]
Queen
Elizabeth II – There were four sketches between the years 2010 and 2012 where he played the Queen of the United Kingdom.
Michael Bloomberg – numerous sketches between 2011 and present, including recurrent segments during the 2020 Democratic Primaries.
Other work
In 1998, he posed as a music journalist for the short film Fred Armisen's Guide to Music and South by Southwest. It was filmed by then-girlfriend
Sally Timms and featured Armisen's "pranking musicians and industry types" during the
South by Southwest festival in
Austin, Texas.[42] In various segments he asked self-described "stupid" questions, pretended to be German, and also acted blind.[43] A year later, Armisen starred with alternative rock legend
Steve Albini in
Chevelle's Point No. 1 EPK.
Armisen is part of ThunderAnt, a comedy duo with
Sleater-Kinney guitarist
Carrie Brownstein. The duo specializes in creating comedic short skits often about independent vocations such as one-man shows, feminist bookstores, and bicycle rights activists. Armisen founded ThunderAnt.com, a website that features the comedy sketches created with Brownstein.
Armisen has directed music videos for bands like
The Helio Sequence. Armisen also had a role in the
Wilco documentary I Am Trying to Break Your Heart, which featured footage from his stint opening for front man
Jeff Tweedy's 2001 solo tour. He also appeared in video segments on
Blue Man Group's
How to be a Megastar Tour 2.0. Armisen occasionally writes for
Pitchfork Media and interviewed
Cat Power for that company.[44] He appeared as Jens Hannemann on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on October 19, 2007, promoting a 28-minute DVD called Fred Armisen presents Jens Hannemann: "COMPLICATED DRUMMING TECHNIQUE".[45] In 2010, Armisen briefly joined
Joanna Newsom's tour for her album Have One on Me as his character Jens Hannemann.[46] On SNL, Armisen often plays musical instruments in sketches, has two recurring characters who are musicians (Mackey the drummer from the Rialto Grande and Ferecito from Showbiz Grande Explosion), or impersonates famous figures in the music world such as
Liberace,
Phil Spector,
Lou Reed, and
Prince.
Armisen appeared in the official music video for
Man Man's song "Rabbit Habits", playing a man who charms his
blind date (
Charlyne Yi) but runs away after she turns into a
werewolf.[47]
In 2013, Armisen appeared in the official music video for Portland, Oregon-based band
Red Fang's song "Blood Like Cream". In 2021, he appeared as the protagonist in the official music video for the 2020 mix of
George Harrison's song "
My Sweet Lord".[48][49]
Armisen performed as a singer/drummer/comedic actor in the Blue Man Group's "How to be a Megastar Live!". He played the part of a salesman on TV who advertises for the Megastar Rock Manual. He also drummed in the performance and was a backup singer.
In 2015, Armisen was the recipient of Smithsonian magazine's American Ingenuity Award for Performing Arts.[50]
In 2018, Armisen provided the foreword to The Yacht Rock Book by author Greg Prato.[51]
Armisen appears as Michael on the sixth episode of the revival of The Kids in the Hall, released on May 13, 2022.[52]
In 2024, Armisen made a cameo as the local DJ in Fallout (episode 7), living in a shack surrounded by bespoke traps and playing colonial era violin music, a reference to the oft-hated Classical Radio station from Fallout 4.
Personal life
Armisen was married to English musician
Sally Timms from 1998 to 2004,[53] and English-American actress
Elisabeth Moss from 2009 to 2011.[54][55] In 2014, Moss described their time together as "extremely traumatic, awful and horrible" and said of Armisen, "He's so great at doing impersonations. But the greatest impersonation he does is that of a normal person."[56] During a later interview with
Howard Stern, Armisen said, "I think I was a terrible husband. I think I'm a terrible boyfriend. [...] I feel bad for everyone I've gone out with."[56]
Armisen started dating actress
Natasha Lyonne in 2014.[57][58] Lyonne confirmed that they had ended their relationship in April 2022: "We love each other just about as much as two people can love each other and we're still talking all the time."[59] Armisen began dating comedian
Riki Lindhome later that year, and they purchased a home together in
Los Feliz.[60]
Since working together on ThunderAnt, Armisen and
Carrie Brownstein developed what Brownstein has called "one of the most intimate, functional, romantic, but nonsexual relationships [they have] ever had".[61] According to Armisen, their relationship is "all of the things that I've ever wanted, you know, aside from like the physical stuff, but the intimacy that I have with her is like no other".[62]
Fist Fight! [single] (2010) (Armisen played all the music and did the vocals for the record, although is rumored that drums were actually played by
Dave Grohl)
^
abcHoffmann, Frank (2015).
Berlin Koreans and Pictured Koreans(PDF). Koreans and Central Europeans: Informal Contacts up to 1950, vol. 1, ed. Andreas Schirmer. Vienna: Praesens, pp. 107-127.
ISBN978-3-7069-0873-3.
Archived(PDF) from the original on April 12, 2019. Retrieved November 17, 2020.