Chris Kattan is a $6 million net worth American actor and comedian. Chris Kattan is most well-known for his work on the weekly NBC sketch comedy show “Saturday Night Live.” However, his net wealth was not only derived from his employment on “Saturday Night Live.” He’s done a wide range of work in both television and film.
Early Life
Christopher Lee Kattan was born on October 19, 1970 in Culver City, California parents Kip King and Hajnalka E. Biro. His father was an actor and voice actor, while his mother was a model in London who once posed for “Playboy.“
When Chris was young, his parents split, and his mother married a Buddhist therapist and monk. Kattan was reared in a Zen retreat outside Los Angeles called Mount Baldy. He spent his adolescence on Bainbridge Island, Washington, where he graduated from Bainbridge High School in 1989.
Acting Career
Kattan’s career in show business began when he became engaged with a number of Los Angeles-area comedy troupes, most notably The Groundlings, of whom his father was a founding member. During this time, he also appeared in a number of TV episodes in minor parts, including the “NewsRadio” episode “No, This Is Not Based Entirely on Julie’s Life,” in which he portrayed a picture shop clerk.
Eventually, Kattan relocated to New York to work on “Saturday Night Live.” From 1996 through 2003, Kattan was a regular on “SNL.” He gained noted for his insane roles on the sitcom, such as Mango, an animalistic guy, and one half of the nightclubbing Butabi Brothers alongside Will Ferrell.
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The latter character was becoming the premise for the star of the feature film “Night at the Roxbury.” Mr. Peppers, Azrael Abyss, Gay Hitler, Suel Forrester, and Kyle DeMarco were among his other prominent recurring characters. He also did celebrity impressions of Clay Aiken, Ben Affleck, Ricky Martin, Al Pacino, Kid Rock, Kerri Strug, and others.
Kattan has continued to work, primarily in television, after leaving “Saturday Night Live” at the end of the 2003 season. He was slated to portray Xanthias in Stephen Sondheim’s 2004 Broadway staging.
In May 2019, Kattan released “Baby, Don’t Hurt Me: Stories and Scars from Saturday Night Live,” a startling tell-all memoir about his “Saturday Night Live” career, his tangled relationship with Lorne Michaels, his odd background, and other scandalous tales.
Personal Life
In June 2008, Kattan married model Sunshine Deia Tutt in Oakhurst, California. On Christmas Eve 2006, he proposed to her. The couple split in August 2008, after only eight weeks of marriage, then divorced in February 2009.
When Kattan was a “Dancing With the Stars” participant, he was chastised by both the judges and social media for his rigid upper body movement while performing. He then confessed that he had fractured his neck over two decades before while doing a stunt, and that the injury and following procedures were the cause of his inability to move.
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He then confessed that he had fractured his neck over two decades before while doing a stunt, and that the injury and following procedures were the cause of his inability to move. He said that his injuries was caused by a “SNL” comedy that aired (live, of course) in May 2001, in which he hurled himself backwards on a chair while performing a Golden Girls spoof.
Kattan was jailed for DUI in 2014, and he blamed it on the pain medication he had started taking after his fourth neck surgery.
That’s it about Chris Kattan and the screenplays done by him.
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