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The celebrated comedian presents letters that he has written to his alcoholic father that reveal some of the hurt and guilt he experienced as a child and provides a glance at a source of his best humor



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Louie Anderson

Iconic comedian Louie Anderson, a three¬-time Emmy Award® winner, is one of the country's most recognized and adored comics, named by Comedy Central as "One of 100 Greatest Stand¬-Up Comedians of All Time." His career has spanned more than 30 years. He is a best-selling author, star of his own standup specials and sitcoms and he continues to tour the country performing to standing-room-only crowds worldwide.

In 2016 Anderson was cast to co¬-star along with Zach Galifianakis and Martha Kelly in the hit FX comedy series Baskets. Anderson plays the extraordinary role of "Christine," the matriarch of the Baskets clan. He based the character on his mother and his five sisters who were all a major presence in his life. Anderson won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series and a Critics' Choice award for Best Supporting Actor In A Comedy Series for his role as "Christine Baskets" in 2016 and received a second Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series nomination for the role in 2017.

"I'm not as nice in the character as my mom was as a person. It really is an extension of my mom," Anderson says, adding that he always aims to make his performance "as real as possible" without affecting or cartooning it up. "It felt like it was divine intervention when I got the call to be on the show ... that somehow my mom, from the great beyond, was finally getting herself into show business where she truly belonged in the first place."

Sharing the ups and downs of his childhood experiences as one of eleven children in Minnesota, Anderson crafted comedy routines that rang true for his early club audiences while reducing them to helpless fits of laughter, routines that led him from his career as a counselor to troubled children to the first¬-place trophy at the 1981 Midwest Comedy Competition. Henny Youngman, who hosted the competition, recognized the diamond-¬in¬-the-¬rough genius of the young comic and hired him as a writer, providing invaluable experience that soon put Anderson in his own spotlight on comedy stages all over the country.

Johnny Carson, the comedy icon for generations of rising stars, invited Anderson to make his national television debut on the The Tonight Show in 1984 and the rest is history. Appearances with Jay Leno, David Letterman and on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, Comic Relief, Showtime and HBO specials followed. He hosted the legendary game show Family Feud making Anderson a household name and opening doors for him as an actor.

Anderson has guest ¬starred in sitcoms like Grace Under Fire and dramas like Touched by an Angel and Chicago Hope. He has had memorable featured roles in film comedies like Coming to America opposite Eddie Murphy, and the classic Ferris Bueller's Day Off. In 2013 he took a dive on the ABC reality series Splash where he conquered his ow



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