Alan Thicke

Alan Willis Thicke (born Alan Willis Jeffrey; March 1, 1947 – December 13, 2016) was a Canadian-American actor, songwriter, and game/talk show host. He was the father of singer Robin Thicke. Thicke was best known for playing Dr. Jason Seaver on the 1980s sitcom Growing Pains on ABC. In 2013, he was inducted into Canada's Walk of Fame.

Alan Thicke
Thicke in 2003
Born
Alan Willis Jeffrey

(1947-03-01)March 1, 1947
DiedDecember 13, 2016(2016-12-13) (aged 69)
Resting placeSanta Barbara Cemetery, Santa Barbara, California, U.S.
Other namesAlan Willis Thicke
Alma materUniversity of Western Ontario
Occupation(s)Actor, composer, television host
Years active1969–2016
Spouses
  • (m. 1970; div. 1984)
  • (m. 1994; div. 1999)
  • (m. 2005)
Children3, including Robin Thicke
RelativesTodd Thicke (half-brother)

Early life

Thicke was born in Kirkland Lake, Ontario, the son of Shirley "Joan" Isobel Marie (née Greer), a nurse, and William Jeffrey, a stockbroker.[2] They divorced in 1953. His mother remarried Brian Thicke, a physician, and they moved to Elliot Lake.[3] Alan Thicke graduated from Elliot Lake Secondary School in 1965[4] and was elected homecoming king.[5] He went on to attend the University of Western Ontario joining the Delta Upsilon fraternity.[6]

Career

Hosting

Game shows

Thicke hosted the Canadian game show Face The Music for CHCH-TV by Niagara Television in 1975 (not affiliated with the Sandy Frank Productions in the 1980-81 version). He hosted the Canadian game show First Impressions on the CTV network during the 1976-77 season, taped at CFCF-TV in Montreal,[7] the Saturday morning celebrity game show Animal Crack-Ups in the late 1980s,[8] and, in 1997, a television version of the board game Pictionary.[2] In the early 2000s, he hosted the All New 3's a Crowd on the Game Show Network.[2]

Talk shows

Norman Lear hired Thicke to produce and head the writing staff of Fernwood 2 Night, a tongue-in-cheek talk show based on characters from Lear's earlier show, Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.[9] In the late 1970s, he was a frequent guest host of The Alan Hamel Show, a popular daytime talk show on Canadian TV, usually hosted by Alan Hamel.[10] When the Hamel series ended in the early 1980s, it was replaced by The Alan Thicke Show. The show at one point spawned a prime-time spinoff, Prime Cuts, which consisted of edited highlights from the talk show.

Thicke was later signed to do a US syndicated late-night talk show, Thicke of the Night, for the 1983–1984 TV season. Heavily promoted prior to broadcast as a competitor to NBC's The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, Thicke of the Night was short-lived.[9]

Producing and composing

Thicke had a successful career as a TV theme song composer, often collaborating with his then-wife Gloria Loring on these projects, which included the themes to the popular sitcoms Diff'rent Strokes and The Facts of Life.[10] He also wrote a number of TV game show themes, including The Wizard of Odds (for which he also sang the vocal introduction),[11] The Joker's Wild, Celebrity Sweepstakes, The Diamond Head Game, Animal Crack-Ups (which he co-wrote with his brother Todd Thicke and Gary Pickus), Blank Check, Stumpers! Whew![12] and the original theme to Wheel of Fortune.[13] Thicke was a popular songwriter. He co-wrote "Sara", a solo hit for Bill Champlin and included on the latter's Runaway album (1981).[14]

Thicke produced a variety of television shows, including Anne Murray Christmas specials for the CBC, beginning in the late 1970s.[15]

Growing Pains

Thicke became well-known when he played Jason Seaver, a psychiatrist and father, on the family sitcom Growing Pains.[16] When the show began, Jason was moving his psychiatry practice into the home to be closer to the family's children while the family matriarch Maggie, played by Joanna Kerns, resumed her career as a reporter.[17] Growing Pains debuted on ABC in 1985 and ran until 1992.[16][18]

Thicke reprised his role in two reunion TV movies, The Growing Pains Movie (2000)[19] and Growing Pains: Return of the Seavers (2004).[20]

Television and film appearances

Thicke at a Canadian Film Centre and Variety-hosted reception for the Telefilm Canada Features Comedy Lab, March 2012

Thicke co-hosted the Walt Disney World Very Merry Christmas Parade (now the Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade) with Joan Lunden from 1983 to 1990, when he was succeeded by Regis Philbin.[21] Thicke also hosted the 1987 and 1988 Crystal Light National Aerobic Championships. [22][23]

In 1987, Thicke appeared as Dr. Jonas Carson, who creates an android that looks just like a human teenage boy (played by Jay Underwood), and he "adopts" him as his son in the Disney Channel film Not Quite Human. Thicke reprised his role as Jonas Carson in two sequels, 1989's Not Quite Human II and 1992's Still Not Quite Human.

In 1988, he hosted the Miss USA Pageant in El Paso, Texas, replacing Bob Barker (who quit over fur being involved in the pageants).[24] He replaced Barker again as host of the 1988 Miss Universe Pageant (along with Tracy Scoggins) in Taipei, Taiwan.[25] Thicke was replaced by Dick Clark as host of the 1989 Miss USA Pageant in Mobile, Alabama[26] and by John Forsythe as host of the 1989 Miss Universe Pageant in Cancún, Mexico.[27]

Thicke continued to host a wide range of variety TV events. In 1989, he co-hosted with SCTV alumna Andrea Martin the TV special Opening of SkyDome in Toronto, which aired across Canada on the CBC.[28][29] In 2004, he hosted the Miss Universe Canada Pageant in Ontario.

In 1992, Thicke appeared as himself in the pilot episode of the sitcom Hangin' with Mr. Cooper. He appeared in the end-credits scene, alongside series star Mark Curry, humorously referencing the pilot episode being filmed on the same set used as the Seavers' home on Growing Pains. He also made guest appearances on shows such as Murder, She Wrote, Married... with Children, Son of the Beach and 7th Heaven.

From 1995-96, Thicke appeared on the American television series Hope & Gloria, which ran for 35 episodes.[30] In March 2002, Thicke participated in a celebrity version of Fear Factor. In May 2002, he appeared in the season six finale of Just Shoot Me, "The Boys in the Band."[31] From 2006 to 2009, Thicke was talk show host Rich Ginger on The Bold and the Beautiful.[32]

From 2001 to 2003, Thicke hosted Animal Miracles on the Pax TV network. In April 2006, he hosted Celebrity Cooking Showdown on NBC, in which celebrities were teamed with famous chefs in a cooking competition.[33]

Later appearances

In 2008, Thicke appeared in a major supporting role as Jim Jarlewski in the television series adaptation of Douglas Coupland's jPod.[34] That same year, he had a cameo appearance in the How I Met Your Mother episode "Sandcastles in the Sand" as the dad in Robin Scherbatsky's second "Robin Sparkles" music video.[35] He guest starred as himself in the episodes "The Rough Patch", "Glitter", "P.S. I Love You", and "The Rehearsal Dinner".[36]

In February 2009, Thicke made guest appearances on Adult Swim's Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job. and the web series Star-ving.[37] He also had a role in the 2009 film, The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard.[38] On 10 July 2009, Thicke appeared on the 1000th episode of Attack of the Show!, singing with Kevin Pereira and Olivia Munn.[39]

Thicke made a guest appearance on a few episodes of Canada's Worst Handyman 5.[40] In January 2010, Thicke appeared on the television program, Tosh.0.[41] In March 2010, he made an appearance in La La Land as himself. In October 2010, he appeared as a celebrity contestant on Don't Forget the Lyrics, where he played for the charities ProCon.org and the Alan Thicke Center for diabetes research.[42]

In March 2013, he participated on ABC's Celebrity Wife Swap. He swapped wives with comedian Gilbert Gottfried.[43] From 2014 to 2015, Thicke starred in his own reality series, Unusually Thicke, which aired on Pop.

In October 2016, Thicke appeared as himself in the pilot episode of NBC's This is Us.[44]

Other hosting

During 2014 and 2015 Thicke hosted a travelling dance show Dancing Pros Live which toured the United States.[45]

Commercials

In the 1990s, Thicke was the spokesman for the Canadian division of Woolco department stores until its demise in 1994.[46] In 2007, Thicke appeared in a television ad for Tahiti Village, a Las Vegas time-share resort.[47][48] In 2009, Thicke began appearing in TV ads endorsing CCS Medical, a distributor of home-delivered diabetes supplies.[49][unreliable source?] In 2014, he began representing Optima Tax Relief.[50]

From 2011, Thicke was the spokesperson for Cambridge Life Solutions, a Canadian company that promised to reduce unsecured consumer debt through a method known as debt settlement, which had been outlawed in the United States by the Federal Trade Commission as a predatory practice in 2010 and was subsequently banned in Ontario in 2015. According to Scott Hannah, the president and CEO of the Credit Counseling Society of Canada, the company, which was accused of "bilking thousands of vulnerable Canadians" eventually dominated half of the Canadian market due to Thicke's hiring "as a spokesman who was very credible to Canadians."[51]

Personal life

Thicke was married three times: His first marriage, to Days of Our Lives actress Gloria Loring, lasted from 1970 until 1984; they had two sons, Brennan and Robin.[2] In 1987 at the age of 40, Thicke began dating 17-year old Kristy Swanson. Two years later, they were engaged but never married. He married his second wife, Miss World 1990 Gina Tolleson, on 13 August 1994, and had a son, Carter William Thicke, before their divorce was finalized on September 29, 1999.[2] In 1999, he met Tanya Callau in Miami, where he was a celebrity host and she was a model.[52] They were married from 2005 until his death.[53]

Thicke lent his name and star power to supporting the Alan Thicke Center for diabetes research.[54] Also, for several years in the mid-1980s, Thicke and Gloria Loring were co-hosts of Telemiracle, an annual 20-hour telethon that alternated between Saskatoon and Regina, Saskatchewan, to support programs run by the Kinsmen Club.[citation needed]


Death

On December 13, 2016, Thicke collapsed while playing ice hockey with his son Carter at Pickwick Gardens in Burbank, California. The manager of the rink said he was talking and even joked to his son to take a photo as he was being wheeled out on a stretcher.[55] Thicke died later that day of type-A aortic dissection at the Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, at the age of 69.[56][57] On December 19, 2016, the cast of Growing Pains, including Leonardo DiCaprio, reunited at Thicke's funeral; a eulogy was given by his friend Bob Saget, and his son, Robin, offered a humorous remembrance. He was buried at Santa Barbara Cemetery in Santa Barbara, California.[58]

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1971The Point!Narrator / FatherVoice, third telecast
1983Copper MountainJackson Reach
1987Not Quite HumanDr. Jonas Carson
1989Not Quite Human IIDr. Jonas Carson
1991And You Thought Your Parents Were WeirdMatthew Carson / NewmanVoice
1992Still Not Quite HumanDr. Jonas Carson / Bonus
1993StepmonsterGeorge Dougherty
Betrayal of the DoveJack West
1995Open SeasonXanex
1996Demolition HighSlater
1998Anarchy TVReverend Wright
Casper Meets WendyBaseball Announcer
2000Bear with MeKen Robinson
Ice AngelCoach Parker
2001Xin shi zi jie tou (X-Roads)Steve
Teddy Bears' PicnicHimself
2003CarolinaChuck McBride – Perfect Date Host
Hollywood NorthPeter Casey
2004Raising HelenHockey Cantor
ChildstarJ.R.
2006Alpha DogDouglas Holden
The Surfer KingPipeman
2009The Goods: Live Hard, Sell HardStu Harding
RoboDocDr. Roskin
2012That's My BoyTV Version Donny's Dad
HemingwayPaul Hemmingway
2013Cubicle WarriorsPeter Hoss
2015Being CanadianHimselfDocumentary
2017It's Not My Fault and I Don't Care AnywayPatrick SpencerPosthumous release
The ClapperHimselfPosthumous release
Love's Last ResortPaul RobertsPosthumous release (final film role)

Television

Series

YearTitleRoleNotes
1969It's Our StuffRegular
1974Jack: A Flash FantasyJack of Diamonds
1978America 2-NightDougEpisode: "I Am Democracy"
1980–1982The Alan Thicke ShowHimself/hostAlso writer and producer
1983–1984Thicke of the NightAlso writer and executive producer
1984MasqueradeEpisode: "Sleeper"
The Love BoatAlan Price / Robert McBride / Senator Bob Townsend3 episodes
1985Scene of the CrimeCraig SpearsEpisode: "A Vote for Murder"
1985–1992Growing PainsJason Seaver
1990The HitchhikerMickey BlackEpisode: "Tough Guys Don't Whine"
1992TravelquestHost
1993Murder, She WroteHarrison M. KaneEpisode: "The Phantom Killer"
1994Burke's LawEpisode: "Who Killed the Beauty Queen?"
1995Minor AdjustmentsRogerEpisode: "The Ex-Files"
Hope & GloriaDennis Dupree
1996–1997Married... with ChildrenHenry / Bruce3 episodes
1997The Outer LimitsDonald RiversEpisode: "A Special Edition"
PictionaryHost
1999ArlissDoctorEpisode: "Rules of the Game"
2000Beggars and ChoosersEpisode: "The Woodhouse Conundrum"
Son of the BeachCaptain 'Buck' Enteneille / Captain Buck Enteneille3 episodes
20017th HeavenEd PalmerEpisode: "Parents"
2001–2003Animal MiraclesHimselfHost
2002Just Shoot Me!Episode: "The Boys in the Band"
2003EGG, the Arts ShowAlan ScottEpisode: "Broadway Workshop"
2004My Wife and KidsMagicianEpisode: "Fantasy Camp: Part 2"
2005Yes, DearJoelEpisode: "The New Neighbors"
Half & HalfGavin StormEpisode: "The Big Mothers for Others Episode"
JoeyHimselfEpisode: "Joey and the Poker"
2006–2009The Bold and the BeautifulRich Ginger7 episodes
2007Ned's Declassified School Survival GuideHal E. BurtonEpisode: "Spring Fever & the School Newspaper"
2008About a GirlDude's DadEpisode: "About a Homecoming"
JPodJim Jarlewski13 episodes
2008–2013How I Met Your MotherHimself5 episodes
2009Tim and Eric Awesome ShowDr. Alan ThickeSeason 4, Episode 2 (The Cinco Napple)
2010Canada's Worst Handyman 5Himself
Tosh.0Episode: "Crystal Light Dancers (Reunion)"
2011I'm in the BandSimon Craig5 episodes
This Hour Has 22 MinutesHimself
2012The L.A. ComplexDonald Gallagher4 episodes
2012Fugget About ItRichard Wheatthin1 Episode (Screw You, Mr. Wonderful)
2013Celebrity Wife SwapHimselfSeason 2, episode 3
2014Unusually ThickeReality show; 14 episodes
American Dad!Episode: "Permanent Record Wrecker"
2015Scream QueensTad RadwellEpisode: "Thanksgiving"
The Jack and Triumph ShowHimselfEpisode: "Commercial"
2016GrandfatheredEpisode: "Jimmy's 50th, Again"
Mike Tyson MysteriesWalter MorganEpisode: "Unholy Matrimony"
This is UsHimselfEpisode: "Pilot"
The Eric Andre ShowDavid Alan Thicke (with David Alan Grier) / HimselfSeason 4, Episode 9
Fuller HouseMikeEpisode: "Mom Interference"
Chopped JuniorJudgeSeason 3, Episode 8
The Stanley DynamicEpisode: "The Stanley Band"
2017ChoppedContestantSeason 33; 5 epi. "Star Power" tournament
*Posthumous release

Television movies

YearTitleRoleNotes
1983Copper MountainJackson Reach
1984Calendar Girl MurdersAlan Conti
1986Perry Mason: The Case of the Shooting Star[59]Steve Carr
1987Not Quite HumanDr. Jonas Carson
198814 Going on 30The real Forndexter
ObsessedConrad Vaughan
Dance 'til DawnJack Lefcourt
1989Not Quite Human IIDr. Jonas Carson
1990Jury Duty: The Comedy[60]Phil Beckman
1992The Trial of Red Riding HoodThe Wolf
Still Not Quite HumanDr. Jonas Carson/Bonus Carson
1993Rubdown[61]Raymond Holliman
1994Lamb Chop in the Haunted StudioAlan
1995Lamb Chop's Special Chanukah[62]Alan
1996Windsor ProtocolSenator Joplin Hardy
Shari's Passover SurpriseAlan
The Secret She CarriedReed EppersonUncredited
1997Shadow of the BearWilliam Andrich
Any Place But HomeAugust Danforth
1998Thunder PointJoplin Hardy
Casper Meets WendyBaseball Announcer
1999Two of HeartsHank Powers
2000Ice AngelCoach Parker
The Growing Pains MovieJason Seaver
2004Growing Pains: Return of the SeaversJason Seaver
2010Making a SceneThe Producer
2013Camp SunshineKen Handcourt
Bad ManagementTobias Sr.
Let It SnowTed Beck
2014A Cookie Cutter ChristmasChef Kruger
2016Stop the WeddingSean Castleberry
2017Loves Last ResortPaul Roberts

Books

  • Thicke, Alan (May 1999). How Men Have Babies: The Pregnant Father's Survival Guide. Contemporary Books. ISBN 978-0-8092-2806-5.
  • Thicke, Alan (27 April 2006). How To Raise Kids Who Won't Hate You: Family Wisdom and Humor from a Favorite TV Dad. iUniverse Star. ISBN 978-0-595-84288-9.

Honours

References

External links

Preceded by
Miss World America Host
1992
Succeeded by
Preceded by Miss USA Host
1988
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Bob Barker
Miss Universe Host
1988
Succeeded by
Preceded by Host, Pictionary
1997–1998
Succeeded by
Defunct
Preceded by
Miss Universe Canada Host
2004
Succeeded by
Dominique Dufour