Tim Bagley
Timothy Hugh Bagley (born August 17, 1957) is an American actor and comedian recognized for his extensive work in television, film, and improv comedy.[1][2] Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Bagley grew up across Wisconsin and Michigan before relocating to Southern California during high school, where he later studied art and psychology at California State University, Fullerton.[2] His career breakthrough came through membership in the improv troupe The Groundlings from 1990 to 1995, earning two L.A. Weekly awards, followed by his film debut as a mechanic in The Mask (1994) and early television roles.[2] Bagley has guest-starred, recurred, or held series regular positions in over 170 television programs, including portrayals of Larry on Will & Grace, Harold Krenshaw on Monk, and recent characters in Somebody Somewhere and Grace and Frankie.[2][1] In film, he appeared in Judd Apatow comedies such as Knocked Up and This Is 40, alongside disaster epics like The Day After Tomorrow.[2] Beyond acting, Bagley developed acclaimed one-person shows like Clean Boy Dirty Stories and Happy Hour, the latter winning a Jury award in 1999, and received theater honors including Drama Critics Circle, Garland, and Ovation awards for Four Places.[2] He supports causes including the Los Angeles LGBT Center and entertains U.S. troops through volunteer performances.[2]Early life
Childhood and family
Tim Bagley was born on August 17, 1957, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to parents Carol Bagley and Elwyn Bagley.[1][2][3] He grew up primarily in Madison and Trempealeau, Wisconsin, as well as Niles, Michigan, before the family relocated to Southern California.[1][2] Bagley is one of five children, with siblings including Anne Bagley, Patrick Bagley, Kathleen "Kit" Bagley (later Locke), and Dan Bagley.[2][3][4] As of 2012, his mother Carol resided in Trempealeau, Wisconsin, where his sister Kit also lived in the family's childhood home.[5][6]Education and early influences
Bagley attended California State University, Fullerton, where he majored in art with a minor in psychology.[4][7] During this period, following high school, he relocated to Southern California and performed with the youth singing and dance ensemble The Young Americans, an experience that introduced him to stage performance.[4][8] After completing his degree, Bagley pursued formal acting training under instructors including Gordon Hunt, Nina Foch, and Howard Fine, alongside improv workshops at The Groundlings in Los Angeles.[4][7] He joined The Groundlings' main stage company in 1989, writing and performing sketches until 1995, which honed his improvisational skills and comedic timing foundational to his career.[4][9] These early theatrical engagements, emphasizing spontaneous character work and ensemble dynamics, influenced his approach to character-driven humor evident in later roles.[10]Career
Early career and odd jobs
Following his college graduation, Bagley pursued a series of unconventional jobs in Southern California, many tangentially linked to entertainment. These included performing as a dancer for entertainer Mitzi Gaynor, appearing as a cast member in the "Kids of the Kingdom" show at Disneyland, and working as a page at Paramount Studios.[2][4] Other roles encompassed serving as a butler at the Playboy Mansion, assisting Olympic gymnast Cathy Rigby, reading at a court reporting college, and managing a phone answering service for two individuals identified as pimps, T-99 and Blueberry Muffin.[2] These positions provided financial stability while Bagley initiated his acting aspirations through classes with instructors Gordon Hunt, Nina Foch, and Howard Fine, laying groundwork for his subsequent entry into improv and comedy training.[2]Comedy and improv work
Bagley initiated his professional comedy career in 1989 by studying improvisation and sketch comedy with The Groundlings, a Los Angeles-based troupe renowned for launching comedic talent. He advanced to writing and performing with their Main Stage Company from 1990 to 1995, during which he earned two Los Angeles Weekly Theater Awards for his contributions.[11][2] Following his departure from the Main Company in the mid-1990s, Bagley maintained ties to The Groundlings through guest appearances in shows such as Groundlings Good 26 Twenty and Groundlings Fondue Party, as well as improvisational performances in Cookin' with Gas. He also created the character "The Captain" for the revue Beverly Winwood Presents alongside other Groundlings alumni.[11][12] Bagley developed three solo comedic shows drawing from personal experiences: No Actors Allowed, addressing challenges in Hollywood acting; Clean Boy Dirty Stories, recounting his time as a butler at the Playboy Mansion; and Happy Hour, which premiered in 1999 and received the Jury Award at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival. These performances highlight his blend of storytelling and character-driven humor.[2] In addition to structured improv and solo work, Bagley remains active in Los Angeles' alternative comedy scene as a regular performer in storytelling and rant-style shows, including UnCabaret, Sit n Spin, Say The Word, and Rant and Rave. This ongoing involvement underscores his sustained commitment to live comedic formats beyond scripted television roles.[11][2]Television roles
Bagley began his television career with guest appearances in the early 1990s, including roles on shows such as Seinfeld, Wings, and Ellen.[1] His first series regular role came on the short-lived sitcom Howie (1992), where he portrayed a supporting character alongside host Howie Mandel.[1] Throughout the 1990s, he continued with recurring parts in sitcoms like Hope & Gloria (1995–1996) and Suddenly Susan (1996–1997), often playing comedic, everyman figures.[13] He achieved greater recognition with his recurring role as Larry, one half of the married gay couple Joe and Larry, on Will & Grace (1998–2006, with appearances in the 2017–2020 revival), appearing in over a dozen episodes as the crafty, domestic partner to Joe (played by Marshall Phelps III).[1] The character, part of Will and Grace's social circle, highlighted Bagley's skill in portraying affable, humorous supporting friends in ensemble comedies.[14] In the 2000s, Bagley recurred on The King of Queens (2002–2007) as Doug Heffernan's friend Deacon's brother-in-law in several episodes, and on Monk (2005–2009) as Harold Krenshaw, Adrian Monk's obsessive-compulsive rival, appearing in eight episodes that showcased his deadpan antagonism.[1] Other recurring turns included According to Jim (2004–2009), Strip Mall (2000–2001), and Help Me Help You (2006–2007).[13] In later years, Bagley took on voice work, such as Principal Gibbons on the animated series The Great North (2021–present), and live-action roles like Brad Schraeder on Somebody Somewhere (2022–present), a recurring character in the HBO Max dramedy.[15] He also appeared as Greg in And Just Like That... (2023).[15] Additional guest spots spanned procedurals and comedies, including Curb Your Enthusiasm (2000), The X-Files (2001), ER (2002), Dharma & Greg (1999), and 3rd Rock from the Sun (1998), often in quirky or exasperated supporting parts.[1] From 2016 to 2017, he had a main role as Mitch on the TV Land series Teachers, appearing in 20 episodes as a hapless elementary school teacher.[14]Film roles
Bagley's entry into feature films came with a supporting role as the auto mechanic Irv in the 1994 comedy The Mask, directed by Chuck Russell, marking his first credited appearance in a major theatrical release.[1] This early part alongside Jim Carrey showcased his comedic timing in a high-energy ensemble. Throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s, Bagley took on minor but memorable supporting roles in ensemble comedies, including David in the 1999 indie film Happy, Texas, a con artist mistaken for a beauty pageant coach, and the "Friendly Dad" in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999), contributing to the film's satirical suburban family parody.[15] He also appeared as Marc in Christopher Guest's mockumentary Best in Show (2000), playing a dog show enthusiast in the film's improvisational style.[14] In Roland Emmerich's disaster film The Day After Tomorrow (2004), Bagley portrayed Tommy Levinson, a character killed during a tornado sequence by a flying billboard, providing brief comic relief amid the catastrophe.[16] Bagley continued with comedic character parts in mid-2000s releases, such as Glen Ross, a rival employee, in Employee of the Month (2006) starring Dane Cook, and Vice Principal Van Der Eb in the college satire Accepted (2006).[14] His role as Dr. Pellagrino in Judd Apatow's Knocked Up (2007) involved a pivotal gynecological exam scene confirming Katherine Heigl's character's pregnancy, blending awkward humor with medical consultation.[17] Bagley reprised a similar doctor archetype as Dr. Pellegrino in Apatow's This Is 40 (2012), extending the character's deadpan delivery into family therapy dynamics.[18] Later films featured Bagley in varied supporting capacities, including Reid the airport traveler in Due Date (2010) with Robert Downey Jr., an FBI agent in Steven Soderbergh's The Informant! (2009), and Mr. G, a shady associate, in Shane Black's The Nice Guys (2016).[14] These roles, often brief and scene-specific, emphasized Bagley's strengths in eccentric, humorous authority figures or everyman types across genres from spoof (Superhero Movie, 2008, as Christian) to action-comedy (Game Over, Man!, 2018, as Mr. Ahmad).[14] His film work, while not lead-oriented, consistently supported ensemble narratives with physical comedy and timing honed from improv backgrounds.[2]Personal life
Sexuality and public identity
Bagley is an openly gay man who has publicly identified as such since the early years of his career in the 1980s. He has stated that his openness about his homosexuality limited professional opportunities, including being denied an audition for Saturday Night Live under producer Lorne Michaels, as the show purportedly did not hire openly gay performers at the time.[19][20] Bagley has emphasized adhering to his principles despite advice against portraying gay roles or being out, noting the challenges for gay actors in Hollywood during that era.[10] In reflecting on his personal history, Bagley has disclosed undergoing conversion therapy, sessions with a sex surrogate, and other therapeutic interventions in an attempt to alter his sexual orientation early in his career, amid a cultural context that pathologized homosexuality as a mental illness until 1973.[21][22] These efforts, he has indicated, were unsuccessful and underscored the internal and external conflicts he faced before fully embracing his identity publicly. Bagley's candid discussions of these experiences highlight his role in broader conversations about gay visibility in entertainment, though he has not tied his public persona to activism, focusing instead on comedic work that often incorporates his sexuality without overt political framing.[10]Relationships and personal losses
Bagley maintained a committed relationship with his partner, Bill Pounders, for ten years, which concluded tragically in 1995 when Pounders succumbed to complications from AIDS, including kidney failure.[10][23] This loss profoundly shaped Bagley's life and career, as he has described carrying Pounders' memory with him daily and viewing it as a pivotal influence amid the broader AIDS crisis affecting the gay community during that period.[10] No other long-term romantic partnerships have been publicly documented in Bagley's life following this event.[24]Reception and impact
Achievements in comedy and acting
Bagley garnered early acclaim in comedy through his tenure with the improvisational troupe The Groundlings, performing from 1990 to 1995, during which he won two LA Weekly Theater Awards: one for best solo comedy performance in Groundlings, Pretty Groundlings and another for best ensemble performance in Groundlings, Good and Twenty Years.[9][7] These honors highlighted his skill in character-driven improv and solo sketches, foundational to his comedic style.[2] He further distinguished himself by writing and starring in one-person shows, including No Actors Allowed at the Groundlings Theatre, Clean Boy Dirty Stories premiered at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival, and Happy Hour, which received the Jury Award for best one-person show at the same festival.[25][7] These productions showcased his ability to blend personal anecdotes with sharp observational humor, earning critical notice for their originality and delivery.[2] In acting, Bagley's achievements are evidenced by his steady succession of recurring television roles, such as Larry Gross in Will & Grace (1999–2006, 2017–2020) and Harold Krenshaw in Monk (2004–2009), roles that leveraged his comedic timing and character depth across over 150 guest appearances in series including Seinfeld, Curb Your Enthusiasm, and Somebody Somewhere.[18] His film work, featuring supporting parts in The Mask (1994), Knocked Up (2007), and Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002), further demonstrated versatility, though without formal awards, his endurance in the industry underscores sustained professional success.[9]Critical and cultural reception
Bagley's stand-up and one-man shows have garnered praise for their sharp, self-deprecating humor drawn from his acting struggles and personal anecdotes. In a 2014 review of his solo performance No Actors Allowed, BroadwayWorld described it as a "hysterically sad and poignantly funny" weaving of career incidents into an entertaining hour-long format, highlighting Bagley's quick delivery and ability to blend pathos with comedy.[26] His improv background with The Groundlings has been noted for influencing his versatile character work, though formal critiques remain sparse outside niche theater circles. In television, Bagley's recurring roles have received positive mentions for adding depth to ensemble casts without relying on stereotypes. On HBO's Somebody Somewhere (2022–2025), critics and outlets like Deadline commended his portrayal of Brad, a singer navigating emotional vulnerability and romance, for balancing humor with heartfelt authenticity, particularly in musical scenes that avoid exaggeration.[27] Earlier guest spots, such as on Curb Your Enthusiasm, earned appreciation for his refusal to play flamboyant tropes, as Bagley himself reflected in interviews, contributing to more grounded depictions amid the show's improvisational style.[28] Film roles, like in The Moguls (2005), have been critiqued less extensively but align with his reputation for reliable comedic support. Culturally, Bagley is recognized as an early out gay performer who advanced visibility in mainstream comedy during a era of industry resistance. The Advocate profiled him in 2024 as an "unsung hero" in Hollywood's LGBTQ+ history, citing his Will & Grace appearances as pioneering normalized gay friendships on network TV, predating broader acceptance.[10] He has discussed barriers, such as Saturday Night Live's refusal to audition openly gay Groundlings in the 1980s, underscoring his persistence amid risks to career prospects.[29] This has positioned him as a bridge figure in evolving representations, favoring complex humanity over caricature, though his impact remains more influential in queer comedy subcultures than blockbuster fame.[21]Filmography
Television appearances
Bagley began his television career with guest spots in the late 1980s, including roles as Jonathan on Roseanne (1989) and Cousin Roy on Coach (1989).[9] He appeared as a manager on Seinfeld in 1990.[9] His first series regular role was in the Showtime comedy Sunny Skies (1995), starring alongside Howie Mandel.[1] Recurring roles followed, such as Larry on Will & Grace across its original run (2000–2006) and revival seasons (2018–2020), appearing in multiple episodes including three in 2018.[14] He also recurred on Monk, The King of Queens, According to Jim, and Help Me Help You.[30] Bagley has made guest appearances on a wide array of series, including Curb Your Enthusiasm (2000) as a shoe salesman, Diagnosis: Murder, Grimm, New Girl, and procedural dramas like ER, Bones, NCIS, and Law & Order.[2] Animated credits include voice work on The Great North as Principal Gibbons, Bob’s Burgers, Family Guy, and American Dad.[15][2] In recent years, he portrayed Brad Schraeder on Somebody Somewhere (2022–present), Reggie on Hacks (2021), Greg on And Just Like That... (2021), and Roger Pelton on The Perfect Couple (2024).[15][1] Overall, Bagley has accumulated credits in over 170 television productions as a series regular, recurring player, and guest star.[2]Film appearances
Bagley made his feature film debut as Irv, a mechanic, in The Mask (1994), directed by Chuck Russell. He followed with supporting roles in comedies such as Happy, Texas (1999), where he played David, a pageant organizer.[13] In Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999), Bagley appeared as the "Friendly Dad" in a brief comedic bit.[31] His role as Tommy in The Day After Tomorrow (2004), a disaster film directed by Roland Emmerich, involved a scene depicting a tornado victim in Los Angeles. Bagley portrayed Glen Gary, a rival employee, in the workplace comedy Employee of the Month (2006), starring Dane Cook and Jessica Simpson.[32] In Judd Apatow's Knocked Up (2007), he played Dr. Pellagrino, the obstetrician during a chaotic delivery sequence. Later credits include Alan Balaban in the romantic comedy Finding Bliss (2009)[13] and Rod Carmichael in the mockumentary Jesus People (2009). Bagley appeared as Carl in the action-comedy Operation: Endgame (2010).[13] In Otherhood (2019), a dramedy directed by William Osdale, he played Miles, one of the supporting friends in a story of middle-aged mothers reconnecting with their sons.| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1994 | The Mask | Irv Ripley |
| 1999 | Happy, Texas | David |
| 1999 | Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me | Friendly Dad |
| 2004 | The Day After Tomorrow | Tommy |
| 2006 | Employee of the Month | Glen Gary |
| 2007 | Knocked Up | Dr. Pellagrino |
| 2009 | Finding Bliss | Alan Balaban |
| 2009 | Jesus People | Rod Carmichael |
| 2010 | Operation: Endgame | Carl |
| 2019 | Otherhood | Miles |