Artie Lange
- Actor
- Writer
- Producer
Arthur Steven Lange grew up a child of a middle class family in Union,
New Jersey. At Union High School, Lange excelled in baseball, becoming
an All County third baseman. Working long afternoons with his loving
contractor father, Artie developed a comical view of social classes,
and his place in life as a barrel-chested Italian boy. After Artie
completed high school, his father, who was a cable installer, fell off
a roof and became a quadriplegic. Artie changed his college plans to be
near his family, taking up odd jobs as a clerk, laborer and cab driver.
After his fathers' death four years later, Artie quit his Port of
Newark longshoreman's' job to play his first gig at New York's Improv
in Hell's Kitchen. Gaining steadying success Artie pursued sketch
comedy, helping to create the popular improvisation group, "Live On
Tape". Doing improvisation landed Artie his major break. He was cast as
an original member of Fox's
Mad TV (1995) in 1995. Hollywood success
would bring down the comic with substance abuse and a possession for
cocaine arrest. Mad TV fired him in 1997. After rehab, depression and a
40-pound weight gain, Lange found himself out of work until
Saturday Night Live (1975)comedian
Norm MacDonald remembered him.
Lange played MacDonald's sidekick in both
Dirty Work (1998) and ABC's
Norm (1999). As a
guest during a promotional tour with
MacDonald,Howard Stern first heard
and liked Lange. Years before, Artie and his father listened daily to
the Howard Stern Show. Artie joined the nationally syndicated
The Howard Stern Radio Show (1998)in
2001, bringing impressions and an average guy prospective to the radio
and E network shows. However, his troubled past re-emerged through his
years on the Stern show and Artie had fights with various staff members
and splits with the show on several occasions up until his suicide
attempt in 2010 when he left the show for good. Artie spent 7 months in
a rehab center in Florida and emerged stating that he was finally clean
and sober. Artie returned to radio in 2011 when, along with his friend
Nick DiPaolo, they inked 3-year deals for a nationally syndicated radio
show on Fox Sports. The show is called "The Nick and Artie Show".