Dan Butler- Biography

Also Credited As:

Dan E. Butler

About Dan Butler

Known to fans of the TV series "Frasier" (NBC, 1993-) as Bob "Bulldog" Briscoe, the womanizing, blue-collar, loud-mouthed sports radio host and nemesis to stuffy Dr. Frasier Crane, Dan Butler is one of the few openly gay stars on primetime TV. His sexual orientation has had no impact on his career on "Frasier" nor has there been any negative audience fallout since Butler disclosed it on "Entertainment Tonight" in 1994.

The talented, compact Butler won parts--most of them heterosexual--in a host of TV and movie projects. Butler had been involved with the theatre since his youth in Fort Wayne, IN. He made his performing debut as a lad in a local production of "The Music Man" and eventually joined the Indiana-Purdue theatre group while in high school. Although he received a scholarship from the Irene Ryan Foundation to study acting, Butler left both Purdue University and San Jose State College without degrees and migrated to San Francisco where he worked in regional theatre. Relocating to New York in 1980, Butler won a role in Neil Simon's "Biloxi Blues" on Broadway and small parts in such TV-movies as "Country Gold" (CBS, 1982) and "The Last Days of Frank & Jesse James (ABC, 1986). A starring role in the New York company of "The Lisbon Traviata" brought him to the Mark Taper Forum for the Los Angeles production in 1991. Butler decided to stay in L.A. and won guest shots on "Quantam Leap" and a small recurring role on "Roseanne" as a motorcycle pal of Dan's (John Goodman). His "Roseanne" bosses, Carsey-Werner Productions, put him in the pilot of "Sex & Saints" (1992), but CBS failed the pick up the project. Guest appearances in ABC's "Life Goes On" and CBS' "Picket Fences" kept Butler busy, but "Bulldog" on "Frasier" had kept him steadily working. As the role is not featured in every episode, Butler has had time to occasionally do guest spots in other series, such as "The X-Files" (Fox) and "Caroline in the City" (NBC).

Billed as Dan E. Butler, he made his film debut in Michael Mann's "Manhunter" (1986) as a fingerprint expert and also appeared in "The Silence of the Lambs" (1991); both films featured the serial killer Dr. Hannibal Lechter (played by Brian Cox and Anthony Hopkins respectively). He was the pushy casting agent who refuses to hire an actor because of rumors the actor has AIDS in "Longtime Companion" (1989) and played small character roles in the comedies "Captain Ron" (1992) "Dave" (1993) and "I Love Trouble" (1994). Butler also launched "The Only Thing Worse You Could Have Told Me," his partly autobiographical one-man show in which he portrayed a host of gay characters. The play has had lengthy runs in both Los Angeles and New York where it received much praise and audience support.

Family

Father

Andrew Butler.

Mother

Shirley Butler.

Sister

Pam Conrad. born c. 1958

Education

Purdue University, West Lafayette , Indiana
San Jose State College, San Jose , California

Career Milestones

1972

Joined Indiana-Purdue, Fort Wayne, IN, theatre group while in high school (date approximate)

1973

Received an Irene Ryan scholarship to study acting

1976

Performed in regional theatre in San Francisco

1980

Relocated to NYC; won role in Biloxi Blues on Broadway

1982

Primetime TV debut, small role in Country Gold , a CBS TV-movie

1986

Film debut, Manhunter , based on Thomas Harris novel that concerns Dr Hannibal Lechter (billed as Dan E Butler)

1989

Starred in off-Broadway production of Terrence McNally s The Lisbon Traviata

1990

Travelled to L.A. for West Coast production of The Lisbon Traviata

1991

Appeared in The Silence of the Lambs , based on Thomas Harris novel that concerns Dr Hannibal Lechter

1991

Played recurring role on Roseanne (ABC)

1992

Co-starred in unsold pilot, Sex and Saints for CBS

1993

Joined cast of Frasier as Bob Bulldog Briscoe

1994

Starred in one-man show, The Only Thing Worse You Could Have Told Me in L.A.

1995

Appeared off-Broadway in one-man show The Only Thing Worse ... ; later toured in show

2000

Had featured role in the Off-Broadway production of Wendy Wasserstein s play Old Money

2001

Starred as a psychologist who trafficks in reparative therapy in the indie Fixing Frank