Bob Newhart
Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for Bob Newhart. If you have any corrections or additions, please email us at corrections@meninmovies.com. We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.

Movie Credits
The Librarian 2: Return to King Solomon's Mines (2006)
[ Noah Wyle ][ Erick Avari ]
Sunday in the Park with George (2005)
Children Will Listen (2005)
The Librarian: Quest for the Spear (2004)
[ Kyle MacLachlan ][ Noah Wyle ]
The Greater Good (2003)
[ Glenn Howerton ][ Paul McCrane ]
Out of Africa (2003)
[ Daniel Dae Kim ][ Glenn Howerton ][ Paul McCrane ]
Elf (2003)
[ James Caan ][ Will Ferrell ][ Jon Favreau ][ Artie Lange ][ Frank Sinatra ]
Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde (2003)
[ John Lennon ][ Bruce McGill ][ Luke Wilson ][ Avril Lavigne ][ Jack McGee ]
The Sports Pages (2001)
[ Kelsey Grammer ][ Eugene Levy ][ John Kapelos ]
Untitled Sisqo Project (2001)
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Movie (1998)
[ Eric Idle ][ John Goodman ]
In & Out (1997)
[ Wilford Brimley ][ Matt Dillon ][ Dan Hedaya ][ Kevin Kline ][ Anthony Ruivivar ]
The Bob Newhart Show 19th Anniversary Special (1991)
[ William Sanderson ]
The Entertainers (1991)
The Rescuers Down Under (1990)
[ Peter Firth ][ George C Scott ][ John Candy ][ Frank Welker ][ George C. Scott ]
Good-Bye & Good Riddance, Mr. Chips (1987)
[ Tom Poston ]
In the Beginning (1982)
First Family (1980)
[ Rip Torn ][ Fred Willard ][ Austin Pendleton ][ Harvey Korman ]
Little Miss Marker (1980)
[ Walter Matthau ][ Tony Curtis ]
Marathon (1980)
[ John Hillerman ][ Herb Edelman ]
Episode #5.18 (1980)
The Rescuers (1977)
[ John Fiedler ]
Episode dated 13 December 1976 (1976)
Episode dated 3 June 1976 (1976)
A Matter of Principal (1974)
Confessions of an Orthodontist (1974)
By the Way... You're Fired (1974)
A Love Story (1974)
Thursday's Game (1974)
[ Chris Sarandon ][ Gene Wilder ][ Rob Reiner ][ Norman Fell ]
Decisions! Decisions! (1972)
[ Charles Nelson Reilly ]
Cold Turkey (1971)
[ Dick Van Dyke ][ Tom Poston ][ M. Emmet Walsh ]
Catch-22 (1970)
[ Alan Arkin ][ Martin Balsam ][ Art Garfunkel ][ Anthony Perkins ][ Martin Sheen ]
On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (1970)
[ Jack Nicholson ][ John Cho ][ Richard Kiel ][ Roy Kinnear ]
Hot Millions (1968)
[ Peter Ustinov ][ Karl Malden ][ Cesar Romero ]
Hell Is for Heroes (1962)
[ Bobby Darin ][ Steve McQueen ]
Happy Birthday Marvin (0)

 

A Chicagoan from head to toe, American comedian Bob Newhart started his workaday life as a certified public accountant after flunking out of law school. As a means of breaking his job's monotony, Newhart would call his friend Ed Gallagher, and improvise low-key comedy sketches. A mutual friend of Newhart and Gallagher's, Chicago deejay Dan Sorkin, tape-recorded some of these off-the-cuff routines and played them for Warner Bros. records. Newhart suddenly found himself booked into a Houston nightclub — his first-ever public appearance. Armed with telephone-conversation routines which delineated how Abe Lincoln would be handled by a publicity agent, or how Abner Doubleday would have fared trying to sell baseball to a modern-day novelty firm, Newhart recorded his first comedy album in 1960 — which evidently struck a nerve with fellow white-collar workers, since it sold 1,500,000 copies. The hottest young comic on the club-and-TV circuit, Newhart was offered starring roles in situation comedies, but felt he wasn't a good enough actor to make a single character interesting week after week. Instead, he signed in 1961 for NBC's The Bob Newhart Show, a comedy-variety series which nosedived in the ratings but won an Emmy. Fearing that TV would eat up all his material within a year or so, Newhart went back to nightclubs after his one-season series was cancelled. Sharpening his acting skills in TV guest spots and in several films (his first, 1962's Hell is For Heroes, was so unnerving an experience that Bob repeatedly begged the producers to kill his character off before the fadeout), Newhart felt emboldened enough to attempt a regular TV series again in 1972. This Bob Newhart Show cast the comedian as psychologist Bob Hartley - an ideal outlet for his "button-down" style of dry humor. Six seasons and several awards later, Newhart was firmly established as a television superstar; this time around he wasn't cancelled, but ended the series on his own volition, feeling the series had exhausted its bag of tricks. Most popular sitcom personalities had come acropper trying to repeat their first success with a second series, but Newhart broke the jinx with Newhart in 1982, wherein Bob played author Dick Loudon, who on a whim decided to open a New England colonial inn. Newhart was every bit as popular as his earlier sitcom, and, like the previous show, the series ended (in 1990) principally because Newhart chose to end it. This he did with panache: Newhart's final scene suggested the entire series had been a bad dream experienced by Bob Newhart Show's Bob Hartley! A third starring sitcom, 1992's Bob, found Newhart playing a cult-figure comic book artist; alas, despite excellent scriptwork and the usual polished Newhart performance, this new series fell victim to format tinkering and poor timeslots. Even so, Bob Newhart has gone from humble CPA to comedy legend - and he did it all without raising his voice.


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