Ryan Stiles
Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in) for Ryan Stiles. 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
Two Girls for Every Boy (2003)
[ Drew Carey ][ Diedrich Bader ]
Blecch Sunday (2003)
[ Drew Carey ][ Diedrich Bader ]
Nobody Knows Anything! (2003)
[ Tim Meadows ][ Mike Myers ][ Ben Stiller ][ Fred Willard ][ Stephen Colbert ]
Mama Told Me I Should Come (2002)
[ Drew Carey ][ Diedrich Bader ]
Kate's Wedding (2002)
Bow Wow Wedding Vows (2002)
Rock & Roll Back to School Special (2001)
[ Drew Carey ][ Diedrich Bader ][ Craig Ferguson ]
Courting Courtney (1997)
[ Doug McKeon ]
The Unplanned Child (1993)
[ Larry Miller ]
Thirty Day Chip (1993)
Hot Shots! Part Deux (1993)
[ Rowan Atkinson ][ Charlie Sheen ][ Martin Sheen ][ Miguel Ferrer ][ Richard Crenna ]
Say What? (1992)
Life As We Know It! (1991)
[ Steve Carell ]
Teens from a Mall (1991)
Citizen Kube (1991)
Hot Shots! (1991)
[ Cary Elwes ][ Charlie Sheen ][ Jon Cryer ][ Efrem Zimbalist Jr. ]
Andrea Martin... Together Again (1989)
[ Martin Short ][ Dave Thomas ]
Rainbow War (1985)

 

A master of improvisational comedy, tall, rangy, and rubber-faced, Ryan Stiles is best known for playing comic Drew Carey's best friend in the ABC sitcom The Drew Carey Show. Born in Seattle, Stiles entered the entertainment industry as a standup comedian in Vancouver, British Columbia. It was not the career his parents had hoped he would choose, but Stiles managed to make a living for a few years. In the mid-'80s, Stiles switched gears and joined the Second City comedy group in Toronto, renowned for its highly topical and fast-paced sketches. There, Stiles grew adept at improvising; in 1990, he transferred to the Los Angeles Second City troupe and, before long, the six-foot, five-inch redhead was working on television and in feature films. He made his film debut in Rainbow War (1986). Stiles' early television credits include guest-starring roles on Parker Lewis Can't Lose and Mad About You. Outside of The Drew Carey Show, he had his greatest success as a regular on the British improvisational series Whose Line Is It, Anyway?, which found an American audience on the Comedy Central cable network. During the show's run (1988-1993), it won four CableACE awards. The show was revised and updated, as a replacement series on ABC, in the summer of 1998. The show was hosted by Drew Carey.


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