- Born
- Birth nameMichael John McKean
- Height5′ 11″ (1.80 m)
- McKean was born in New York City at Manhattan Women's Hospital, now part of the Mt. Sinai St. Luke's complex on Amsterdam Avenue. He is the son of Ruth Stewart McKean, a librarian, and Gilbert S. McKean, one of the founders of Decca Records, and was raised in Sea Cliff, New York, on Long Island. McKean is of Irish, English, Scottish, and some German and Dutch descent. He graduated from high school in 1965. In early 1967, he was briefly a member of the New York City "baroque pop" band The Left Banke and played on the "Ivy, Ivy" single (B-side: "And Suddenly").- IMDb Mini Biography By: Bonitao
- SpousesAnnette O'Toole(March 20, 1999 - present)Susan Russell(October 10, 1970 - 1993) (divorced, 2 children)
- Children
- ParentsRuth StewartGilbert Scaife McKean
- RelativesPatricia McKean(Sibling)Joel Stewart McKean(Sibling)Joel McKean(Sibling)
- Lenny Kosnowski's "Lone Wolf" jacket on Laverne & Shirley (1976)
- Dan Aykroyd and McKean are the only ones to have appeared as musical guests, hosts and regulars on Saturday Night Live (1975).
- Is a relative of Thomas McKean, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence.
- He began playing the guitar at the age of 14. He plays the piano and the harmonica also.
- The song "A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow," performed by Mitch & Mickey in A Mighty Wind (2003), was written by McKean and his wife, Annette O'Toole, as a love song to each other after the movie was conceived. Christopher Guest asked McKean and O'Toole to write the duet. He almost turned it down after the McKeans performed it. Jamie Lee Curtis convinced her husband (Guest) to use it in the film.
- Did celebrity impersonations of Robert Evans, Gary Busey, Howard Stern and Bill Clinton on Saturday Night Live (1975).
- [describing how he and wife Annette O'Toole go about writing a song's music and lyrics] When we've done it - and this sounds like I'm talking about sex, doesn't it? - we've done it every way you can.
- If 'Harry Shearer' hates you, don't feel special.
- [on why he was offered Saturday Night Live at age 46] Phil Hartman had just left the show and they needed somebody to play David Spade's dad.
- Lloyd Richards, who was my [acting] teacher at NYU, had this theory that every scene you do is about love, on some level. At the time, when I was 18, I thought, well this guy's full of crap. But you can really almost play anything that way. You can love money, you can love a woman, you can love America. There are all those things that if you take love as the center-you can be a loveless person, but it will make sense.
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