Kelsey Grammer (birthname: Allen Kelsey Grammer) is best known as Dr. Frasier Crane in two long-running hit sitcoms,
Cheers (1984-1993) and
Frasier (1993-2004), he has also a number of feature film credits, many of them as vocal performances in animated movies.
His animation credits are as follows: the Don Bluth/Gary Goldman-directed
Anastasia (1997) with Meg Ryan and John Cusack; John Lasseter’s Pixar masterpiece,
Toy Story 2 (1999), with
Tom Hanks and Tim Allen, and famed for being one of the few Hollywood sequels superior to its original; Disney’s musical comedy,
Teacher’s Pet (2004), with Nathan Lane, David Ogden Stiers, and Jerry Stiller; the indie-produced
Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return (2013), with Lea Michele,
Patrick Stewart, Jim Belushi, and Dan Aykroyd; Warner Bros.’ animated
Storks (2016), with Andy Samberg, Jennifer Aniston, Keegan-Michael Key, and
Jordan Peele.
The indie-produced adventure comedy,
Bunyan and Babe (2017), with John Goodman, Jeff Foxworthy, and Mark Hamill; and Grammer also the voice of William F. Buckley for Robert Gordon’s and Morgan Neville’s documentary,
Best of Enemies (2015), with John Lithgow, Dick Cavett, Christopher Hitchens, and James Wolcott, and premiering at the Sundance Film Festival.
Grammer’s first significant starring role in a feature was under David S. Ward’s direction in the military comedy,
Down Periscope (1996), with Lauren Holly, Rob Schneider, Harry Dean Stanton, Bruce Dern, William H. Macy, Rip Torn, and grossing $37.5 million globally. Grammer’s next notable feature role was opposite Robert De Niro and Edward Burns in writer-director John Herzfeld’s buddy-cop movie,
15 Minutes (2001), but grossing barely above its $42 million cost. Director Mark Rydell cast Grammer in the crime movie,
Even Money (2006), with Kim Basinger, Nick Cannon, Danny DeVito, Carla Gugino,
Ray Liotta, Tim Roth, and
Forest Whitaker, and which premiered at the South by Southwest Film Festival.
Kelsey Grammer’s first MCU credit was as Dr. Hank McCoy/Beast in the Brett Ratner-directed
X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), with Hugh Jackman, Halle Berry, Ian McKellan, Famke Janssen, and Patrick Stewart, and grossing $460.4 million globally. Grammer joined Kevin Costner, Paula Patton, Dennis Hopper, Nathan Lane, Stanley Tucci, and George Lopez in writer-director Joshua Michael Stern’s Swing Vote (2008), underperforming at $17.6 million. One of its hit movies for Grammer was
Fame (2009), starring Debbie Allen, Charles S. Dutton, Megan Mullally, and Bebe Neuwirth, earning $77.2 million at the global box office.
Kelsey Grammer’s next significant movie credit was for
The Expendables 3 (2014), written by and starring
Sylvester Stallone, with
Jason Statham, Antonio Banderas, Jet Li, Terry Crews, Harrison Ford, and Arnold Schwarzenegger, with a mildly robust $214.7 million gross. Grammer joined another movie franchise with director
Michael Bay’s Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014), starring
Mark Wahlberg and Stanley Tucci, powering to a $1.1 billion worldwide gross. Grammer was cast in an Australia-China sci-fi horror movie,
Guardians of the Tomb (2018), starring producer Li Bingbing, and earning $8 million worldwide.
Among over two dozen movies that were either Netflix or other streaming releases, commercial bombs, and/or critically lambasted, Grammer starred in a few somewhat well-received
theatrical releases such as writer-director S.E. DeRose’s historical drama,
Charming the Hearts of Men (2021), with Anna Friel and Sean Astin. Grammer co-starred with Joel Courtney in the Christian drama,
Jesus Revolution (2023), released by Lionsgate. Grammer co-starred with writer-director-star
Dolph Lundgren in the action movie,
Wanted Man (date to be announced). Grammer then joined Vivica A. Fox and Erik King for writer-director Matthew Rocca’s crime drama,
Neighborhood Watch (date to be announced).