Martin Mull

Martin Mull
Martin Eugene Mull is an American actor and comedian who has appeared in many television and film roles. He is also a painter and a recording artist. As an actor, he first became known in his role on Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman and its spin-off Fernwood 2 Night. Among his other notable roles are Colonel Mustard in the 1985 film Clue, Leon Carp on Roseanne, Willard Kraft on Sabrina, the Teenage Witch, Vlad Plasmius on Danny Phantom and Russell the...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionTV Actor
Date of Birth18 August 1943
CityChicago, IL
CountryUnited States of America
Music helps set a romantic mood. Imagine her surprise when you say, "We don't need a stereo - I have an accordion."
Human beings are 70% water and with some the rest is colagen
I never stopped making pictures. There were times when more of my income was coming from other sources, and I had to devote more time to television and movies and records.
I had a teacher in art school who said something about the only works he really enjoyed seeing or found much in were works where he had a sense that a discovery was made in the course of making this object. I like to hold to that as my marching orders.
I try to not get to the point where one is making wallpaper, or simply painting money. I want to make sure that I am at least trying to weigh myself down, that there's a challenge each time.
It was taunted as reality. It was dangled as a carrot. In terms of people's hopes and dreams, to say that that is less of a reality than the daily grind they find themselves in is maybe not correct.
Around 1980, I went back to painting with a vengeance.
You'd be surprised at how undemanding acting is
I don't jog. It makes the ice jump right out of my glass.
Writing about music is like dancing about architecture.
It's hard to decide if TV makes morons out of everyone, or if it mirrors Americans who really are morons to begin with
I've always had a certain fascination. It's basically paint what you know, and this is what I grew up with.
If there is some art involved, I'd like it to be that it came through the cracks of daily work.
It seems like the opportunity just increases exponentially. There doesn't seem to be much stopping.