This season, while cheering on the Tigers at Comerica Park, donβt be surprised if you find yourself waiting for a coney dog pizza next to Leon Phelps, also known as βThe Ladies Manβ from Saturday Night Live. Or perhaps youβll recognize him for one of the many other gut-busting personas he took on at the storied sketch show β like O.J. Simpson, Tiger Woods, and Oprah Winfrey. Then again, you could just recognize him as Tim Meadows, the Detroit native turned Hollywood megastar who has spent the past 25 years building a career that includes a decade at SNL, appearances in many hit sitcoms, and memorable roles in movies like The Ladies Man and Mean Girls. And while all this work has kept him largely planted in Los Angeles, where heβs currently starring in two situation comedies, this Detroiter is adamant about staying connected to his roots.Μύ
βI bought a place in Detroit recently, near downtown,β says the Highland Park native. βIβll live there part-time now, in the Lafayette Park area. Iβve been working a lot and just wrapped No Activity, so Iβm not making any plans the next four or five months β other than seeing my kids. Iβll probably be there a lot this summer because I have Tigers season tickets, and I hope to go to every home game.β
The Lafayette Park neighborhood holds vivid memories for Meadows, who worked at Vinceβs Party Store on McNichols Road and Conant Street when he was younger. βOne of my many duties was to deliver liquor and refreshments. One of our customers lived in the towers in Lafayette Park β his apartment was amazing! Floor-to-ceiling windows and a beautiful view of Windsor and downtown. I later learned about [architect] Mies van der Rohe and the history of his work. So, when I found a place I really liked, I bought it.β
The son of Lathon Meadows, a janitor, and Mardell, a nurseβs assistant, Tim moved into Detroitβs Conant Gardens with his family as a youngster. He attended Mason Elementary, Farwell Junior High, and Pershing High, before heading to Wayne State University to study radio-TV broadcasting and later joining an improvisational comedy troupe at the gone-but-not-forgotten Soup Kitchen Saloon.Μύ
After just two years at Wayne State, Meadows dropped out and eventually moved to Chicago, where he joined the famed improv troupe, The Second City.Μύ And though it was his time in Chicago that eventually led him to be discovered by the team at SNL, Meadows believes itβs his Detroit DNA that has allowed him to maintain longevity in Hollywood.
βI think because I came from Detroit and the people that I grew up around β the one thing that has stuck with me is my work ethic,β Meadows says. βI work hard, Iβm aware itβs going to take a lot of hours to get something done, and I donβt shy away from it. Iβm not one of those people who complains about having to work. Of everything I took from my growing up, ³Ω³σ²Ή³Ωβs the thing that is still with me.β
![Tim Meadows](https://cdn.hourdetroit.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2019/03/021419_ΒιΆΉ·¬ΊΕDetroit_TimMeadows15733.jpg)
Good thing, given his workload at the moment. In No Activity, the first original comedy picked up by the video streaming service CBS All Access in 2017 and now in its second season, Meadows plays Detective Tolbeck, a low-on-the-pecking-order cop forced to spend countless hours on a stakeout in a squad car with his partner (played by Patrick Brammall, co-creator of the Australian series upon which the show is based). The eccentric comedy boasts an astonishing cast including dispatcher Amy Sedaris and guests like comedian Will Ferrell (who is also an executive producer of the show), Academy Award winner and fellow Detroiter J.K. Simmons, Bob Odenkirk, and Jessica Alba.
βItβs one of the things Iβm most proud of,β Meadows says of the hit show. βWeβre all waiting for something to happen, and in that waiting, you get to know the characters and how they relate to each other. I love my character, I love the guys I get to work with, Pat Brammell and Trent OβDonnell, who created the show in Australia. I call them geniuses because what they do is so retro, yet so ahead of its time. Itβs different, but itβs amazing.β
The one negative about No Activity, Meadows concedes, is, well, the lack of activity. βI filmed the whole season in about eight days, and we shoot it sitting in that car for 12 or more hours a day,β he says. βI was complaining to my kids because my back and legs were sore, and my son [17-year-old Isaiah, named for Pistons legend Isiah Thomas] asked, βWell, what are you doing all day?β I said, βI have to sit in a car all day.β And heβs like, βAnd ³Ω³σ²Ή³Ωβs whatβs making you sore? Sitting in a car? Dad, you are weak!ββΆΔ
Meadows, also a frequent guest on the syndicated daytime game show Funny You Should Ask, has recently been seen on the ABC sitcom Schooled, which premiered this past January and is a spinoff of the networkβs stalwart hit The Goldbergs. In Schooled, his character John Glascott has been promoted from a guidance counselor to the principal of William Penn Academy, the school the Goldberg offspring attended. βWe shot 13 episodes, and I think the show went well,β Meadows says. (When this issue went to press, ABC had not yet announced whether it would renew the series.) Of course, playing a principal isnβt exactly new territory for Meadows β many fans remember him as Principal Ron Duvall in 2004βs Mean Girls, written by fellow SNL alum Tina Fey.
ΜύIΜύdonβt know if Iβll ever not beΜύasked about Leon Phelps. But I donβt care. It was a blast to do.
-Tim Meadows
βIβve been lucky,β Meadows says. βI donβt know why writers see me in that position, but I think Mean Girls really set the template. But I feel this guyβs a lot different from the principal in Mean Girls. With that character, it was the last year he was going to teach, and he had pretty much given up. He was probably going to end up becoming a bartender somewhere,β Meadows says. βWhereas this guy, Glascott, heβs really into his job and loves to inspire teachers and students, so his approach to teaching is different. Heβs surrounded by all these characters, but heβs sort of the center, the rock of the show.β
The 10 seasons Meadows, 58, spent on Saturday Night Live made him one of the longest cast members the show has ever had β in fact, only a few others, like Darrell Hammond, Fred Armisen, and current ensemble member Kenan Thompson have surpassed it. The years he spent on the show and the bonds he was able to nurture have clearly benefited his career. After all, the SNL alumni are known to be a loyal fraternity: witness the involvement of Fey and Farrell in his career. But that doesnβt mean Meadows hasnβt faced his share of letdowns.Μύ
The Michael Richards Show, arriving on the heels of Richardsβ sky-high popularity from Seinfeld, and the animated/live-action mashup Son of Zorn (which featured SNL alum Jason Sudeikis) showed great promise but never quite caught on with audiences. His role as a next-door neighbor on The Bill Engvall Show lasted a few seasons, then disappeared.
βI tell my kids [Isaiah and Julian, 15] I donβt want them to become actors because of the amount of rejection involved,β he says. βIβm not surprised when shows are canceled even if they do well. Of course, it hurts, and you want the work to continue. Rejection is nothing you ever get used to, but you learn to accept it. With the Engvall show I became friends with Bill Engvall, so that was something positive that came out of that experience.β
Another thing ³Ω³σ²Ή³Ωβs still with him after all these years: Leon Phelps, the oversexed radio talk show host that originated on SNL and spun off into the big-screen comedy The Ladies Man.Μύ
βPeople still love that character,β he says with a hint of disbelief. βI still get asked about him. I donβt know if Iβll ever not be asked about Leon Phelps. But I donβt care, because I love the character. It was a blast to do, and it brings back the really good memories of SNL.β
Now that heβll be around the city on a more regular basis, Meadows is eager to create new memories. βOne thing Iβd like to do is perform a standup show at Third Man Records and record it,β he reveals. βI love going there when Iβm in town. And Iβm hoping to go to more Red Wings games, see some local bands, and check out the music scene in Detroit. Iβd also like to teach some improv classes with the Detroit Creativity Project, my friend [comedian] Marc Evan Jacksonβs program [that teaches] improv to students in the Detroit Public Schools system.β It is this desire to spend his time off enjoying Detroit β the hometown that shaped him β and give back in any way he can is exactly what makes Meadows such a grounded, standout star. Μύ
Other SNL Alumns From the Mitten State
Gildna Radner
Hometown: Detroit
One of the original seven cast members on SNL, Radner is known for her characters Roseanne Roseannadanna andΜύEmily Litella.
David Spade
Hometown: Birmingham
A cast member fromΜύβ90-β96, the Rules ofΜύEngagement actor livedΜύin metro Detroit untilΜύhe was 4 years old.Μύ
David Alan Grier
Hometown: Detroit
While serving as host in β95, the actor and comedian appeared on Tim Meadowβs βPerspectives with Lionel Osbourneβ sketch.
Lily Tomlin
Hometown: Detroit
Tomlin, who got her start at stand-up comedy clubs in Detroit, hosted SNL twice in the β70s and once inΜύthe early β80s.Μύ
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Dave Coulier
Hometown:ΜύSt. Clair Shores
Coulier was supposed to be on SNL until executives decided he was too similar to Dana Carvey.
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