Mark Linn-Baker Net Worth

He has also composed music for several films and television shows.
Mark Linn-Baker is a member of Actor

Age, Biography and Wiki

Who is it? Actor, Director, Soundtrack
Birth Day June 17, 1954
Birth Place  St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Age 69 YEARS OLD
Birth Sign Cancer
Alma mater Yale University
Occupation Actor, director
Years active 1979–present
Spouse(s) Adrianne Lobel (1995–2009) Christa Justus (2012–present)
Children 1

💰 Net worth: $9 Million (2024)

Mark Linn-Baker is a multi-talented individual who has found great success in the entertainment industry. With his diverse skills as an actor, director, and soundtrack contributor, he has become well-known in the United States. As of 2024, his net worth is estimated to be an impressive $9 million. Mark has undoubtedly achieved this level of financial success through his dedication and expertise in multiple fields of entertainment. His talent and contributions to the industry are certainly remarkable, and his net worth is a testament to his hard work and accomplishments.

Some Mark Linn-Baker images

Biography/Timeline

1972

Mark Linn Baker was born in St. Louis, Missouri, and later hyphenated his middle and last name. His mother, Joan, was a Dancer and his father, william Nelson Baker, co-founded the Open Stage Theater in Hartford. He graduated from Wethersfield High School in Wethersfield, Connecticut, in 1972, and from Yale University in 1976. He then attended the Yale School of Drama, receiving a MFA in Drama in 1979, and following that, found most of his early roles on stage.

1979

His film debut is a small part in Woody Allen's 1979 film Manhattan. Unfortunately for Linn-Baker, most of his scenes were later cut from the film. Three years later, he landed a far more memorable film role partly inspired by Allen himself, playing Benjy Stone in the 1982 comedy film My Favorite Year alongside Peter O'Toole. In a manner similar to his Future role in Perfect Strangers, Linn-Baker played the straight man to O'Toole's outrageous character, Alan Swann.

1980

He joined his friend, fellow Yale Drama School graduate and former sidekick Lewis Black, on the audiobook version of Black's second book Me of Little Faith where he and Black recreate The Laundry Hour, an act they did in New York City in the early 1980s. He guest-stars in several episodes of the children's TV show The Electric Company in February–March 2009 as "Uncle Sigmund Scrambler".

1983

Having attained success on stage and the big screen, Linn-Baker began to turn his sights toward television. In 1983, he appeared in an unsold detective show pilot called O'Malley. The following year saw a role on the television movie, The Ghost Writer, and in the summer series, The Comedy Zone. Soon, Linn-Baker was appearing in several high-profile television shows. He guest-starred on a 1984 episode of Miami Vice as Bonzo Barry and portrayed hapless office worker Phil West on a 1985 episode of Moonlighting entitled "Atlas Belched". Linn-Baker starred with Charles Kimbrough in the 1985 CBS pilot The Recovery Room, a sitcom about a bar located across from a major city hospital and its inhabitants. Airing as a special that summer, the pilot did not lead to a regular series. Between parts, Linn-Baker also appeared during this time in television commercials pitching products ranging from Kellogg's Nutri-Grain to Kraft's Life Savers.

1992

On a 1992 episode of Full House, Linn-Baker played Dick Donaldson, the wealthy, snobbish cousin of Becky Donaldson Katsopolis (Lori Loughlin). In 1997, he guest starred on Family Matters as the abusive boss of Harriette Winslow (Jo Marie Payton). Linn-Baker guested three times on Hangin' with Mr. Cooper as Larry Weeks. Additionally, he appeared on an episode of Law & Order as a strip club owner being extorted by the Mob. In a 1997 episode of Sesame Street, he had a guest role as a Veterinarian examining a sick—and invisible—Barkley.

2002

Linn-Baker provided the voice for one of a quartet of aardvarks in the 2002 Sandra Boynton album Philadelphia Chickens. The other three were voiced by Joe Grifasi, Michael Gross, and Devin McEwan.

2003

On a 2003 episode of Law & Order: Criminal Intent, he guested as an insurance investigator who displays strong Asperger's Syndrome traits. He gets a degree of empathy from Det. Robert Goren and a number of behind-his-back snickers from Goren's partner Alexandra Eames. His character made a return cameo appearance in the season 6 episode "Endgame", where it was revealed Goren has kept in touch with the character through correspondence. In season 2, episode 14 ("Probability"), the last line spoken by Eames is "I'm sure he'd like a pen pal."

2005

In 2005, he was a regular cast member on the WB Network sitcom Twins, which was canceled after a single season. He also appeared in the 2010 film How Do You Know as Ron. In 2011, he starred in his sixth Broadway show Relatively Speaking in a one-act play by Woody Allen. He previously appeared opposite Whoopi Goldberg in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. In 2016 he appeared off-Broadway as Sir Peter Teazle in The School for Scandal at the Lucille Lortel Theatre. As of 2017 he is playing the role of Carlton Miller, aide to Mayor Margaret Dutton (Lorraine Bracco) on the CBS police procedural drama Blue Bloods.

2009

In 2009, he appeared in an episode of the U.S. version of Life On Mars, playing a character who collected women's underwear that he later used for masturbation. In 2010, he appeared in the episode of Law & Order, "The Taxman Cometh" as Dr. Vincent Balicheck, a physician who used controversial therapies on cancer patients and that caused the patients to die in the year 2010, during a reprieve from the U.S. estate tax.

2012

In 1995, Linn-Baker married Adrianne Lobel, the daughter of children's book author Arnold Lobel, best known for his Frog and Toad series. They divorced after having one daughter. Linn-Baker helped to adapt his father-in-law's stories into the Tony-nominated Broadway musical A Year with Frog and Toad, in which Linn-Baker played Toad and Jay Goede played Frog. On December 29, 2012, Linn-Baker married Actress Christa Justus.

2014

Linn-Baker and Perfect Strangers are referenced in the HBO TV series The Leftovers, which takes place after a fictional global event called the "Sudden Departure," the inexplicable, simultaneous disappearance of 140 million people, 2% of the world's population. Within the show, the entire cast of Perfect Strangers has departed — except for Linn-Baker, who, it turns out, has faked his own departure. Linn-Baker appears, as a fictional version of himself, in The Leftovers season 2, episode 1, "Axis Mundi" and season 3, episode 2, "Don't Be Ridiculous," titled based on the Perfect Strangers' catchphrase.)