Try our affiliated browser extension - redirect to BreezeWiki automatically!

Jon Hamm


Jon Hamm is one of the actors in the Amazon series Good Omens. He portrays the Archangel Gabriel.

Biography

Jon Hamm’s nuanced portrayal of the high-powered, advertising executive Don Draper on AMC’s award-winning drama series Mad Men has firmly established him as one of Hollywood’s most talented and versatile actors. He has earned numerous accolades, including an Emmy Award in 2015 for Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series, Golden Globe Awards in 2016 and 2008, Television Critics Association Awards in 2011 and 2015, a Critics’ Choice Television Award in 2011, as well as multiple Screen Actors Guild nominations. Mad Men concluded its seventh and final season on May 17, 2015.

Hamm most recently appeared on Maggie Moore(s) in which he starred opposite Tina Fey. The film was directed by John Slattery. Hamm also completed production on Fletch. Hamm also recently appeared as a guest star in Season Ten of Curb Your Enthusiasm, with critics calling his impersonation of Larry David “inspired” and a “highlight of the season.” Next, he was seen in Top Gun: Maverick with Tom Cruise and Miles Teller. In 2020, Jon appeared opposite Emily Blunt in John Patrick Shanley’s Wild Mountain Thyme. In 2019, he appeared in Neil Gaiman’s Good Omens a series for Amazon Prime Video and Noah Hawley’s directorial debut film, Lucy in the Sky, opposite Natalie Portman. Additionally, Hamm starred in Scott Z. Burns’ The Report opposite Annette Benning and Adam Driver, and Richard Jewell, directed by Clint Eastwood.

In 2018, he starred in Drew Goddard’s Bad Times at the El Royale for Twentieth Century Fox as well as in Warner Bros. comedy Tag opposite Ed Helms and Jeremy Renner. He also starred in Tony Gilroy’s Beiruit alongside Rosamund Pike. Hamm starred as a former U.S. diplomat who returns to service to save a former colleague. Critics called Hamm’s performance his “best work yet.”

In 2017, Hamm starred in Edgar Wright’s hugely successful heist thriller Baby Driver opposite Jamie Foxx. Hamm also appeared in the independent film Marjorie Prime.

In 2016, Hamm starred in 20th Century Fox’s Keeping Up With the Jones, opposite Zach Galifianakis and Isla Fisher. In 2015, Hamm loaned his voice to the wildly successful Universal Pictures animated feature, The Minions, alongside Sandra Bullock and Steve Coogan. Hamm’s previous film credits include Disney’s Million Dollar Arm, based on a script by Thomas McCarthy and directed by Craig Gillespie, Friends With Kids, written and directed by Jennifer Westfeldt; Bridesmaids with Kristen Wiig; Ben Affleck’s The Town, Zack Snyder’s fantasy thriller Sucker Punch, Shrek Forever After, in which he voiced the character Brogan, The Day the Earth Stood Still with Keanu Reeves, Jennifer Westfeldt’s Ira & Abby and Kissing Jessica Stein, and We Were Soldiers.

Hamm’s appearances on the Emmy-winning comedy, 30 Rock, from 2009-2012 earned him three Emmy nominations for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series. He has also hosted Saturday Night Live three times, once in 2008 and twice in 2010 to critical acclaim. In addition to Mad Men, Hamm also appeared in the Netflix series Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt created by Tina Fey and Robert Carlock. Hamm played Reverend Richard Wayne Gary Wayne, the senior prophet who fools four women into being held captive for 15 years while they believe to have survived the apocalypse. The role earned him an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series. His additional television credits include A Young Doctor’s Notebook, a BBC miniseries in which he stars opposite Daniel Radcliffe and also executive produced, the Larry David film Clear History for HBO. Hamm first came to audience’s attention in the NBC series Providence. Signed for a cameo role, he impressed the producers so much that he ended up with an 18-episode run on the series. 

A native of St. Louis, Missouri, Hamm received his Bachelor of Arts in English at the University of Missouri-Columbia and currently resides in Los Angeles.[1]


References