Birthday:
Birthday:

The dedication of Sal Viscuso to the craft of acting can be dated to a singular evening in 1967. A college freshman, he happened upon a teleplay of Ronald Ribman's CBS Playhouse: The Final War of Olly Winter (1967) and was so inspired by Ivan Dixon's Emmy-winning rendition of the title role that he entered the drama department the very next day, later explaining, "I felt that there I had found my family." He earned his BA from the University of California at Davis, then went on to study with Olympia Dukakis at NYU School of the Arts, from which he graduated with an MFA. Opportunities presented themselves rapidly, and Sal made his film debut in the classic The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974). An introduction to Burt Metcalfe, associate producer of the iconic series M*A*S*H (1972), led to his move to Los Angeles, and soon Sal was a regular on NBC's sitcom The Montefuscos (1975). He was an off-screen loudspeaker announcer (as well as various other characters) on M*A*S*H (1972); appeared in Gene Wilder's homage to 1920's Hollywood, The World's Greatest Lover (1977); improvised in Robert Altman's Three Women (1977); and played multiple parts on the beloved Barney Miller (1975) (one of which was written especially for him by the show's creator, Danny Arnold). He was also to feature in what TIME magazine has rated as one of the "Top 100 TV shows of all time," Susan Harris's Soap (1977). His vocationally challenged Father Timothy Flotsky (and the show's depiction of one of the first openly gay characters on network television), created instant controversy that attracted 19 million viewers to the series premiere. Shortly thereafter, Sal commenced his professional association with the Bancroft/Brooks combine of talent, first appearing in Anne Bancroft's Fatso (1980), and then in Mel Brooks' Spaceballs (1987), about which he has remarked, "I continue to get more attention from that project than from anything I've ever done!"
Birthday: October 05, 1948

December 04, 1981

December 11, 1980

October 23, 2000

September 22, 1982

September 20, 1990

September 23, 1986

September 17, 1972

September 20, 1985

January 07, 1982

August 24, 1979

January 08, 1999

September 24, 1977

September 25, 1982

March 03, 1986

November 24, 1981

September 20, 1999

March 25, 1982

September 26, 1987

September 13, 1977

October 29, 1993

September 22, 1984

September 18, 1984

September 19, 1994

September 24, 1989

September 04, 1975

September 05, 1992

October 14, 1982

March 09, 2009

September 29, 1985

September 23, 2008

November 06, 1983

December 11, 1961

April 05, 2012

March 22, 2018

October 04, 1990

September 12, 1993

January 23, 1975

July 08, 1990

October 25, 1981

October 27, 1996

September 21, 1994

January 03, 2018

January 28, 1978

March 25, 1983

August 21, 1978

April 16, 2001

October 06, 1995

October 02, 1974

January 09, 2001

May 01, 2013

March 18, 1985

December 18, 1977

October 02, 2001

October 07, 2022

February 01, 1980

February 16, 1986

June 24, 1987

January 18, 1982

May 30, 1986

March 06, 1988

April 10, 1995

October 07, 1996

June 07, 1996

March 07, 1998