:BIOGRAPHY:
Diane
Farr is a household name to Gen X and Y’ers for her work as
co-host of MTV’s cult phenomenon ‘Loveline’. This
fall, Farr will join the WB network starring in the comedy, ‘Like
Family.’ Farr will star opposite Holly Robinson Peete and
the two will bring a “Laverne and Shirley sense of comedy
to motherhood.”
In 1997, Farr was brought on board MTV’s highest rated show
to give ‘Loveline’ a long awaited feminine edge. Farr
added her charismatic personality and quick-witted intelligence
to what was once “the all male couch.” Her “whisky
soaked voice” offered perspective to callers for 165 episodes
of ‘Loveline’, making Farr one of the leading female
personas of young America. Universities around the country have
packed audiences into the thousands for a ninety minute stand-up
show by Farr on “What’s up with America’s youth?”
Diane left ‘Loveline’ to join the cast of ABC’s
‘The Drew Carey Show’, playing a recurring role as the
love interest of the whole cast. Following ‘Drew,’ she
joined the cast of the WB drama ‘Roswell’. Farr brought
a comic, left of center, character to this very “out of this
world” drama. Farr has also had recurring roles on UPN’s
‘Secret Agent Man,’ TNT’s ‘Bull’ and
received critical acclaim for her cameo role in HBO’s ‘Arliss,’
for which HBO submitted her for an Emmy nomination.
In ABC’s most critically acclaimed series of the 2000 season,
Diane played Jan Fendrick on ‘The Job’ opposite Denis
Leary. Diane brought her own bravado to the series, playing a tough
New York City detective, which she desperately needed to be as the
only female in the series. This thirty minute, single-camera comedy
was touted as “the best thing on network television since
M*A*S*H.”-- just before ABC cancelled it.
This year in ‘Like Family,’ Farr will play Maddie, a
31 year old single mother of a 16 year old boy she can no longer
handle on her own. Maddie is forced to ask her oldest friend for
help and subsequently moves in with her and her very African-American
Family. ‘Like Family’ has an ‘old school sitcom
syle,’ says Farr. Like Lucy and Ethel, Farr and Robinson Peete
get in most of their trouble right at home, where the laughter and
the drama among family members and ‘like’ family members
takes place.
Raised in New York City, Diane got her start as a model at the age
of twelve. While pondering her major at Stonybrook University, Diane
took various theatre classes. Realizing her love for the craft,
she applied for a scholarship to a prestigious drama program at
Loughborough University in England. Diane was accepted overseas
and studied classical theatre, graduating with a joint B.A. from
the two universities. Upon returning to the states Diane began her
theatre career. She made her Broadway debut in the lead role of
Jackie in the original comedy “No Place Like Home.”
Diane’s free time was spent globe trotting to places like
Cambodia, Zimbabwe, New Zealand, Brazil, Vietnam, India, Tanzania,
Hong Kong, Egypt, Israel, Thailand, South Africa and all of continental
Europe.
After moving to Los Angeles, Farr was asked by an entertainment
lawyer if she had any desire to teach acting. The query led to an
unbelievable opportunity for Diane to teach at a maximum security
men’s prison in Los Angeles. Motivated to succeed at something
she thought she could feasibly fail at, she accepted the job. Since
then, Diane has completed two ten-week contracts teaching at the
prison and has begun a similar program with un-wed teenage mothers
in South Central Los Angeles. Farr is currently working on a documentary
about her prison experience.
Earlier this year Farr was engaged to be married. Just after her
engagement Farr sent 300 announcement cards to her closest friends
and family telling them all the big news. The bigger news was yet
to come when her fiancé called off the engagement six weeks
later. Farr was left with the incredibly hard job of telling everyone
that her plans were off and figured the only way to do it with some
grace and humor was by sending another announcement card. Her ‘Single’
card was such a gigantic hit she was asked to be on ‘Oprah’
and tell her ‘making lemonade out of lemons story. Diane and
her best friend soon started ‘Otherannouncements.com’
to help everyone over life’s little road bumps. Diane’s
humorous cards are currently moving into stores nationwide.
Farr’s first book, THE GIRL
CODE, was released on Valentine’s Day 2001. The book is
a comic look at single women in the twenty-first century. The book
is published by Little, Brown and Co. and has been sold to seven
countries, in four languages. Diane has written for Jane, Esquire,
Glamour and Self magazines; as well regular contributions for Cosmopolitan
and Soma.
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