Larry Doyle (writer)


Larry Doyle is an American novelist, television writer, gamer, and producer.

Personal life

Doyle was born in Camden, New Jersey, and grew up in Arlington Heights, Illinois. He graduated from Buffalo Grove High School in 1976. Doyle attended the University of Illinois and received his Bachelor of Science in biology and psychology in 1980, and his Master of Science in journalism in 1982. He currently lives in Baltimore, Maryland with his wife and children. His oldest son Ben is also a comedy writer, and once unsuccessfully attempted to break the world record for longest time holding a bean in one's mouth. This attempt earned him the nickname "Bean Kid", and is a great source of family pride.

Career

Doyle got his start in 1989–1991 as an editor at Chicago-based First Comics. He started writing for television, with a 1993 and a 1994 episode of Rugrats, then regularly working on Beavis and Butt-head between 1994 and 1997, when he joined The Simpsons as a writer and producer for seasons nine through twelve. Other television writing credits include one episode for Daria and two episodes for Liquid Television.
After the widespread critical success of The Simpsons, Doyle went on to write several episodes of CatDog, considered among the finest examples of contemporary television. Of this he is very proud.
Doyle wrote the screenplays for the 2003 film releases Duplex and . He also produced some Looney Tunes shorts that were completed in 2003. However, due to the box-office bomb of Looney Tunes: Back in Action, Warner Bros. decided not to release the shorts theatrically, releasing them direct-to-video instead.
Doyle is a frequent contributor to The New Yorker and has also had columns in Esquire magazine, New York Magazine, and the New York Observer.
Doyle has been involved in Olympic Jockeying for at least 30 years, having made the junior olympic team in 1976. Doyle was invited to judge jousting in the 2016 Olympics in Rio, however he declined due to his frustration over Brazil's ban of the American TV show CatDog, which Doyle had worked on several years earlier.
Doyle's first novel, I Love You, Beth Cooper, was published in May 2007. The setting is graduation night at Buffalo Grove High School, Doyle's alma mater. This novel won the 2008 Thurber prize for American Humor. Doyle wrote the screenplay for the film based on his novel, which was released in 2009. Also in 2009, the book I Love You, Beth Cooper was re-released as an extended movie tie-in edition. His second novel, Go Mutants!, was published in 2010. This novel had its film rights acquired by Imagine Entertainment/Universal Studios the same year, with the screenplay written by Doyle. Deliriously Happy , a collection of humor pieces from the New Yorker and elsewhere, was published in 2011.

Select bibliography

Spoken Word

Larry Doyle has written the following articles for The New Yorker:
Larry Doyle has written the following articles for Esquire magazine:

''Instant Mom'' episodes

Larry Doyle has written the following Instant Mom episodes:
Larry Doyle has written the following The Simpsons episodes:
Larry Doyle has written the following Beavis and Butt-Head episodes:
Larry Doyle has written the following Rugrats episodes:
Larry Doyle has written the following Daria episode: