As a result, she founded Hands of Hope, a student-led physical therapy clinic for the homeless, and Journey Home, a non-profit organization. She was moved by the plight of the homeless while working in Philadelphia. His birth name is Thomas Francis Wilson Jr.An alumna of Brown University, Diane Cornman-Levy earned a graduate degree in physical therapy from Northwestern University.
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As of April 2020, his channel has over 23,000 subscribers. Wilson currently maintains a YouTube channel, where he regularly vlogs. The podcast features Tom sharing stories of his career, as well as informal chats with show business friends including Samm Levine, Blake Clark, Steve Oedekerk, "Weird Al" Yankovic, and more. He has hosted a podcast, Big Pop Fun, on the Nerdist Network starting in November 2011.
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In 2005 he played Coach Phelps in the TV series Zoey 101. He has voiced many villainous characters that are physically strong and menacing, such as Flats the Flounder in the third season episode The Bully, and The Tattletale Strangler in SpongeBob Meets the Strangler, and the non-villainous character Reg the Club Bouncer in No Weenies Allowed. Wilson has done voice-over work for the Nickelodeon TV show SpongeBob SquarePants. Wilson was briefly reunited with his Back to the Future co-star Christopher Lloyd in the 1994 film Camp Nowhere. Coach Fredricks dated Bill Haverchuck's mother. Wilson played McKinley High School's Coach Ben Fredricks in the 1999–2000 NBC comedy-drama Freaks and Geeks. He also guest starred in an episode of Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman in 1997. Wilson also starred in the sequels Wing Commander IV: The Price of Freedom (1995) and Wing Commander: Prophecy (1997) and contributed his voice to the animated series Wing Commander Academy (1996) in the same role. The character played by Wilson was Major Todd "Maniac" Marshall, a fellow starfighter pilot of Hamill's character. It was the third chapter in the Wing Commander series, but the first to feature live action and was extremely popular at the time. He later went to co-star with Mark Hamill in Wing Commander III: Heart of the Tiger, a video game. In 1992, he voiced gangster Tony Zucco in Batman: The Animated Series and police detective Matt Bluestone in the animated series Gargoyles. When the game was ported to the PlayStation 4, Xbox 360 and Xbox One in 2015 in commemoration of the original film's 30th anniversary, Wilson returned to provide Biff's voice in these newer versions.
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Wilson did not reprise his role as Biff in the initial versions of Telltale's Back to the Future: The Game released in 2011, being replaced by Kid Beyond. He reprised his role as Biff and voiced various Tannen relatives in the animated series. In every Back to the Future film, his character ends up in a pile of manure (in reality, a heap of decayed sphagnum and other mulches) after trying to kill or hurt Michael J. He returned in the sequels Back to the Future Part II and Part III to not only reprise his role as Biff, but to also play Biff's grandson Griff Tannen and great-grandfather Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen. His breakthrough role was the bully Biff Tannen in the 1985 film Back to the Future. Wilson had a small role in the second season of NBC's Knight Rider in an episode titled "A Knight In Shining Armor". He shared an apartment with fellow aspiring comedians Andrew Dice Clay and Yakov Smirnoff, and later joked that he "taught them both about America." In the early 1980s, Wilson moved to Los Angeles to pursue his career. While in New York, he got his first "real" stage experience as a comedian.
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Wilson attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City. He studied international politics at Arizona State University. While attending Radnor High School, he was involved in dramatic arts, was president of the debate team, where his partner was future New York Times columnist David Brooks, played tuba in the high school band, and was drum major of his marching band. Wilson was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and raised in nearby Wayne, Pennsylvania.