Daniel Michael DeVito Jr. was born on November 17, 1944, in Neptune Township, New Jersey, the son of Daniel DeVito Sr. and Julia DeVito. He grew up in Asbury Park, New Jersey, and attended Oratory Preparatory School in Summit. After high school, he pursued an interest in hairdressing before his sister, a cosmetician, introduced him to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City, where he enrolled in 1966. At the Academy, he worked as a caretaker while studying, and his small physical stature โ he is 4'10" (147 cm) โ was initially presented as a liability in an industry structured around conventional physical appearance. He refused to accept this framing, and his training at the Academy gave him the technical foundation for a career that has demonstrated, across 50 years, that unconventional physical presence can be a dramatic and comedic asset rather than a limitation.
DeVito's breakthrough came through his friendship with Michael Douglas, who connected him with director Milos Forman for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975), where DeVito appeared as a supporting player and observed the making of a film that would win five Academy Awards. His powerful television role was Louie De Palma, the acerbic, petty, brilliantly comic dispatcher in the sitcom Taxi (1978-1983), which won him an Emmy Award and a Golden Globe and established him as one of the sharpest comedic performers in American television. His film career alongside Michael Douglas โ Romancing the Stone (1984), The Jewel of the Nile (1985) โ confirmed his box office viability, and he appeared in Ruthless People (1986), Throw Momma from the Train (1987, which he also directed), Twins (1988, opposite Arnold Schwarzenegger in a deliberate height-joke casting), and Batman Returns (1992, as the Penguin) across a decade of remarkable productivity.
DeVito's role as Frank Reynolds in It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia โ which he joined in season 2 in 2006 and has continued in through 18 seasons โ has introduced him to a younger generation as a performer of extraordinary dark comedic instinct. Frank Reynolds is a genuinely awful human being โ greedy, amoral, physically grotesque in his excesses โ and DeVito plays him with a commitment that makes him both repellent and deeply funny, demonstrating the comic truth that fully committed villainy is more entertaining than half-measures. The role also demonstrates his continued creative engagement at an age when many performers have accepted diminishing returns. He directed Matilda (1996) and The War of the Roses (1989), demonstrating a directorial perspective that is consistently darker and stranger than his on-screen persona suggests.
Danny DeVito founded Jersey Films in 1992 with his wife Rhea Perlman, producing films including Pulp Fiction (1994), Get Shorty (1995), Erin Brockovich (2000), and Man on the Moon (1999). This production work placed him at the center of some of the most significant films of the 1990s and 2000s, demonstrating a creative intelligence that operates well beyond the on-screen persona of the short, loud, comically aggressive character he is most associated with. He and Perlman separated in 2012 but have maintained a close relationship and reunited periodically. He is widely described by colleagues as one of the most generous, funny, and professionally committed people in the industry โ the actor who brings the same complete commitment to a one-line role as to a leading one.