Background
Clarke was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Clarke was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
He was the most famous "saloon comic" in Boston during the 1980s, the heyday of the Boston comedy scene. In 1980, Clarke wrote and starred in a local television show Lenny Clarke"s Late Show featuring Wright and Leary, in collaboration with Boston comedy writer Martin Olson. Clarke and Olson were roommates, and their apartment, known by comedians as "The Barracks", was a notorious "crash pad" for comics visiting Boston, and the subject of a documentary film as Clarke and Leary explain in When Standup Stood Out.
Since his early days in Boston, Clarke starred in his own short-lived network sitcom Lenny (1990), and in such television shows as Contest Searchlight, The Job, The John Larroquette Show and lieutenant"s All Relative and movies like Monument Avenue., Fever Pitch and Southie.
From 2004 to 2011, Clarke appeared in the recurring role of Uncle Teddy on the Forex comedy-drama Rescue Maine.
In 2006, Clarke and Leary appeared on television during a Red Sox telecast and, upon realizing that Red Sox 1st baseman Kevin Youkilis is Jewish, delivered a criticism of Mel Gibson"s anti-semitic comments. The show was cancelled after six episodes due to low ratings on May 16, 2007.
Clark is also an occasional guest on the WEEI radio shows in Boston. lieutenant was on this show that he announced he would be a regular on the 2009 Fox Sitcom Brothers as the racist neighbor who is married to a black woman.
He wound up appearing in three episodes before the series was cancelled.
In the 2011-2012 television season, he landed a role as the main character"s father on the National Broadcasting Company mid-season replacement sitcom Are You There, Chelsea?. On the evening of January 19, 2010, Clarke appeared on stage at the victory speech of Republican Senator elect from Massachusetts, Scott Brown, who was elected to the United States. Senate seat formerly held by Edward Kennedy. He had appeared on Entertainment and Sports Programming Network"s: 30 for 30 - 4 Days in October.
Alongside Entertainment and Sports Programming Network sports and popular culture columnist Bill Simmons as a narrator giving insight on the 2004 ALCS comeback by the Red Sox against the New York Yankees.