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  1. Lou DiMaggio
    American actor and writer

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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lou_DiMaggioLou DiMaggio - Wikipedia

    Lou DiMaggio is an American actor, writer, and former stand-up comedian. Beginning his career as a performer at Catch a Rising Star in New York City , he later relocated to Los Angeles , where he has worked as a writer.

  2. m.imdb.com › name › nm0227155Lou DiMaggio - IMDb

    Lou DiMaggio is an Actor, Stand-up Comedian and Writer/Producer. He began his career as a stand-up comic in New York. He has performed in nightclubs, television, film and commercials and is best known for his work on HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm."

  3. Lou "DiMaggio" Galina, portrayed by Joseph Castellana, is a minor character in The Sopranos. He is the leader of a group of old mob hitmen from Providence, Rhode Island, working alongside Frank Crisci and Alfred.

  4. Lou DiMaggio is an Actor, Stand-up Comedian and Writer/Producer. He began his career as a stand-up comic in New York. He has performed in nightclubs, television, film and commercials and is best known for his work on HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm."

  5. Mar 9, 2018 · Where Have You Gone, Lou DiMaggio?: Directed by Brad Kuhlman. With Larry David, Jeff Garlin, Joy Behar, Richard Belzer. From 1985 to1989 Lou DiMaggio, no relation to baseball legend Joe DiMaggio, was a regular at the iconic "Catch a Rising Star" comedy club in New York City.

  6. Lou DiMaggio is an American actor, writer, and former stand-up comedian. Beginning his career as a performer at Catch a Rising Star in New York City, he later.

  7. Mar 7, 2018 · After decades away, comedian Lou DiMaggio tries to return to stand-up comedy in Brad Kuhlman’s skimpy, nostalgic documentary.

  8. After moving to Los Angeles in 1989 to pursue acting, Lou, in a mysterious act of career self-sabotage, stopped doing stand up comedy forever. But why? Today Lou is an Emmy winning writer for television.

  9. Mar 8, 2018 · A former stand-up comic’s attempt to pick up where he left off two decades earlier is engagingly chronicled in Brad Kuhlman’s terrific documentary, “Where Have You Gone, Lou DiMaggio?”

  10. In the 1920s, Lou Gehrig, the Yankees’ "Iron Horse," played a quiet second fiddle to Babe Ruth. Gehrig took center stage after Ruth’s retirement, but then Joe DiMaggio arrived.

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