
Photo: Frank Sun / CC BY-SA 4.0 (source: Wikimedia Commons)
My Take
Christine Taylor is the kind of performer comedy quietly depends on. In Zoolander and Dodgeball she played the sane center of gravity around which the chaos spun, and that straight-woman work is far harder than it looks: timing without punchlines, reactions that make everyone else funnier. Her Marcia in The Brady Bunch Movie remains a small masterpiece of affectionate parody. From Allentown, Pennsylvania to cult-classic ubiquity, she built a career on reliability rather than spectacle. I wish the industry handed out trophies for impeccable supporting work, because by my count she would already have a full shelf.
Overview
Christine Joan Taylor (born July 30, 1971) is an American actress. She has played Marcia Brady in The Brady Bunch Movie (1995) and A Very Brady Sequel (1996), and appeared in The Craft (1996), The Wedding Singer (1998), Zoolander (2001), and Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004). In television, she has appeared in roles in Hey Dude, Arrested Development, and Search Party.
Summary adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.
1. Profile
- Name (English)
- Christine Taylor
- Name (Japanese)
- クリスティン・テイラー
- Reading
- くりすてぃん・ていらー
- Born
- July 30, 1971 (age 54)
- Zodiac / Chinese zodiac
- Leo / Boar
- Origin
- Allentown, Pennsylvania, United States
- Blood type
- Private
- Height
- Private
- Agency
- Private
- Occupation
- television actor / film actor / actor
2. Background
- Elementary school
- Private
- Junior high
- Private
- High school
- Allentown Central Catholic High School
- University
- Private
3. Relationships
- Spouse
- Private
- Children
- Private
- Parents
- Private
- Siblings
- Private
4. Personality
Motto
Private
6. Links
Television actor — see all → · Film actor — see all → · More people from United States →
7. About this entry
Tags
- Last updated
- 2026-06-11
Facts are limited to publicly available information up to 2024; non-public items are marked "Private / Unknown". English text is machine-assisted (facts translated by Sonnet, "My Take" written by Opus 4.8). The Japanese page is the source of record.