Frank Welker Net Worth

How much is Frank Welker worth?

Net Worth: $15 Million
Date of Birth: Mar 12, 1946 (74 years old)
Gender: Male
Height: 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Profession: Voice Actor, Actor
Nationality: United States of America
Last Updated: 2020
Frank Welker Net Worth:
$15 Million

Frank Welker Net Worth: Frank Welker is an American voice actor and former stand-up comedian who has a net worth of $15 million dollars. Born March 12, 1946 in Denver, Colorado, Frank Welker’s early career was spent as a stand-up comedian, appearing on such shows as The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast of George Burns and releasing a comedy album in 1988. As a voice actor, he is widely known as the voice of Fred Jones of the Scooby Doo franchise (later becoming the voice of Scooby Doo); Ray Stantz and Slimer from The Real Ghostbusters; Nibbler from Futurama; Wild Bill, Torch and many other characters from G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero; Dr. Claw from Inspector Gadget (the parrot that got eaten by the shark in the Deep Blue Sea; the voice of Garfield the Cat. His first voice role came in 1969 as Fred Jones in the Hanna-Barbera series Scooby Doo, Where Are You! In the ’80s Welker was commission to voice many recurring parts within the Transformers franchise. His live-action, on-camera appearances include television shows Love American Style, The Partridge Family and The Don Knotts Show as well as Laugh In, The Tonight Show, Merv Griffin and The Smothers Brothers Show. His list of voice credits have now crested 100 and counting.

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Inspirational Quotes by Frank Welker

Normally I play dads, good guys, and little animals.

Frank Welker

I was voted by my high school senior class as most likely to recede.

Frank Welker

I like looking at the characters. Seeing them always brings up some voice or attitude. I am much more visual, and that works so much better than having someone tell me what the character is all about.

Frank Welker

I've been doing voices as long as I can remember. When I was little I could pick up on sounds, and then I discovered you could distort what you hear and make people laugh or disrupt a class.

Frank Welker

I have worked alone and with a cast and enjoy the process both ways. There is more back-and-forth with a full cast, and you can feed off the other actors' performance.

Frank Welker