Jason Segel

Jason Segel (b. 1980) is an actor and writer, known for his work on television in the series Freaks and Geeks and How I Met Your Mother, and the films Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Knocked Up, and I Love You, Man.

In Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Segel performed puppet characters created by Jim Henson's Creature Shop.

Segel wrote the script for The Muppets, a new Muppet movie, with Forgetting Sarah Marshall director and co-writer Nick Stoller. In June 2008, Segel said: "I actually just turned in my first draft of the Muppets and I'm really excited about it. I think we're bringing them back. Hopefully it will fall right in the pantheon of The Great Muppet Caper, Muppets Take Manhattan, Muppet Movie, you know, we're trying to make one of those."

In Rolling Stone’s Top 10 list of "The Best in TV, the Web, Books and Beyond" from June 2008, Segel's role in "reviving the Muppets" was voted number one on the list:

""To me, Kermit was the original Tom Hanks — the Everyman," says Jason Segel, so awesome (and so full-frontal) in this spring's Forgetting Sarah Marshall. "He really shaped what I wanted to be as an actor." Man, we're feeling you — and we think it's brilliant that the Jim Henson Company tapped Segel to revive Muppet mania. "We are trying to bring the franchise back to the perfect tone they had established in the early Eighties," Segel tells us. "No more Muppets Underwater.... This movie is about the Muppets putting on a show to help each other out. Simple and heartfelt... I also expect really cool cameos." How are his actors responding? "Both Animal and Gonzo have been very easy... It's Camilla the Chicken who is a royal pain in the rump.""

In a March 2009 interview promoting I Love You, Man, Segel was asked about the status of the Muppet movie. He said, "[Co-writer Nick Stoller and I] have written four or five drafts; now we're just waiting patiently on Disney to see what they want to do. It's such a big commitment for them because it's relaunching the franchise, so it's a bit slower going than a regular movie because there are decisions about rights and toys and timing they need to make."