Tom Purcell grew up in St. Joseph, Michigan, just north of South Bend, Indiana, and graduated from St. Joseph High School.[1] While attending St. Josephs', he started writing comedy at 15 years old, having his own comedy column and serving as features editor for his high school comedy newspaper called The Wind Up.[1]
In 1985, Purcell graduated with a Bachelor of Arts from Loyola University in Chicago.[2]
After college, Purcell took a job at Loyola’s law library to pay the bills while working on his comedy routine and attending improvisation classes at The Second City in Chicago.[2]
In the summer of 1987, Purcell wrote and performed with the resident theatre company New Age Vaudeville.[3]
Purcell currently serves as an executive producer of The Late Show, where he oversees the show’s writers and helps write and polish Colbert’s material.[4][2] Purcell has said that he often relies on his Catholic, Jesuit education from Loyola University while working for Colbert, who is known for using Catholic humor.[4][2]
As of 2021, he is the winner of 7 Primetime Emmy awards.[6]
Awards
2013 Emmy, Nominee, Writing for a variety series (Colbert Report)[7]
2014 Emmy, Winner, Writing for a variety series (Colbert Report)[8]
^Archived. "Tom Purcell". IMDb. Amazon. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
^"2013 Emmy Award Winners and Nominees". The New York Times. 2013-09-22. Retrieved 2015-10-26. WRITING, VARIETY SERIES 'The Colbert Report' (Comedy Central) ... Moreschi; Writers: ... Tom Purcell, [normal font indicate nominee]
^"Emmys 2014: The Nominees and Winners". The New York Times. 2014-07-10. Retrieved 2015-10-26. WRITING, VARIETY SERIES 'The Colbert Report' (Comedy Central) ... Writers: ... Tom Purcell... [Bold indicates 'winner']
Michael Brumm, Nate Charny, Aaron Cohen, Stephen Colbert, Richard Dahm, Paul Dinello, Eric Drysdale, Rob Dubbin, Glenn Eichler, Gabe Gronli, Barry Julien, Jay Katsir, Sam Kim, Matthew Lappin, Frank Lesser, Opus Moreschi, Tom Purcell, Meredith Scardino, and Max Werner (2014)