Michael McKean
Birth Name: Michael John McKean
Place of Birth: New York City, New York, U.S.
Date of Birth: October 17, 1947
Ethnicity: English, Scottish, Irish, some German and Dutch
Michael McKean is an American actor, comedian, writer, composer, and musician. He is known for his roles in This Is Spinal Tap, A Mighty Wind, Better Call Saul, Clue (1985), and Coneheads, and on Saturday Night Live.
Michael is the son of Ruth, a librarian, and Gilbert S. McKean, who co-founded Decca Records. Michael is married to actress, dancer, and musician Annette O’Toole. He has two children with his former wife Susan Russell.
Michael’s paternal grandfather was Henry Clunn “H.C.” McKean (the son of John Gilbert McKean and Mary Elizabeth Coulter). Henry was born in Arkansas. John was the son of Joseph William McKean and Lucy Davis Gray Kearney. Mary Elizabeth was the daughter of James Madison Coulter and Brunetta Wilkerson Burton.
Michael’s paternal grandmother was Erin Ruth Scaife (the daughter of William Isaiah Scaife and Blondel Elizabeth Griffin). Erin was born in Louisiana. William was the son of Charner Poole Scaife and Sarah Ann Hollingsworth. Blondel was the daughter of Charles Henry Griffin and Alice Adosta Otts.
Michael’s maternal grandfather was Chester Graham Stewart (the son of William Green Stewart and Ida Nora Killen). Chester was born in Louisiana. William, a prominent farmer, was the son of Dougald Stewart and Mary Elizabeth Culbertson. Ida was the daughter of John Sidney Killen, a prominent farmer and cattleman, and of Sarah Ann Lou Monzingo.
Michael’s maternal grandmother was Fannie Bell (the daughter of Lorenzo James Bell and Fannie M. Laurence). Michael’s grandmother Fannie was born in Louisiana. Lorenzo was the son of James Bell and Theresa Doyle, who was Irish. Michael’s great-grandmother Fannie was the daughter of William McClendon Laurence and Sarah M. Culbertson.
Sources: Genealogy of Michael McKean – http://www.geni.com
Michael’s father on the 1920 U.S. Census – https://www.familysearch.org
Michael’s maternal grandmother, Fannie Bell, on the 1900 U.S. Census – https://www.familysearch.org
I spotted another Mozingo/Monzingo descendant.
This sounds extremely West African and should have made rang a bell when you added him.
https://www.familysearch.org/tree/pedigree/landscape/MCFR-Y2C
His 10th great-grandfather? Why, this man is positively African, I say.
It’s a trivia. Or maybe not. He has probably other non-White ancestors down the line (as parts of Melungeon ethnic group), but with the Anglicized surname it sometimes may be blurry. Mozingo is a huge red flag. Nothing more African than that.
I often read people with Mozingo surname believed their odd surname was “Italian” (?) (and either French Huguenot or Portuguese in the past).
American ignorance at its peak.