Career Summary
| | | Movies | Domestic Box Office | International Box Office | Worldwide Box Office |
| As an Actor | Supporting | 14 | $1,172,965,769 | $1,843,994,308 | $3,016,960,077 |
| Lead Ensemble Member | 3 | $227,699,042 | $307,100,000 | $534,799,042 |
| (Unclassified) | 10 | $304,323,928 | $317,708,979 | $622,032,907 |
Career Trend
This graph shows Wayne Knight’s score on our annual analysis of leading stars at the box office. The Star Score represents points assigned to each of the leading stars of the top 100 movies (based on box office) in the current year and two preceding years. For appearing in the number one movie in a year a star gets 100 points, the number two movie 99 points and so on..
Latest Ranking on Selected Box Office Record Lists
| Record | Rank | Amount |
| Top 100 Stars in Leading Roles at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 901-1,000) |
973 |
$227,699,042 |
| Top Stars at the Domestic Box Office (Rank 501-600) |
523 |
$1,704,988,739 |
| Top 100 Stars in Leading Roles at the International Box Office (Rank 901-1,000) |
984 |
$307,100,000 |
| Top Stars at the International Box Office (Rank 401-500) |
473 |
$2,468,803,287 |
| Top 100 Stars in Leading Roles at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 901-1,000) |
968 |
$534,799,042 |
| Top Stars at the Worldwide Box Office (Rank 401-500) |
473 |
$4,173,792,026 |
See the Acting Credits tab for all Acting Box Office Records and the Technical Credits tab for all Technical Box Office Records.
August 10th, 2014
By the time Tarzan came out, Disney's animation studio was off its recent peak and had been overtaken by Pixar as the king of animated films. Tarzan did manage to open in first place, but it was the most expensive animated film of all time when it came out, while its box office numbers were only good in comparison. Now that the film is coming out on Blu-ray, is it worth picking up?
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April 1st, 2013
March is over and while it is a little too soon to tell where a few films will end their box office runs, it is clear Oz The Great and Powerful won the month. Some films beat expectations to become midlevel hits, like The Call, but it wasn't a great month at the box office, especially compared to last year. This month, there are only seven wide releases spread over four weeks. Only one of those films, Oblivion, has a shot at being anything more than a midlevel hit. None of the other six releases look like they will come close to $100 million, but none of them look like obvious bombs either. (Although I do have my worries when it comes to Scary Movie 5.) Last April was even weaker with no film earning $100 million, although Think Like a Man did come relatively close. We might actually see growth on the year-over-year comparison. We'd better, because 2013 is behind 2012's pace by a huge margin at the moment and things will get worse when May arrives.
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