Bob D'Amico/Touchstone Television/Courtesy Everett Collection
Life wasn't always easy for Tim "The Toolman" Taylor — and that goes for the guy who played him, too.
Home ImprovementstarTim Allen, who portrayed the character for all of the sitcom's eight seasons, from 1991 to 1999, says he felt somewhat clueless guiding his TV sonsJonathan Taylor Thomas(Randy), Zachery Ty Bryan (Brad), and Taran Noah Smith (Mark).
"When it was easy to be a TV parent, it's easy. When it's difficult to be a TV parent, you really are of no value," the former stand-up comedian toldUs Weeklyin an interview published Wednesday. "[With the]Home Improvementkids, it was so long ago, and I was brand new, and it was very difficult for me to be anywhere near a mentor. It wasn't until later that I became more of a mentor. But they all had great parents."
Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.
Asked about how his role on sets has evolved, while making not onlyHome ImprovementandLast Man Standingbut also his new show,Shifting Gears, which is in its second season, Allen acknowledged that it didn't come naturally.
"It was new to me, and it took a while for me to be that [father figure]," he said. "I felt like more of a funny, mischievous older brother for quite a while — especially to the boys onHome Improvement."
Home Improvementis one of his best-known projects. The story of a TV host — of a show calledTool Time— also starred Patricia Richardson (as his wife Jill), Richard Karn (as TV sidekick Al), and Earl Hindman (as neighbor Wilson).
He also famously played a dad in many more projects, including his 1994 movieThe Santa Clause— about a man who discovers that he's mysteriously becoming the actual St. Nick — and its sequels.
In real life, Allen is the father of two daughters: Katherine Allen, 36. Her mother is Allen's ex-wife Laura Deibel, whom he divorced in 2003. His other child, Elizabeth Allen-Dick, whose mom is his current wife Jane Hajduk, is 16.
"I don't know what it's like to have sons," Allen said. "I like being a father to girls."
In his current show, Allen plays Matt Parker, a stubborn man whose estranged daughter (Riley Parker) suddenly moves in.
Shifting Gearsairs Wednesdays at 8 p.m. on ABC.
Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly