LOS ANGELES – Success hasn't gone to Colton Dunn's head — or his taste buds.
The 39-year-old actor, who stars as wheelchair-bound sarcasm specialist Garrett McNeill on NBC's "Superstore," makes it a point to always pop by Leeann Chin whenever he's back home in St. Paul.
"I've been to China and had delicious Chinese food," he said while providing a tour of his Target-inspired set. "But I still come back and want some of those oyster wings."
Dunn picked up more than culinary cravings during his Minnesota childhood. He is the latest of a club of thriving actors in Hollywood who cut their teeth on the Twin Cities comedy improv scene, joining the likes of Rich Sommer ("Mad Men"), Cedric Yarbrough ("Speechless"), Melissa Peterman ("Baby Daddy") and stand-up Nick Swardson, a certified member of Adam Sandler's Rat Pack.
In fact, it was Dunn who inspired Swardson to join Minneapolis' student branch of ComedySportz, a national organization in which teams compete for laughs, when they were classmates at St. Paul Central High School.
"Colton essentially got me into comedy," said Swardson, whose April 28 show at Mystic Lake Casino Hotel has already sold out. "Watching him do improv really inspired me. Pretty soon, we were doing comedy together nonstop. But he was the catalyst."
Dunn, who was born in Normal, Ill., but moved to St. Paul as a toddler, grew up dreaming of being an astronaut, maybe even an NBA player. But his desire to be the class clown trumped other ambitions.
"I remember him playing basketball when he was 5 or 6 years old, skipping back and forth across the court, trying to make people laugh instead of playing aggressively," said his mother, Kari Dunn Buron, a world-renowned specialist on autism education. "I never felt he had that same competitive drive other kids had. Until comedy."