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Bebe Neuwirth

Beatrice "Bebe" Jane Neuwirth (/ˈbbi ˈnjwɜːrθ/ BEE-bee NEW-wurth; born December 31, 1958)[1] is an American actress, singer, and dancer. Known for her roles on stage and screen, she has received two Emmy Awards, two Tony Awards, and a Drama Desk Award.

Bebe Neuwirth

Beatrice Jane Neuwirth

(1958-12-31) December 31, 1958
  • Actress
  • singer
  • dancer

1980–present

  • Paul Dorman
    (m. 1984; div. 1991)
  • Chris Calkins
    (m. 2009)

Neuwirth made her Broadway debut in the musical A Chorus Line in 1980. She went on to receive two Tony Awards, the first for Best Featured Actress in a Musical playing Nickie in the revival of Sweet Charity (1986) and received her second for Best Actress in a Musical for Velma Kelly in the revival of Chicago (1996). She has also starred as Lola in the revival of Damn Yankees (1994) and Morticia Addams in The Addams Family (2010).


On television, her breakthrough role was as Dr. Lilith Sternin, Frasier Crane's wife, on both the sitcom Cheers (in a starring role), its spin-off Frasier (in a recurring guest role), and in the 2023 Frasier revival (in a guest role). The role won her two Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series. Neuwirth was cast as Bureau Chief/ADA Tracey Kibre in NBC's Law & Order: Trial by Jury which ran for 2005 to 2006. She starred as Nadine Tolliver on the CBS political drama Madam Secretary from 2014 to 2017. She also appeared in recurring roles on Blue Bloods (2013–2019), The Good Wife (2012–2014), The Good Fight (2018–2021), and Julia (2022–2023).


In film, she portrayed Nora Shepherd in the original Jumanji (1995) and Jumanji: The Next Level (2019). Other film roles include Say Anything... (1989), Green Card (1990), Bugsy (1991), Celebrity (1998), Summer of Sam (1999), and How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days (2003).

Early life[edit]

Neuwirth was born in Newark, New Jersey.[2][1][3] Her father, Lee Neuwirth, was a mathematician who taught at Princeton University and also designed an encryption device while working at the Institute for Defense Analyses.[3] Her mother, Sydney Anne Neuwirth, is a painter who also danced as an amateur for the Princeton Regional Ballet Company.[3] She has an older brother Peter, a mathematician and actuary who graduated from Harvard.[3] In her youth, Neuwirth rebelled against authority, being placed in custody for smoking marijuana when she was 13.[3]


Neuwirth started taking ballet lessons at the age of five, a year after viewing a production of The Nutcracker with her mother.[3] She desired to be a ballet dancer until her early teens, when she realized how restricted her technique was, as well as the standard of ballet education where she lived.[3] Upon viewing the musical Pippin in Manhattan at 13, she changed her future plans from becoming a ballerina to being a Broadway musical dancer.[3] After graduating from Princeton High School in 1976,[4] she attended the Juilliard School for dance and left after only a year, disliking the school for having a "stifling creative environment" and no Broadway-style dance training.[5] Immediately after leaving Juilliard in 1977, she took singing and jazz classes at a New York City-based YWCA,[5] one of them taught by Joan Morton Lucas, who appeared in the film Singin' in the Rain (1952) and the original Broadway production of Kiss Me Kate.[6] She performed with the Princeton Ballet Company in Peter and the Wolf, The Nutcracker, and Coppélia, also appearing in community theater musicals.

Personal life[edit]

In 1984, Neuwirth married Paul Dorman.[17] She met him in 1982 after she performed a revue at O'Neal's restaurant in New York, where he was bartending.[17] The two divorced in 1991.[17] In 2009, she married director, producer and writer Chris Calkins at The Players club in Manhattan, in a ceremony officiated by actor Peter Coyote.[18]


In a 2004 article in the newspaper J. The Jewish News of Northern California, she was reported as describing herself as Jewish – a "plain Jew" with "no training".[2] In a 2011 interview she said that she was an "atheist" who "believe[d] in unseen and unproved things" such as reincarnation.[6]


Neuwirth has supported and worked for several non-profit charity organizations.[19] Following two hip replacement surgeries,[20][21] and after hearing stories of other dancers facing hip problems, Neuwirth was moved to establish the Dancers’ Resource program at The Actors Fund, which caters to financial and physical needs unique to professional dancers.[19][6] Neuwirth currently serves as vice chair on the board of trustees for The Actors Fund.[22] She has also helped Seeds of Peace.[19]


As an animal lover,[19] she has contributed to the Chatham, New York-based horse rescue group Equine Advocates and the annual pet adoption event Broadway Barks.[23] Neuwirth is particularly fond of cats.[23] In the 1990s, she owned one, Frankie, that she named after architect and writer Frank Lloyd Wright.[17] As of August 2016, she had a black cat, Bobby, a long-haired calico cat, Tallulah, and a mixed Siamese cat, Billie.[23]


In her free time, she enjoys pottery, which she first did in high school.[19]

at the Internet Broadway Database

Bebe Neuwirth

at the Internet Off-Broadway Database

Bebe Neuwirth

at IMDb 

Bebe Neuwirth

Downstage Center interview at American Theatre Wing.org

Bebe Neuwirth