Bebe Neuwirth Movies
A versatile actress who has displayed a talent for both comedy and drama,
Bebe Neuwirth is also a gifted dancer and vocalist who has won acclaim for her work on the musical stage, though she's still best known to television viewers as Lilith Sternin, Frazier Crane's tightly wound girlfriend (and later wife) on the popular comedy
Cheers. Born
Beatrice Neuwirth on New Year's Eve, 1958, she was raised in Princeton, NJ, where her father, Lee Neuwirth, was a mathematician and her mother, Sydney Anne Neuwirth, was an artist.
Bebe began taking dance lessons at the age of five, and, while a student at Princeton High School, she began appearing in local ballet productions and community theater productions. After high school,
Neuwirth studied dance at New York's prestigious Juilliard School, and in 1980 she made her professional debut as Shelia, a once-famous dancer looking to make a comeback, in a touring production of the long-running musical A Chorus Line. In 1982,
Neuwirth hit Broadway in two different shows, Dancin', directed and choreographed by
Bob Fosse, and Little Me. In 1986,
Neuwirth won the starring role in another
Fosse musical, a revival of Sweet Charity, which later earned her a Tony award and cemented her reputation on Broadway. That year also marked
Neuwirth's television debut (not counting a brief appearance as a member of the Whitney Dance Theater on the daytime drama The Edge of Night in 1981) with her first appearance as Lilith Sternin on
Cheers; Lilith soon became a regular fixture on
Cheers and
Neuwirth won two Emmy awards for her work until Lilith was written out of the show (at
Neuwirth's request) in 1992, to allow
Neuwirth to pursue film and stage work. Lilith, however, occasionally made return visits to
Cheers, and later on
Kelsey Grammer's spin-off series,
Frasier.
Neuwirth made her feature-film debut in 1989 with a small role as a guidance counselor in
Say Anything..., and while a steady stream of supporting roles followed in such films as
Bugsy,
Green Card, and
Jumanji, she had a hard time finding screen roles which suited her edgy charm. She continued to have better luck on-stage, and in 1997 her performance in the Broadway revival of Chicago won her the Tony and Drama Desk awards. After scoring meatier roles in the films
Summer of Sam and
Liberty Heights,
Neuwirth returned to episodic television in the well-reviewed but short-lived drama series
Deadline, in which she worked alongside
Oliver Platt,
Lili Taylor, and
Tom Conti. In 2002,
Neuwirth finally scored a film role that truly suited her talents as Diane, a sexy fourtysomething woman who seduces her best friend's teenage son in the independent comedy
Tadpole. ~ All Movie Guide