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Debra Messing

Who is ??

Birth name : Debra Lynn Messing
Date of birth : 15 August 1968
Place of birth:  Brooklyn, New York, USA
Nickname:  Debra

Height: 5' 8" (1.73 m) 
Spouse: Daniel Zelman (3 September 2000 - present) 1 child

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Famous Quote

"I'm fascinated by diamonds. When I put diamonds on, my hands start to shake. I can't imagine it being more sweet. You just hope that you will get the opportunity to do what you love and pay your bills, and that is being a success as an actor. The accolades - this is otherworldly. I have never allowed myself the ability to dream this far."

Information

Here you can find almost everything about Debra Messing, Profile, Biography, Trivia, Filmography, Movies (you can purchase and buy), Photos Gallery, Magazines, Icons, Posters (if you want to see the posters all over your walls you can get them here) , Books, Famous Quotes, and a beautiful collection of Debra Messing Wallpapers for your computer desktops.
Photos Gallery

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Debra Messing Website
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Debra Messing Desktop Wallpapers at Snoron.com
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Debra Messing Detailed Biography
Contact Address Addresses and mail Info Autograph

Contact Address

Debra Messing
The Gersh Agency NY
41 Madison Avenue, 33rd Floor
New York, NY 10010
USA


Biography Actress Name Biography

 

Debra Lynn Messing (born August 15, 1968) is an Emmy- and SAG-winning American actress, known for portraying Grace Adler in Will & Grace and for appearing in a series of film roles. She starred as Molly Kagan in the 2007 television series The Starter Wife. A vivacious redhead with a knack for verbal and physical comedy, Debra Messing was a Emmy and Screen Actors Guild Award-winning actress who dominated the sitcom scene for eight years as lovelorn interior designer Grace Adler on “Will and Grace” (ABC). 

It was during this masterful run as the ditzy Adler that Messing received the ultimate compliment for any comedienne an oft-cited comparison to Lucille Ball. During and after the show’s run, Messing also found time to appear in the feature films “Hollywood Ending” (2002) and “The Wedding Date,” as well as the popular USA summer miniseries, “The Starter Wife” (2007) – a role which earned her another Emmy nomination.

Messing was born in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, the daughter of Jewish American parents Sandra (née Simons), who has worked as a professional singer, banker, travel and real estate agent, and Brian Messing, a sales executive for a jewelry manufacturer. When Messing was three, she moved with her parents and her older brother, Brett, to East Greenwich, a small town outside Providence, Rhode Island. Messing’s parents recognized her preoccupation with acting and singing when, as a child, she put on performances in their East Greenwich, RI home for family and visitors. 

The Messings encouraged their daughter to pursue a career in the arts, sending her to numerous performing arts camps during her adolescence. Following a high school tenure filled with numerous turns in musical and dramatic productions – with occasional moments of anti-Semitism thrown in, which the undaunted Messing used to strengthen her personality and resolve – she attended Brandeis University in Massachusetts. During her junior year, she also studied theater at the British European Studio Group, a prestigious program based in London. She graduated summa cum laude from Brandeis in 1990 with a Bachelor’s degree in Theater Arts, before being accepted into NYU’s exclusive Graduate Acting Program, which earned her a Master’s degree in Fine Arts.

During her high school years, she acted (and sang) in a number of high school productions, including the starring role in the musical "Annie" and "Fiddler On the Roof". Messing took lessons in dance, singing, and acting. In 1986, she was Rhode Island's Junior Miss and competed in Mobile, Alabama in the America's Junior Miss scholarship program. While her parents encouraged her dream of becoming an actress, they also urged her to complete a liberal arts education before deciding on acting as a career. Following their advice, she attended Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts. During her junior year, she studied theater at the prestigious London-based British European Studio Group program, an experience that fueled her desire to act.

In 1990, after graduating summa cum laude from Brandeis with a bachelor's degree in theater arts, Messing gained admission to the elite Graduate Acting Program (which accepts only about 15 new students annually) at New York University, where she earned a master's degree in fine arts after three years.

Messing gained her earliest notices in a workshop production of Tony Kushner’s “Angels in America: Perestroika” in 1993, later appearing in New York productions of plays by John Patrick Shanley and Paul Rudnick. That same year, she also played Dana Abandando, the cold-hearted, man-hungry sister of Gail O’Grady’s character in three episodes of “NYPD Blue” (ABC, 1993-2005). Her movie debut, as Keanu Reeves’ war bride in Alfonso Arau’s World War II fantasy, “A Walk in the Clouds,” came in 1995, as did her first big break – her network series debut in “Ned and Stacey” (Fox, 1995-97). While the series was not long for this world, it would hone her comic chops and make network execs sit up and take notice.

In 1993, Messing won praise for her acting in the pre-Broadway workshop production of Tony Kushner's much-lauded play Angels in America: Perestroika. Consequently, she appeared in several episodes of the television series NYPD Blue during 1994 and 1995.

In 1995, Messing made her film debut with a relatively small but important role in Alfonso Arau's A Walk in the Clouds playing the unfaithful wife of Keanu Reeves. This exposure led the Fox network to make her the co-star of the television sitcom, Ned and Stacey. The series lasted for two seasons, from 1995 to 1997. Messing appeared as Jerry Seinfeld's date in two episodes of the series Seinfeld: "The Wait Out" in 1996 and "The Yada Yada" in 1997. Messing turned down a starring role in another television sitcom to appear in Donald Margulies's two-character play Collected Stories, which opened at the Off-Broadway Manhattan Theater Club. She also co-starred in McHale's Navy in 1997.

As a liberal reporter who must pretend to be married to cantankerous conservative adman Thomas Haden Church, Messing earned solid reviews for her comic skills – and much admiration from everyone for holding her own against that powerhouse of snide, Haden Church. By the end of the series’ run in 1997, Messing was working regularly in film and on television. She had a two-episode turn – including the much-loved “The Yada Yada” episode – as a girlfriend of Jerry Seinfeld on “Seinfeld” (NBC, 1989-1998), and appeared as the female lead in the woeful big-screen adaptation of “McHale’s Navy” (1997) with Tom Arnold.

In 1998, Messing played a lead role as the bio-anthropologist Sloan Parker on ABC's dramatic science fiction television series Prey. During this time her agent approached her with the pilot script for the television show Will & Grace. Messing was inclined to take some time off, but the script intrigued her, and she auditioned for the role of Grace Adler, beating out Nicollette Sheridan, who later guest-starred on the show as a romantic rival of Grace's. Will & Grace became a ratings success, and Messing gained renown.

Messing turned down an opportunity for another network series in 1997, opting instead to appear in Donald Marguiles’ play “Collected Stories” in New York. Instead, she starred as a scientist who discovers a dangerous alternate form of human life in the TV movie “Prey;” its ratings were significant enough to warrant a series, which she also joined, but the show was pulled from the schedule after just 13 episodes. The following year, after netting a small role in Woody Allen’s film, “Celebrity” (1998), she was cast as Grace Adler, a successful, straight Jewish woman whose best friend was gay man, Will Truman (Eric McCormack) on “Will and Grace.”

With the initially controversial show beginning its long but steady ascent from cult hit and favorite among gay viewers to network powerhouse series, Messing proved she was no fluke in the laugh-getting department – even in a series which boasted two of the most hysterically outlandish supporting stars in Sean Hayes’ flamboyant Jack McFarland and Megan Mullally’s pill-popping Karen Walker. Messing’s convoluted onscreen romances with guest stars Woody Harrelson, Edward Burns and Harry Connick, Jr. – whom Grace would marry in 2002 – as well as her hopelessly co-dependant relationship with her “main gay” Will, endeared her to the show’s heterosexual female audience contingent. She also encouraged the writers to utilize Grace’s Jewish heritage for storylines; even to overturn Jewish stereotypes for laughs. No hypocrite, Messing was also an avid supporter of gay causes throughout the series’ run and beyond.

Messing underwent some considerable high points in her life and career during her show’s network run. She married her graduate school sweetheart, actor-writer Daniel Zelman, in 2000. She would also give birth to their son, Roman, in 2004 – a pregnancy which led to some memorably surreal moments on the series, as the increasing size of Messing’s belly was never quite addressed or explained; often blatantly. She also netted a staggering amount of nominations, including six Golden Globe nods, five Emmy nominations, and six Screen Actors Guild noms; taking home trophies for the latter two in 2003 and 2001, respectively.

In 2002, she was named one of the "50 Most Beautiful People in the World" by People Magazine. TV Guide picked her as its "Best Dressed Woman" in 2003. Messing was cast by director Woody Allen in a small role in his 1998 film Hollywood Ending. Her film roles since include a happily married but ill-fated wife in the supernatural thriller The Mothman Prophecies (2002) and a supporting role in Along Came Polly (2004). Most importantly, the success of the show allowed Messing to branch out and work in other projects in film and on television – though the roles rarely made good use of her talents. 

She was underutilized as the prostitute Mary Magdalene in the 1999 TV production of “Jesus” (1999), and had little to do as Richard Gere’s ill-fated wife in “The Mothman Prophecies” (2002) or as Ben Stiller’s unfaithful new bride in “Along Came Polly” (2004). She had more exposure as Woody Allen’s scatterbrained live-in love in his glum comedy “Hollywood Ending” (2004), and lent her voice to an animated cat and love interest to “Garfield” (2005). Messing’s first top billing in a feature came the following year with “The Wedding Date” (2005), a cute but largely joyless comedy about a young woman who hires a male escort to be her date at her sister’s wedding. Messing handled the romance and the laughs with typical skill, but the picture itself gave her little to work with.

The Wedding Date (2005) was Messing's first leading role in a high-profile film. It received mixed reviews but performed fairly well at the box office. Messing was featured as a judge on the season finale of the second season of Bravo's reality show, Project Runway. She also starred in the television mini-series The Starter Wife, which was nominated for 10 Emmy awards including one for Messing for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or Movie.

As “Will and Grace” drew to a close, Messing continued to dabble in side projects, appearing as a celebrity judge on the second season finale of “Project Runway” (Bravo, 2005- ) in 2006 and lent her voice to the park ranger who shelters a pampered bear (Martin Lawrence) in the likable animated feature, “Open Season” (2007). That same year, she turned up in Curtis Hanson’s much-delayed poker drama “Lucky You” (2007), before scoring her biggest post-“Grace” hit to date in “The Starter Wife” (2007), based on the novel by Gigi Levangie Grazer. As Molly Kagan, a 41-year-old wife and mother who suddenly finds herself single and alone after her film executive husband leaves her for a younger woman, Messing provided the blend of humor and pathos that earned her a devoted fan base during the “Grace” years, bringing her another Emmy nomination for Outstanding Lead Performer.

In October 2007, it was announced that Messing would be reprising the role of Molly Kagan when The Starter Wife was renewed as a regular series, which will consist of 10 episodes for the second season by the USA Network cable channel. Messing met her husband, Daniel Zelman (an actor and screenwriter), on their first day as graduate students at NYU in 1990. The two were married on September 3, 2000, and live in New York City. On April 7, 2004, Messing gave birth to their son, Roman Walker Zelman.

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