Born on 4 March 1961, Steven Weber dons the hat of an actor and is most prominent for his portrayal of the character, Brian Hackett, in the television show ¨Wings,¨ which aired on NBC from April 1990 to May 1997. These days, he can be found playing the recurring role of Mayor Douglas Hamilton in the series, ¨NCIS: New Orleans.¨ He has been acting since making his film debut in the 1984 film, ¨The Flamingo Kid.¨
So, just how rich is Steven Weber, as of 2017? Authoritative sources estimate Steven Weber´s net worth to be over $4 million, accumulated mostly by appearing in over 50 movies to date!
Steven Weber Net Worth $4 million
Born to Jewish parents, Fran, a nightclub singer, and, Stuart Weber, a nightclub manager, Steven Weber spent most of his childhood in Briarwood, Queens, New York City. He was surrounded by comedians as a kid, courtesy of his father´s links and it was heaven for him, meeting many of-“the nicest people, funny and tough.” Steven found himself in the spotlight very early in his life, as he was only in his third grade when he started appearing in TV commercials. While growing up, he attended Manhattan´s High School of Performing Arts, and for his college education, he enrolled at the State University of New York at Purchase.
Upon graduation, he joined the Mirror Repertory Company, and starred alongside Geraldine Page in numerous productions. However, early times as an actor were far from lucrative, so in order to put food on the table, Weber worked several menial jobs such as singing waiter, elevator operator, custodian etc.
However, he soon got the opportunity to make his film debut in the 1984 comedy ¨The Flamingo Kid.¨ A year later, he landed a meaty role in the series, ¨As the World Turns,¨ playing Julianne Moore´s boyfriend. In 1990, he was cast in the television show ¨Wings.¨ a performance that truly earned him global recognition. From there onwards, the roles flooded in and he went on to appear in numerous films and series, including ¨Single White Female,¨ ¨Nightmares & Dreamscapes,¨ and ¨Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip¨ etc. He was even bestowed with the best actor award from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films for his stellar performance in the 1997 miniseries, ¨The Shining.¨ In 2003, Weber wrote and produced the movie, ¨Clubland;¨ Alan Alda even earned an Emmy nomination for his portrayal of Weber´s father in that movie. Recently, between 2012 and 2017, Weber has done voice acting too, giving voice to several characters in the Disney XD animated series, ¨Ultimate Spider-Man.¨
Talking about Weber´s personal life, he was previously married to the actress, Finn Carter from 1985 to 1992. Then, a few years later in 1995, Weber found himself at the altar again, this time with Juliette Hohnen. Regrettably, their 17-year marriage came to an end in February 2013, after Juliette filed for divorce. On the bright side, their union did give the pair two sons, John Alexander Hohnen-Weber and Alfred James.
Wings, The Shining, Murder in the First, Happy Town, Single White Female, Ultimate Spider-Man, Dracula: Dead and Loving It, Stephen King's Desperation, Leaving Las Vegas
TV Shows
Wings, Ultimate Spider-Man, Happy Town, Murder in the First, Cursed, Masters of Horror, The Kennedys of Massachusetts, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, Once and Again, All Dogs Go to Heaven: The Series, Nightmares & Dreamscapes: From the Stories of Stephen King, The D.A., I Love the '90s: Part Deux, Z...
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It's easy to break things. Much, much easier, it seems, than building them.
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My experience tells me that any time you hear people laughing on a sitcom, it's the writers who happen to be closest to the microphones - not the audience.
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I've been a fan of the Marvel Universe since I was a little child.
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What's hard, it seems, is living up to the expectations. Democracy imposes upon those who would participate in society.
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The element which is conveniently missing from today's Republican Party is the human one. People's hopes and realities become numbers and words, devoid of personality and easy to erase.
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The right-wing just loves making a big entrance.
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The fact is, presidential politics has become a game of inches.
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From the moment America went full-on industrial, it seems like it's been a steady path towards people never having to be physically present in order to satisfy their needs.
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Everything sells. Like integrity. Like democracy. Like truth. Like deeds.
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The GOP/corporate right-wing, it seems, never really considers the consequences of their actions.
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I tend to be very relaxed on stage, but the nerves have to come out somehow.
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Fantasy-based ideologies invariably have neat happy endings where all the bad people and all the bad behavior goes away when the volume is turned up and enough force is applied.
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We fight wars from progressively great heights and distances, the blessings of technology steadily removing the personal human element from what was historically an extremely personal experience.
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Right-wing extremism is all about patience. That is, until it makes its move, and then it is sudden and explosive.
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Social media has created a legion of social delinquents, billions of people speaking not their minds but their spleens, venting everything from the gum-cracking snark befitting a hair-twisting mall rat to the froth-flecked rage of a bell tower marksman.
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I know it's sappy, but I bet there's a market for civility and niceness out there that, while probably not as titillating as a junkyard scrap between shirtless adversaries, it'd sure be healthier.
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No matter what your political persuasion, you can find a guide that makes it quick, easy and painless to exercise your right to vote. Wanna know what a certain proposition put forth by a cadre of undisclosed billionaires which cuts funding for public education, arts and infrastructure means? Use the voting guide!
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The guard rails on a highway may restrict some folks from driving the way they want, but those rules mostly end up saving the lives of those other drivers who understand that living in a society means behaving in a commonly beneficial way.
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What's hard, it seems, is living up to the words spoken by Jesus Christ, who preached naught but love and mercy and justice and humility.
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A culture cannot lie down with dogs and not become utterly infested with fleas. The dogs, in this case, are the mongrel media and the corporate overlords who have grown fat on manufactured controversy and fear mongering.
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If only Coca-Cola had had the kind of message to accompany its addictive deliciousness that Fox News has, we'd all be speaking Cokelish today.
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We have as a nation been duped by those who use our guilt about how we treated the innocent pawns in the Vietnam War game - the soldiers - into missing the point once again about the utter senselessness that is war.
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The spectacle of insensitivity that is the gun lobby and its outspoken, out-of-their-mind apparatchiks, is the apotheosis of what the Republican Party has allowed itself to become.
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A nation is not a budget, no matter how much ideologues want it to be so.
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I've rarely gotten a good review in my life, yet, to paraphrase Noël Coward, I am happy to console myself with the bitter palliative of commercial success.
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In the corporate-owned media, men dressed like Ronald Reagan and women dressed like Rita Hayworth disseminate grotesque exaggerations and gossip in authoritative tones.
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If you have to lie, cheat, steal, obstruct and bully to get your point across, it must not be a point capable of surviving on its own merits.
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The irony is that the people we tend to vote for actually look down on voters and voting. That's just idiotic, right? That's like a snake eating its own tail! A wolf in a trap gnawing off its own head to escape!
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The flaw in, say, austerity, is that its success is predicated on the relative exactitude of math rather than the shifting, liquid imperfection of people's lives.
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Anyone who thinks they stand apart from society and defies all which govern its existence has less in common with the lone wolf patriot standing up to dystopic forces of oppression - a myth - and more in common with the disease known as cancer - a harsh reality.
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I can't do anything else. I can't type or run a computer, and I've been fired from jobs as a custodian, waiter, and elevator operator. Acting has always been my passion. - 1990
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Fact
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In the "Wings" episode "Terminal Jealousy" (1993), Steven Weber dons a pair of dark sunglasses and does a Jack Nicholson impression at the end of the episode. Weber would go on to play Jack Torrance in the 1997 TV version of "The Shining", an iconic role originally associated with Nicholson in the 1980 movie adaptation.
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Williamstown, MA, USA: Appearing at the Williamstown Theatre Festival in the play "Three Hotels", costarring Maura Tierney. [June 2011]
Owns a six-bedroom, 5,200-square-foot house on 2.57 acres in Los Angeles' Brentwood neighborhood. He purchased the house in late 2003 for an undisclosed amount.
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In May 2007 he sold his 1,400-square-foot home on the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, Calif., for $3,820,000. He originally paid $2,849,000 for the house in April 2006.
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First child, Jack Alexander Hohnen-Weber, was born on 15 January 2001, weighing 7lbs 1oz
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Began acting in commercials in the third grade.
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Mom was a nightclub singer; Dad was a manager of Borscht Belt comedians.