Laila Robins Biography
Laila Robins is a theater, film, and television actress from the United States. Robins made her cinematic debut in 1987, co-starring with Steve Martin in the comedy Planes, Trains, and Automobiles. She has had recurring appearances on Gabriel’s Fire, Homeland, and Murder in the First. In the final season of The Walking Dead in 2022, she plays Pamela Milton.
Laila Robins Age
She was born on March 14, 1959, in St. Paul, Minnesota, United States of America. Laila is 64 years old as of March 2023.
Laila Robins Education
She earned her bachelor’s degree at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and her master’s degree at the Yale School of Drama.
Laila Robins Height- Weight
Laila stands at a height of 5 feet 7 inches (1.7 m); and Weighs, 52 kg.
Laila Robins Family
Robins was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, to Latvian-American parents Brigita and Jnis. Her father was a chemist who conducted research. Robins is the youngest of three sisters.
Laila Robins Husband
Robins has been in a relationship with the actor Robert Cuccioli since 2000.
Laila Robins Career
Robins made her cinematic debut in 1987, co-starring with Steve Martin in the comedy Planes, Trains, and Automobiles. She then appeared in the 1989 criminal drama An Innocent Man with Tom Selleck; Welcome Home, with Roxy Carmichael (1990); and the sex comedy Live Nude Girls (1995) with Dana Delany. From 1990 to 1991, Robins co-starred with James Earl Jones in the ABC criminal drama series Gabriel’s Fire, and she also appeared as a guest star on Law & Order, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Third Watch, Sex and the City, 30 Rock, and The Good Wife. She also appeared in two episodes of HBO’s criminal drama series The Sopranos as a younger version of Livia Soprano, the mother of mobster Tony Soprano.
Robins made her Broadway debut in 2006 as Lady Utterword in the Roundabout Theatre Company’s staging of George Bernard Shaw’s Heartbreak House. Frozen by Bryony Lavery (2004), The Herbal Bed by Peter Whelan (1998), and The Real Thing by Tom Stoppard (1985), directed by Mike Nichols, were Robins’ earlier Broadway appearances. Robins took over the role from actress Glenn Close. Off-Broadway credits include Sore Throats by Howard Brenton, William Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice, Mrs. Klein by Nicholas Wright (in which she also toured with Uta Hagen) (1995-1996), Burnt Piano by Justin Fleming, opposite Richard Thomas in Second Stage Theatre’s Tiny Alice (2000), and The Film Society by Jon Robin Baitz.She has also performed in a number of regional theater performances.
Robins has received or been nominated for a number of awards for her work, including the Actors’ Equity Foundation Joe A. Callaway Award (1995) for The Merchant of Venice, the 2012 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Ensemble for Sweet and Sad, and the Lucille Lortel Award nominations for Outstanding Featured Actress (2004) for Frozen. and Outstanding Lead Actress (2007) for Sore Throats, the 1997 Joseph Jefferson Award Best Actress nomination for A Streetcar Named Desire at The Steppenwolf Theatre, the Helen Hayes Award nomination for Mrs. Klein, 1997 Supporting Performer, Non-Resident Production, and the Drama League Award. Robins is an HB Studio guest instructor.
Laila Robins Net Worth
Robins has an estimated net worth of 6 million dollars as of 2023.
Laila Robins Movies
TBA The Crowded Room
2021–2022 The Walking Dead
2021 The Equalizer
2021 Dr. Death
2019–present The Boys
2019–2020 The Blacklist
2019 The Handmaid’s Tale
2018 Deception
2018 New Amsterdam
2016–2017 Quantico
2015 Murder in the First
2014 The Money
2014 That Hopey Changey Thing
2014 Sweet and Sad
2014 Regular Singing
2014 Homeland
2013 Onion News Empire
2012 Dark Horse
2011 Damages
2011 Too Big to Fail
2011 Blue Bloods
2011 Person of Interest
2010 God in America
2010 The Good Wife
2009–2010 Bored to Death
2009 30 Rock
2009 All My Children
2009 In Treatment
2006 The Book of Daniel
2004 Sex and the City
2001 Witchblade
2001 Law & Order: Criminal Intent
2000 Third Watch
1999–2001 The Soprano