Mary Steenburgen Bio, Age, Husband, Head Injury, Movies, TV Shows

Mary Steenburgen Biography

Mary Steenburgen is an actress, comedian, singer, and songwriter from the United States who received a Golden Globe Award nomination for Miloš Forman’s drama picture Ragtime. Her other film credits include A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy, Cross Creek, Back to the Future Part III, What’s Eating Gilbert Grape, Philadelphia, Nixon, The Brave One, Last Vegas, A Walk in the Woods, Book Club, Nightmare Alley, and Book Club: The Next Chapter.

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How old is Mary Steenburgen? – Age

She is 71 years old as of February 8, 2024. She was born in 1953 in Newport, Arkansas, United States. Her real name is Mary Nell Steenburgen.

Mary Steenburgen Parents – Family – Education

She was born to Nellie Mae Wall, a school board secretary, and Maurice Hoffman Steenburgen, a freight train conductor for the Missouri Pacific Railroad. Nancy Kelly (née Steenburgen), a teacher, is her sister. In 1971, she enrolled in Hendrix College to study drama. She then proceeded to Dallas on the recommendation of her drama teacher, where she successfully auditioned for New York City’s Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre.

Mary Steenburgen Husband – Children

Steenburgen met and began dating actor Malcolm McDowell in 1978, while they were co-starring in Time After Time. They married and had two children, including son Charlie McDowell. They divorced in 1990, and he remarried the following year. Steenburgen married actor Ted Danson on October 7, 1995, after meeting him on the production of the film Pontiac Moon, and became stepmother to Danson’s two daughters from his previous marriage to director Cassandra Coates. Since 2014, Steenburgen’s son Charlie McDowell has made a running joke about her by claiming on social media that his mother is actress Andie MacDowell.

Mary Steenburgen Net Worth

She has an estimated net worth of $80 million.

Mary Steenburgen Head Injury – Did Mary Steenburgen have surgery?

Steenburgen had minor arm surgery in 2007 that needed a general anesthetic; shortly after, she began hearing “music (…) playing in her head day and night”. She then took music classes so she could write down what she heard, and by 2013, she had around 50 songwriting credits. She has cooperated with Nashville musicians and is a Universal Music Group songwriter.She sings one of her own songs in Last Vegas.

Mary Steenburgen together with her husband Ted Danson
Mary Steenburgen together with her husband Ted Danson

In 2018, her piece “Glasgow (No Place Like Home)” was performed by Jessie Buckley as the climax musical moment in the film Wild Rose, which garnered Steenburgen multiple prizes, including the Critic Choice Award.On October 30, 2020, Steenburgen inked a global publishing agreement with Universal Music Publishing Group.

Mary Steenburgen Career

Steenburgen moved to Manhattan in 1972 after the Local Playhouse offered her a chance to concentrate on acting. She filled in as a server at The Enchanted Skillet and for Doubleday while concentrating under William Esper.

Steenburgen’s break came when she was found by Jack Nicholson in the banquet hall of Fundamental Pictures’ New York office and was given a role as the female lead in his second executive work, the Western parody Goin’ South (1978). Steenburgen played a main part in the film Many times (1979), for which she won the Saturn Grant for Best Entertainer. She played a cutting edge lady who falls head over heels for creator H. G. Wells, played by Malcolm McDowell, whom she wedded the next year.

In her third film, she won the Foundation Grant for Best Supporting Entertainer for the film Melvin and Howard (1980). She played Lynda Dummar, the spouse of Melvin Dummar, a driver and hopeful vocalist who professed to have become friends with hermitic unusual Howard Hughes. One more prominent film appearance came in the generally welcomed film Cross Rivulet (1983), in which she depicted Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, creator of The Yearling. In 1985, she featured in the film One Enchantment Christmas as somebody who falls on destroying times at Christmas, just to depend on a marvel to save her loved ones. In 1989, she played Karen Buckman in Being a parent. In Back to the Future Part III (1990), Steenburgen played Clara Clayton, a teacher who falls head over heels for Doc Brown. She was convinced to assume the part by her youngsters, as well as by enthusiasts of the Back to What’s to come films, and repeated the job by giving the person’s voice in Back to What’s in store: The Vivified Series.

Different exhibitions have in’s Eating Gilbert Grape (1993), as a lady who is taking part in an extramarital entanglements with the title character; My Late spring Story (1994), as the mother of Ralphie Parker (the continuation of A Christmas Story); the job of Hannah Milhous Nixon in the Oliver Stone biopic Nixon (1995); and the Will Ferrell parody Mythical person (2003), as a that her lady spouse is the dad of one of St Nick’s mythical beings.

She has showed up in the parody films Step Siblings (2008), playing the mother of Will Ferrell’s personality; Four Christmases (2008); and The Proposition (2009). Filthy Young lady, which included Steenburgen, debuted at the Toronto Global Film Celebration on September 12, 2010. She likewise showed up in the widely praised film The Assistance (2011) and played a highlighted part as a parlor vocalist, who is the heartfelt interest in a circle of drama, in the satire film Last Vegas (2013). She played a little part in the parody show film A Stroll in the Forest as Jeannie. In 2018, Steenburgen featured with Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda and Candice Bergen in the rom-com film Book Club.

In TV, Steenburgen showed up as Kate Montgomery in Ink (1996) and co-featured as Mary Gulliver in Gulliver’s Movements (1996). She plays a repetitive part as herself in Control Your Energy. Steenburgen co-featured as Helen Girardi, the mother of Golden Tamblyn’s title character in Joan of Paradise. In 2011, she played a common part as Josephine in the HBO sitcom Exhausted. Steenburgen featured as Anastasia Lee in the 2011 FX pilot Ban Nation, yet it was passed by the organization. She showed up in obscurity sitcom Wilfred from 2011 through 2013 as Catherine Newman, the title character’s offbeat and deranged mother. Steenburgen played a repetitive part on the NBC sitcom 30 Stone from 2012 to 2013 where she played Diana Jessup.

In 2014, she started a repetitive job as previous Dixie Mafia manager Katherine Solidness in the fifth and 6th times of Legitimized. From 2015 to 2018, she featured as Gail Klosterman on the satire series The Keep going Man on The planet.

From 2020 to 2021, she assumed the part of Maggie Clarke in the NBC melodic satire show series Zoey’s Phenomenal Playlist for two seasons. She repeated the job for The Roku Station TV film Zoey’s Phenomenal Christmas.

Mary Steenburgen Movies

♦ 2023 – Book Club: The Next Chapter
♦ 2021 – Nightmare Alley
♦ 2020 – Happiest Season
♦ 2019 – Flannery
♦ 2018 – Book Club
♦ 2018 – Antiquities
♦ 2017 – The Discovery
♦ 2017 – I Do… Until I Don’t
♦ 2016 – The Book of Love
♦ 2016 – Dean
♦ 2016 – Katie Says Goodbye
♦ 2015 – A Walk in the Woods
♦ 2014 – Song One
♦ 2013 – Last Vegas
♦ 2013 – Brahmin Bulls
♦ 2013 – The Tale of the Princess Kaguya

Mary Steenburgen TV Shows

♦ 2022 – Mr. Mayor
♦ 2021 – Zoey’s Extraordinary Christmas
♦ 2020–2021 – Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist
♦ 2020 – Grace and Frankie
♦ 2020 – The Good Place
♦ 2019–2021 – Bless the Harts
♦ 2019 – On Becoming a God in Central Florida
♦ 2018 – The Conners
♦ 2017 – Finding Your Roots
♦ 2016 – Blunt Talk
♦ 2015–2018 – The Last Man on Earth
♦ 2015–2017 – Orange Is the New Black
♦ 2015 – Togetherness
♦ 2015 – 7 Days in Hell
♦ 2015 – Turkey Hollow
♦ 2014–2015 – Justified
♦ 2012 – 30 Rock