Steve Guttenberg
Steve Guttenberg was born in Brooklyn, New York, United States on August 24th, 1958 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 65, Steve Guttenberg biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, and networth are available.
At 65 years old, Steve Guttenberg physical status not available right now. We will update Steve Guttenberg's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Steven Robert Guttenberg (born August 24, 1958) is an American actor, author, businessman, producer, and director.
He is known for his lead roles in Hollywood films of the 1980s and 1990s, including Cocoon, Police Academy, Three Men and a Baby, Diner, The Bedroom Window, Three Men and a Little Lady, The Big Green and Short Circuit.
Early life
Guttenberg was born on August 24, 1958, in Brooklyn, New York, the only son, along with his two sisters, of Ann Iris (née Newman), a surgical assistant, and Jerome Stanley Guttenberg, an electrical engineer. His godfather is actor Michael Bell. He had a Jewish upbringing in the Flushing neighborhood of the borough of Queens. In 1976, he graduated from Plainedge High School after his family moved from Queens to North Massapequa. While still in high school, Guttenberg attended a summer program at the Juilliard School and studied under John Houseman. During that time period, he auditioned for and won a part in an off-Broadway production of The Lion in Winter.
After high school, Guttenberg attended the State University of New York in Albany for a year. When he left SUNY, he moved to California to pursue an acting career. As he recounts, within weeks he was cast in a Kentucky Fried Chicken commercial playing opposite Colonel Sanders.
Personal life
Guttenberg married model Denise Bixler on September 30, 1988. They separated in June 1991 and divorced in 1992.
Guttenberg has lived with WCBS-TV reporter Emily Smith since 2014. On December 25, 2016, they announced their engagement. They married on January 19, 2019.
Career
Guttenberg had his first screen credit in the 1977 film Something for Joey after appearing in an uncredited bit in Rollercoaster. He appeared in The Chicken Chronicles, a 1977 California high-school comedy set in Beverly Hills. He appeared in the 1978 film The Boys From Brazil, based on the Ira Levin bestseller, and appeared on Family.com.
Guttenberg appeared in Billy (1979), based on Billy Liar. He appeared in the tennis romance film Players (1979). In 1980, a Coca-Cola commercial featured him struggling to assist a non-English-speaking woman whose car stalled.
Guttenberg appeared in the film To Race the Wind (1980), playing blind advocate Harold Krents. He appeared in Can't Stop the Music, a semiautobiographical film about the disco group Village People, the same year.
In the television series Miracle on Ice (1981), Jim Craig played Jim Craig. He appeared in Barry Levinson's Diner (1982) and then appeared in another short-lived television series No Soap, Radio (1982). He appeared in the action-comedy The Man Who Wasn't There (1983) and appeared in the post-apocalyptic television film The Day After (1983). Guttenberg appeared in The Ferret (1984), a pilot for a television show that was not picked up.
Guttenberg was the first female member of the Police Academy in 1984. It grossed $8.5 million in its first weekend and over $149 million worldwide, against a $4.5 million budget, and out of the film franchise it introduced, it is the most profitable. He continued to act in nine leading roles over the next four years, tying for busiest actor with Gene Hackman.
Police Academy 2: Their First Assignment, which was immediately followed in 1985, was followed by a sequel. In Cocoon, Guttenberg had the romantic male lead, which was yet another box-office hit. Bad Medicine, a comedy in which he appeared, was not particularly popular.
Guttenberg appeared Pecos Bill in an episode of Tall Tales & Legends in 1986, then he was in Police Academy 3: Back in Training.
Guttenberg appeared in Short Circuit, opposite Ally Sheedy in 1986, another very popular film.
Curtis Hanson's thriller The Bedroom Window (1987) brought him to a halt, then made Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol, his last Police Academy film. Guttenberg made a cameo in Amazon Women on the Moon and he helped Michael Caine and Sally Field in Surrender. Guttenberg's most successful financial career to date had three men and a baby with Tom Selleck and Ted Danson.
He appeared in High Spirits, a flop, in 1988.
In 1989, he appeared in Michael Jackson's "Liberian Girl" film. He also served in Cocoon: The Return of a corporate disappointment was also a commercial disappointment.
Timothy Hutton was replaced by him in the lead role of Prelude to a Kiss at the Helen Hayes Theatre on Broadway in 1990. He appeared in The Boys Next Door, London's West End, where he appeared in The Boys Next Door. He appeared in Woody Harrelson's world premiere production of Furthest From the Sun, which he produced and co-authored. He appeared in Don't Tell Her It's Me and 3 Boys and a Little Lady, among other films.
In 1993, he produced "Love Off Limits" for the CBS Schoolbreak Special.
He appeared in The Big Green in 1995. He appeared in It Takes Two with Kirstie Alley, Mary-Kate, and Ashley Olsen, and was one of the cast members of Home for the Holidays.
He appeared in Zeus and Roxanne, Casper: A Spirited Beginning, and with Kirsten Dunst in Disney's Tower of Terror in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, in 1997.
Guttenberg appeared in action films, Airborne, and Overdrive, as well as the comedy Home Team in 1998.
P.S. is the author of his first film as a producer/producer/co-screenwriter/star of P.S. Your Cat Is Dead (2002), a film adaptation of James Kirkwood, Jr.'s novel and Broadway play "The Cat Is Dead." As Barry, he appeared in Mojave Phone Booth (2006) and Making Change as Trafton. He appeared in Single Santa Seeks Mrs. Claus and its sequel Meet the Santas.
Woody Goodman, a wealthy businessman and community steward, appeared on the television series Veronica Mars from 2005 to 2006. He appeared as a lead in the NBC made-for-TV adaptation of The Poseidon Adventure, starring Richard Clarke, a struggling writer in an affair with a massage therapist. In 2008, he appeared in According to Jim's "Two for the Money."
Guttenberg's Steak House, a documentary released on Will Ferrell's Funny or Die website on August 25, 2008. Anna Trebunskaya, a professional dancer, appeared in Dancing with the Stars in the 2008 spring season, and was fired on April 1.
Guttenberg jogging almost naked through Central Park in October 2008. Guttenberg appeared on the British talk show The Paul O'Grady Show on November 12, 2008, where he said he made the video for Will Ferrell's Funny or Die website but later decided to post it "as if it were real" as part of a competition. He went on to become the Guinness World Record holder for preparing the most hot-dogs in a minute.
Guttenberg appeared in an episode of the Starz comedy Party Down that aired on May 21, 2010.
Guttenberg appeared in season seven, episode six of Law & Order: Criminal Intent, which was published on November 8, 2007.
He appeared on Broadway from late 2011 to early 2012 in Woody Allen's one-act play Honeymoon Hotel, which was part of the show Relatively Speaking.
Guttenberg's 2015 miniseries Sons of Liberty can be seen on History Channel's Sons of Liberty. Jack Bonner plays Jack Bonner.
Guttenberg completed filming on Lavalantula's SyFy Channel in fall 2014, which is scheduled to premiere in summer 2015.
Guttenberg appeared on "Intro to Recycled Cinema," which aired on Yahoo Screen in April 2015.
Guttenberg appeared in the Cinderella pantomime at Churchill Theatre in Bromley, England, where he played the Baron (father of Cinderella) in 2008. The local Empire Cinema screening took place on November 19th to honor Guttenberg's presence. Guttenberg introduced the film and answered questions.
Guttenberg appeared on Holey Moley II: The Sequel on May 21, 2020. Later this week, he appeared on Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, Cameo.
During an interview on November 4, 2009, Guttenberg announced that Disney was releasing a second sequel to Three Men and a Baby titled Three Men and a Bride. Ted Danson and Tom Selleck, Guttenberg's co-stars, will return to the film, according to Guttenberg. He also expressed his interest in making more sequels to the Police Academy and Cocoon films, saying that if they were to be made, they would be surefire hits.
David Diamond and David Weissman were writing a script for Police Academy 8. Guttenberg revealed it in an interview that was released on August 1, 2010. Guttenberg announced on September 3, 2018 that a new Police Academy film is being sent, but that there are no other details.