Lily Rabe net worth is $2 Million. Also know about Lily Rabe bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …
Lily Rabe Wiki Biography
Lily Rabe, born on the 29th of June 1982, is an American actress who became known through her roles in the hit television show “American Horror Story”, and her performance in the production of “The Merchant of Venice.”
So how much is Rabe’s net worth? As of late 2017, based on authoritative sources it is reported to be $2 million, acquired from her years working as an actress in television, film, and stage, which began in 2001.
Born in Upper West Side of New York City, Rabe is the daughter of David Rabe, a playwright, and Jill Clayburgh, an actress. She was raised in Bedford, but then spent most of her time growing up in Lakeville, Connecticut where she attended Hotchkiss School.
Rabe originally planned to be a dancer, and studied dance for ten years, and even taught at a summer arts program in Connecticut where she had to perform a monologue for the play “Crimes of the Heart,” which actually signaled a change of heart for her, and she decided to pursue an acting career instead. She subsequently attended Northwestern University to study acting, from where she graduated in 2004.
In 2001, Rabe began her career in the world of acting, appearing in the film “Never Again” with her mother Jill Clayburgh. It was then followed by her first stage production entitled “Speaking Well of the Dead” and “The Crazy Girl”, and she also appeared alongside Julia Roberts in the movie “Mona Lisa Smile.” Her early years in acting certainly helped set up her career, and her was the basis for her net worth.
In 2005, Rabe received a nomination from the Drama Desk Award for her performance in the stage production of “Steel Magnolias”; other notable productions that she has appeared in include “Heartbreak House” and “Crimes of the Heart”. In 2010, she also made her debut in Shakespeare in the Park for the production of “The Merchant of Venice”, for which she received a nomination for the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play.
After years appearing in various television shows and movies, Rabe finally made a breakthrough on TV, when she was cast in the hit show “American Horror Story”. She appeared in the first season as Nora Montgomery, in the second as Sister Mary Eunice McKee, and in the third as Misty Day, and subsequently made appearances in the fourth and fifth seasons of the show, and in a main role in the sixth season playing the character of Shelby Miller. The success of the show helped with her success too, helping to increase her wealth too.
Today, Rabe is still active as an actress and was recently cast in the show “Golden Exits.”
In terms of her personal life, Lily Rabe has been in a relationship with actor Hamish Linklater since 2013, and they have one child together.
IMDB Wikipedia “The Wizard of Lies” (2017) $2 million 1.73 m 1982 Actors Actress All Good Things (2010) American Horror Story: Asylum (2012-2013) American Horror Story: Roanoke (2016) Connecticut Cymbeline (2015) David Rabe Drama Desk Awards Golden Exits (2017) Hotchkiss School Jason Rabe Jill Clayburgh June 29 Lakeville Lily Rabe Lily Rabe Net Worth Michael Rabe Miss Stevens (2016) New York New York City No Reservations (2007) Northwestern University stage Steel Magnolias (2005 SXSW Film Festival Awards – Special Jury Recognition for Best Actress (2016) The Good Wife (2011-2015) The Merchant of Venice (2010-2011 The Whispers (2015) Tony Award for Best Lead Actress in a Play United States United States of America
Lily Rabe Quick Info
Full Name | Lily Rabe |
Net Worth | $2 Million |
Date Of Birth | June 29, 1982 |
Place Of Birth | New York City, New York, United States |
Height | 1.73 m |
Profession | Actress |
Education | Hotchkiss School, Lakeville, Connecticut, Northwestern University |
Nationality | American |
Parents | Jill Clayburgh, David Rabe |
Siblings | Michael Rabe, Jason Rabe |
Partner | Hamish Linklater |
https://www.facebook.com/lilyrabeunofficial/ | |
https://twitter.com/mslilyrabe?lang=en | |
https://www.instagram.com/pillypie22/?hl=en | |
IMDB | http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1143816 |
Awards | SXSW Film Festival Awards – Special Jury Recognition for Best Actress (2016) |
Nominations | Tony Award for Best Lead Actress in a Play, Drama Desk Awards |
Movies | No Reservations (2007), All Good Things (2010), Miss Stevens (2016), Golden Exits (2017), All Good Things (2010) |
TV Shows | The Merchant of Venice (2010-2011, stage), Cymbeline (2015), The Good Wife (2011-2015), Steel Magnolias (2005, stage), The Whispers (2015), American Horror Story: Roanoke (2016), The Wizard of Lies (2017),American Horror Story: Asylum (2012-2013) |
Lily Rabe Quotes
- Lily’s birth was announced in the Milestones column of the Time Magazine Issue dated July 12th 1982 she weighed 3.572100 Kilos or 7 lbs 14 oz at birth on June 29th 1982 in New York City
- I’m starting to watch Breaking Bad (2008) and my mind is being blown. It’s just beyond, beyond, beyond. Bryan Cranston is one of those actors who doesn’t shy away from ugliness, the truth, honesty. He’s never making a choice where you feel, ‘Oh, he’s trying to be liked in some way.’ And that is always the thing I want to watch.
- As someone who’s been doing a lot of classical theater recently, I loved the idea of getting to run around in Steven Alan, and not be in a corset and a wig, and not have a dialect, and get to be in a 90-minute play with no intermission, and get to do real comedy.
- The only thing that matters is the theater!
- To be working in the theater steadily and to be recognized and appreciated by the community means the world.
- The focus of our family life was homework and what was for dinner; getting to ballet rehearsal and getting my brother to soccer.
- I know it’s such a boring interview sometimes with us at ‘American Horror Story’, but I just can’t say a word. I would certainly love to be back, that’s for sure. It’s such a great job.
- I had never done a 90-minute play with no intermission, so it is a bit like you get onto the train and you don’t get off until it’s over – and it’s over very quickly, so don’t miss a moment of it. That experience is very rare and specific so don’t miss a minute, because there aren’t very many minutes of it.
- One of my mother’s friends said to me, ‘Your ex-boyfriends didn’t stand a chance with you and your mother.’ And I think I probably was unfair to them because she was the first person and the last person I called about every single thing. Sorry, ex-boyfriends.
- For a long time I was cautious of working with my parents because I wanted to feel separate from them in the community. Now there’s no more wasting time.
- You want to feel like people are hiring you because they want to work with you, not because of who your parents are.
- Truthfully, I don’t know how those special effects people do it.
- So, for the most part, I really like when I read a scene that scares me and makes me sweat a little bit, thinking about doing it. That’s usually a good sign to me.
- I am my parents’ daughter, and I always want to be. But I first wanted to make sure that I was standing on my own two feet.
- Being a part of the theater community has been important to me from the time I was a child, through my parents.
- When I was in high school and college, my other real focus was, actually, fiction writing. So in college, I had done all these seminars with these various writers-in-residence.
- Mark Conseulos is so amazing.
- I think every script I read has something that sends me into a state of panic but that usually makes me want to do it.
- All I really want to do is someday be in a western. If I could be on a horse with a rifle, I would be a really happy camper.
- When I was teeny tiny, I definitely had a voice that didn’t quite match the way I looked at five.
- Before I ever start a job that I’m really excited about, I usually have some sleepless nights or weeks or months. But that anticipation for a person like me… I don’t do so well with a lot of time off.
- No, I’m not feminist. I’m not, not a feminist.
- I will say that I’ve been lucky enough never to have to do a job I didn’t want to do, or a play I wasn’t in love with.
- I did have wonderful things to draw from, from my own experience and also just from friends and people I’d gone to school with who were very much immersed in this world right now.
- I can’t actually think of a job where I was relaxed the whole time. I don’t think I would want to do that job. When I break into a cold sweat when I’m reading, I think, ‘Oh good. That’s what’s supposed to be happening.’
- Listen, a cable series is a beautiful thing because there’s such amazing writing happening on television, and it’s a schedule that allows you to do a play or two. There’s a reason everybody wants that job!
- It’s sort of scary to work with your parents when you’re in the same business. But there was something so very safe about that. Acting with her was just like working with a wonderful actress who just happens to be my best friend and also my mother.
- It’s very hard when you’re doing a new play that you believe in, and you want to tell the story in the best way possible.
Lily Rabe Important Facts
- (December 28, 2016) Expecting her first child with her boyfriend Hamish Linklater.
- Niece of Jim Clayburgh.
- Preparing for her Broadway debut in “Steel Magnolias” – she’s playing Annelle (Daryl Hannah’s role in the movie version). [January 2005]
- Appearing in “Heartbreak House” for the Roundabout Theatre Company in New York City. [November 2006]
- Performing as “Portia” in Shakespeare in the Park’s “The Merchant of Venice”, with Al Pacino and Jesse L. Martin. [June 2010]
- Student at Northwestern University [February 2004]
- Older sister of Michael Rabe.
- Made her professional theatre debut at Israel Horovitz’s Gloucester Stage Company’s production of “Speaking Well of the Dead” with her mother, Jill Clayburgh. The following season, she returned to perform in “Proof”, which also starred Jennifer Malloy.
- Younger half-sister of Jason Rabe.
- Daughter of Jill Clayburgh and David Rabe.
Lily Rabe Filmography
Title | Year | Status | Character | Role |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Wizard of Lies | 2017 | TV Movie post-production | Catherine Hooper | Actress |
A Midsummer Night’s Dream | 2017/II | post-production | Actress | |
Finding Steve McQueen | 2017 | post-production | Sharon Price | Actress |
We’re Just Married | pre-production | Actress | ||
American Horror Story | 2011-2017 | TV Series | Sister Mary Eunice McKee Misty Day Shelby Miller … |
Actress |
Golden Exits | 2017 | Sam | Actress | |
Regular Show in Space | 2017 | TV Series | Ailen | Actress |
Miss Stevens | 2016 | Miss Stevens | Actress | |
The Veil | 2016/I | Sarah Hope | Actress | |
Exit Strategy | 2015 | TV Movie | Natalie Clayton | Actress |
The Whispers | 2015 | TV Series | Claire Bennigan | Actress |
The Walker | 2015 | TV Series | Sarah | Actress |
The Good Wife | 2011-2015 | TV Series | Petra Moritz | Actress |
Pawn Sacrifice | 2014 | Joan Fischer | Actress | |
Redemption Trail | 2013 | Anna | Actress | |
Aftermath | 2013/I | Samantha | Actress | |
Letters from the Big Man | 2011 | Sarah | Actress | |
All Good Things | 2010 | Deborah Lehrman | Actress | |
Weakness | 2010 | Katharine Browne | Actress | |
Law & Order | 2010 | TV Series | Andrea Wheaton | Actress |
Saving Grace | 2010 | TV Series | Sarah Cullen | Actress |
Last of the Ninth | 2009 | TV Movie | Mary Byrne | Actress |
Medium | 2008 | TV Series | Joanna Wheeler | Actress |
The Toe Tactic | 2008 | Mona Peek | Actress | |
Nip/Tuck | 2008 | TV Series | Lanie Ainge | Actress |
What Just Happened | 2008 | Dawn | Actress | |
No Reservations | 2007 | Bernadette | Actress | |
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | 2006 | TV Series | Nikki | Actress |
A Crime | 2006 | Sophie | Actress | |
Law & Order: Criminal Intent | 2005 | TV Series | Siena Boatman | Actress |
Mona Lisa Smile | 2003 | Art History Student | Actress | |
Never Again | 2001 | Tess | Actress | |
American Horror Story | 2012-2014 | TV Series performer – 3 episodes | Soundtrack | |
Downtown Owl | producer announced | Producer | ||
We’re Just Married | producer pre-production | Producer | ||
Rufus | 2016 | Short very special thanks post-production | Thanks | |
39th Annual Kennedy Center Honors | 2016 | TV Movie | Herself | Self |
You’ll Have the Sky: The Life and Work of Anne Morrow Lindbergh | 2016 | TV Short documentary | Anne Morrow Lindbergh (voice) | Self |
American Horror Story: Meet Ms. Nola – Shooting on Location in New Orleans | 2014 | Video short | Herself | Self |
The Writers’ Room | 2013 | TV Series | Herself – | Self |
Charlie Rose | 2010-2012 | TV Series | Herself – Guest | Self |
Theater Talk | 2012 | TV Series | Herself – Guest | Self |
The 65th Annual Tony Awards | 2011 | TV Special | Herself – Nominee: Best Leading Actress in a Play | Self |
All Good Things: Truth in Fiction | 2012 | Video documentary short | Deborah Lehrman (uncredited) | Archive Footage |
Lily Rabe Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie | Category |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | Special Jury Award | SXSW Film Festival | Best Actress – Narrative Feature | Miss Stevens (2016) | Won |
2016 | Special Jury Award | SXSW Film Festival | Best Actress – Narrative Feature | Miss Stevens (2016) | Nominated |