Rachel Susan Dratch (born February 22, 1966) is an American actress, comedian, and writer. After she graduated from Dartmouth College she moved to Chicago to study improvisational theatre at The Second City and ImprovOlympic.
Rachel Dratch | |
---|---|
![]() Dratch in 2022 | |
Born | Rachel Susan Dratch (1966-02-22) February 22, 1966 (age 56) Lexington, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Alma mater | Dartmouth College |
Occupation |
|
Years active | 1994–present |
Children | 1 |
Her breakthrough role was on the NBC television show Saturday Night Live (SNL); she was a cast member from 1999 to 2006 portraying a variety of roles including Debbie Downer. She has since occasionally returned to SNL as a guest portraying Senator Amy Klobuchar. Other television credits include The King of Queens, Monk, and 30 Rock. She has also played the recurring role of Wanda Jo Oliver on Last Week Tonight with John Oliver. She acted in films including Click (2006), I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry (2007), Sisters (2015), and Wine Country (2019).
In 2022, Dratch made her Broadway stage debut in POTUS: Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive for which she earned a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play nomination. In 2012 she published her autobiographical book Girl Walks Into a Bar...: Comedy Calamities, Dating Disasters, and a Midlife Miracle.
Dratch was born on February 22, 1966 in Lexington, Massachusetts,[1][2] the daughter of Elaine Ruth (née Soloway), a transportation director, and Paul Dratch, a radiologist.[3][4] Both of Dratch's parents were Reform Jews.[5] Dratch attended Hebrew school and had a bat mitzvah. She is nonobservant as an adult, and instead characterizes the faith she was born into as part of her cultural heritage.[2]
Her younger brother, Daniel, is a television producer and writer; his credits include the TV series Anger Management. Dratch says she grew up as the "class clown type"[2] attending William Diamond Middle School and Lexington High School in Lexington. She said while performing in high school plays she gravitated towards acting in comedies more often than in dramas.[6]
Dratch attended the National Theater Institute at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center in the fall of 1985[7] and graduated from Dartmouth College in 1988. She majored in drama and psychology and was a member of the improvisational comedy group "Said and Done".[2] While at Dartmouth Dratch was a classmate of Kirsten Gillibrand.[8]
Dratch was a member of the mainstage cast of The Second City comedy troupe for four years. She received the Joseph Jefferson award for Best Actress in a Revue for the two revues in which she performed: Paradigm Lost and Promisekeepers, Losers Weepers. At The Second City, she performed alongside future SNL head writers Adam McKay and Tina Fey, as well as future 30 Rock performer Scott Adsit. The first incarnation of her SNL "Wicked" sketch was performed in The Second City's Paradigm Lost. In addition to acting, Dratch also played the cello onstage. The theater also hosted the first incarnation of Dratch & Fey (her critically praised two-woman show with Tina Fey[9]), which was later performed at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre in New York, where it was dubbed "the funniest thing to be found on any New York comedy stage" by Time Out New York.[10]
Dratch has appeared in several movies, including Martin & Orloff, The Hebrew Hammer, Down with Love, Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star, Click, I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry, Spring Breakdown, and My Life in Ruins. She also has joined fellow SNL cast members on A.S.S.S.S.C.A.T.: Improv, which aired September 7, 2005, on the Bravo channel. Dratch also made television appearances on NBC's Third Watch and in a recurring role on The King of Queens (playing Denise, the on-off girlfriend of Spence, who worked in a bowling alley). Other television appearances include Monk, Frasier, Wizards of Waverly Place, 30 Rock, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Inside Amy Schumer, Ugly Betty, and more recently, in season five of The Middle. She also appeared online with comedian Billy Eichner in a spoof of Jay-Z and Alicia Keys's "Empire State of Mind", titled "Forest Hills State of Mind."[11]
Dratch was originally cast in the role of Jenna Maroney on 30 Rock as "Jenna DeCarlo", and the original pilot episode features her in the role. After feedback from test audiences, the role was ultimately recast with Jane Krakowski. She went on to play a variety of small guest roles in several episodes of the first season, including Barbara Walters, Elizabeth Taylor, a cat trainer, a custodian, a blue monster, and a doctor.[12]
On March 19, 2012, Dratch's memoir, Girl Walks into a Bar...: Comedy Calamities, Dating Disasters, and a Midlife Miracle was published. In it, Dratch recounts her experiences after being recast in the 30 Rock pilot, including the birth of her first child.[13]
In 2016 Dratch hosted the program Rachel Dratch's Late Night Snack on truTV. The sketch comedy program featured Dratch playing a waitress who doesn't talk in wraparound segments. Dratch also appeared in sketches and the show ran for two seasons.
Her tenure at SNL spanned 1999 to 2006. Dratch's recurring characters included Denise, a Boston teen; Sheldon, the junior-high-school boy from Wake up, Wakefield; one of the Luvahs (with Will Ferrell, as two pretentious professors); Abe Scheinwald, a Hollywood producer with a terrible acquisition record; and, perhaps most memorably, Debbie Downer, a depressed woman who brought others' moods down while saying grim non sequiturs.[14] In December 2011, she made a guest appearance on Saturday Night Live's Christmas show, hosted by former cast member Jimmy Fallon. On April 15, 2017, she made another guest appearance with host Jimmy Fallon. On February 3, 2018 she made a guest appearance as a "Patriot of New England" in a Revolutionary War-themed sketch parodying the fans of the New England Patriots and Philadelphia Eagles in advance of Super Bowl LII.[15] On September 29, 2018, she appeared as Senator Amy Klobuchar in the cold open sketch surrounding the confirmation hearings of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.[16] She has continued to reprise the role of Klobuchar during sketches on the Democratic Party primary debates, specifically the fifth and sixth debates in November and December 2019.[17]
In her book Girl Walks Into a Bar..., Dratch discusses meeting John Wahl, a consultant in the natural foods industry in a bar in 2009. Six months later, Dratch learned she was pregnant, and on August 24, 2010, Dratch gave birth to Eli Benjamin, her son with Wahl.[18] In an October 2010 interview, Dratch told People that her pregnancy at age 44 shocked her, because she "had bought into all this stuff about, 'Once you're over 40 [pregnancy becomes difficult]" and had "gone through the whole process of letting go of [the idea of having kids.]"[19] As of 2019, Dratch and Wahl are not a couple, but are on good terms and live near each other to be involved with their son.[20]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1999–2006 | Saturday Night Live | Herself/Various (including Debbie Downer) | 1999–2001: featured player, 2001–2006: repertory player, cameos in 2010, 2011, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021. |
2000 | Third Watch | Darla | Season 2, episode 10: "History" |
2002 | Kim Possible | Adrena Lynn | Voice role, episode: "All the News" |
2002–2004 | The King of Queens | Denise Ruth Battaglia | Six episodes (seasons 5–6) |
2004 | Soundtracks Live | Dorothy Baker | TV film |
Monk | Julie Parlo | Season 2, episode 13: "Mr. Monk and the Missing Granny" | |
Game Over | Alice Smashburn | Regular cast voice role | |
Frasier | Horny Date | Season 11, episode 18: "Match Game" | |
2005–2006 | O'Grady | Brooke | Voice role, two episodes (seasons 1–2) |
2006–2012 | 30 Rock | Various Roles | Originally cast as Jenna DeCarlo, later recast. Appearances in 15 episodes (seasons 1, 5 and 6). |
2008 | Aqua Teen Hunger Force | Robot Wife | Voice role Season 5, episode 2: "Robots Are Everywhere" |
Squidbillies | Hippie Woman | Voice role Season 3, episode 6: "Earth Worst" | |
Assy McGee | Various Roles | Voice role Six episodes (season 2) | |
Avatar: The Last Airbender | Actress Aang | Season 3, episode 17: "The Ember Island Players" | |
The Consultants | Allie | Unsold TV pilot | |
Superjail! | Various Roles | Voice role (uncredited) Season 1, episode 3: "Ladies Night" | |
2008–2009 | Wizards of Waverly Place | Future Harper | Season 2, episode 37: "Future Harper" |
2009 | Ugly Betty | Penny Meadows/Mindy Meadows | Season 3, episode 24: "The Fall Issue" |
Sherri | Teacher | Season 1, episode 13: "Indecision '09" | |
2010 | Delocated | Cellist | Season 2, episode 4: "Mixer" |
2010–2013 | Fish Hooks | Koi/Esmargot/Koi's Mom | Voice role, 28 episodes |
2011 | Funny or Die Presents | Dirkson | 4 episodes in season 2 (2.6, 2.7, 2.8, 2.9) |
Lady Friends | Lisa | Unsold NBC Pilot | |
2012 | Up All Night | Linda | Season 2, episode 3: "Swingers" |
Suburgatory | Paula Weingelb | Season 2, episode 3: "The Witch of East Chatswin" | |
The Cleveland Show | Maggie | Season 4, episode 6: "'Tis the Cleveland to Be Sorry" | |
2013–2014 | The Middle | Principal Barker | 2 episodes: Season 5, episode 3: "The Potato" Season 5, episode 12: "The Carpool" |
2013–2014 | The Awesomes | Joyce Mandrake/Tom Boy | Voice role 12 episodes; recurring role |
2014–2016 | Broad City | Linda Lodi | 3 episodes: Season 1, episode 3: "Working Girls" Season 3, episode 5: "2016" Season 5, episode 2: "SheWork and S**t Bucket" |
2014 | The Neighbors | Pearl | Season 2, episode 18: "A Night in (Lou Ferrigno's Hibachi) Heaven" |
Inside Amy Schumer | Lisa | Season 2, episode 4: "Boner Doctor" | |
Bob's Burgers | Jodi/Abby | Voice role, 3 episodes (seasons 4–5) | |
Dead Boss | Christine | Unsold Fox Pilot | |
2015 | Parks and Recreation | Roz | Season 7, episode 7: Donna & Joe |
Salem Rogers: Model of the Year 1998 | Agatha Todd | Lead role | |
2015–2021 | Last Week Tonight with John Oliver | Guest Star | Season 2, episode 25: Wanda Jo Oliver Season 2, episode 26: Wanda Jo Oliver Season 2, episode 35: Wanda Jo Oliver Season 5, episode 7: Wanda Jo Oliver Season 6, episode 2: Wanda Jo Oliver Season 8, episode 17: Wanda Jo Oliver |
2015 | Unforgettable | Rosie Webb | Season 4, episode 2 |
2015–2016 | Difficult People | Chemo Woman Casting Director |
Season 1, episode 1 Season 2, episode 5 |
2016 | The $100,000 Pyramid | Herself (celebrity guest) | Season 1, episode: Rachel Dratch vs. Ana Gasteyer |
2016 | The Simpsons | Bostonian Doctor | Episode "The Town" |
2016-2017 | Rachel Dratch's Late Night Snack | Host | |
2017 | Imaginary Mary | Mary | Voice role; lead role |
Angie Tribeca | Masha Chekhov | 1 episode | |
Great News | Mary-Kelly | Episode: "Snowmageddon of the Century" | |
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt | Dianne/Leonora | Episode: "Kimmy Googles the Internet!" | |
At Home with Amy Sedaris | Florence Chervil | Episode: "Entertaining for Peanuts" | |
Portlandia | Fred's Wife | Season 7, episode 5: "Amore" | |
2019 | Teen Titans Go! | Negative Girl | 4 episodes |
Shameless | Paula Bitterman | 4 episodes (Season 10) | |
2020 | Blue's Clues & You! | Herself | Episode: "Happy Birthday, Blue!" |
Harley Quinn | Nora Fries, Queen Hippolyta | Voice roles, 2 episodes | |
The Good Fight | Linda Shuck | Episode: "The Gang Offends Everyone" | |
2021 | Mr. Mayor | Ms. Adams | 3 Episodes |
Bubble Guppies | Alison Heart (voice) | Episode: "Alison in Wonderland!" | |
2022 | American Dad | Nerfer (voice) | Episode: "Beyond the Alcove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Klaus" |
Getting Curious with Jonathan Van Ness | Construction Worker | Episode: "Are Skyscrapers Huge Divas?" | |
Beat Bobby Flay | Herself; guest host | Episode: "Foodie Downer" |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1999 | Serious Business | Jude Rusell | |
2002 | Martin & Orloff | Southern Woman | |
2003 | The Hebrew Hammer | Tikva | |
Down With Love | Gladys | ||
National Lampoon's Barely Legal | Mrs. Greitzer | ||
Dickie Roberts: Former Child Star | Reiner's Secretary | ||
2004 | Freshman Orientation | Very Drunk Chick | |
Looking for Kitty | Julie | ||
2005 | Her Minor Thing | Caroline | |
Winter Passing | Female MC | ||
2006 | Click | Alan/Alice | |
The Pleasure Drivers | Counter Monkey | ||
2007 | I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry | Benefits Supervisor Sara Powers | |
2008 | Bill | Doctor Robardo | Short Film |
Harold | Ms. Vicky Norris | ||
2009 | Spring Breakdown | Judi Joskow | Also a Writer and Producer |
Love N' Dancing | Kalle | ||
I Hate Valentine's Day | Kathy Jeemy | ||
My Life in Ruins | Kim Sawchuck | ||
2011 | Just Go with It | Kirsten Brant | |
2012 | Teacher of The Year | Assistant Principal | Short film |
That's My Boy | Phil's Wife | ||
2013 | Syrup | Clerk | |
2014 | A Little Game | Aunt Diane | |
2015 | The Grief of Others | Madeleine Berkowitz | |
Sisters | Kelly | ||
2016 | Hurricane Bianca | Deborah Ward | |
Tracktown | Gail | ||
2018 | The Week Of | Debbie | |
Hurricane Bianca 2: From Russia with Hate | Deborah Ward | ||
2019 | Little | Agent Bea | |
Wine Country | Rebecca | ||
2021 | Plan B | Ms. Flaucher | |
A Clüsterfünke Christmas | Marga | ||
2022 | I Love My Dad | Erica | |
2023 | Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse ![]() |
School Counselor | Voice role |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2010 | Sylvia | Sylvia | George Street Playhouse, New Jersey |
2013 | Love's Labour's Lost | Holofernes | The Public Theater |
2014–15 | Tail! Spin! | Various Roles | Off-Broadway at the Lynn Redgrave Theater at the Culture Project |
2016 | Privacy | Various Roles | Off-Broadway at The Public Theater |
2022 | POTUS: Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive | Stephanie | Broadway at Shubert Theatre Nominated – Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play |
Guys and Dolls | Big Jule | The Kennedy Center, Washington, D.C. |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2011 | Submissions Only | Fiona Evans | Webseries Season 1, episode 6: "Somethin' Else" |
2015 | The Dratchelor[21] | Herself | Funny Or Die web series |
Raised in a Reform Jewish family, Dratch did have a Bat Mitzvah but does not consider herself to be observant. “It’s more a heritage thing, I guess,” she says of her relationship to her roots.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)General | |
---|---|
National libraries | |
Biographical dictionaries | |
Other |