Anita Barone


Actor

About

Also Known As
Anita L Barone
Birth Place
St Louis, Missouri, USA
Born
September 25, 1964

Biography

A versatile stage actress who has been relegated mostly to sitcoms on TV, Anita Barone received her best shot in the medium as wife to Jeff Foxworthy on "The Jeff Foxworthy Show," which ran one season on ABC from 1995-96. Barone made her first stage appearance at age five in Detroit, where she was raised after her family moved from St Louis. By age 23, she had appeared in more than 50 pl...

Biography

A versatile stage actress who has been relegated mostly to sitcoms on TV, Anita Barone received her best shot in the medium as wife to Jeff Foxworthy on "The Jeff Foxworthy Show," which ran one season on ABC from 1995-96. Barone made her first stage appearance at age five in Detroit, where she was raised after her family moved from St Louis. By age 23, she had appeared in more than 50 plays, mostly in university production and regional theaters. Among her stage roles were Juliet in "Romeo and Juliet," Helen Keller in a production of "Monday After the Miracle" and the title role of Agnes, the young tormented nun, in "Agnes of God." She made her screen debut with a small role in "The Rosary Murders" (1987), had a bit in "Ricochet" (1991) and landed a lead in the indie romantic comedy "Just Friends" (1996). But Barone's first Hollywood employment of note was as a member of the stock company of "Carol & Company" (NBC, 1990-91), the ill-fated the attempt by Carol Burnett to revive the variety/sketch comedy program. Barone also appeared in the USA Network movie "Wounded Heart" in 1995. Eventually she returned to the weekly sitcom grind, co-starring with Michael Chiklis in "Daddio" (NBC, 2000).

Life Events

1987

Feature film debut in "The Rosary Murders"

1990

Was regular cast member on the NBC variety series "Carol & Company"

1995

Co-starred in USA Network movie "Wounded Heart"

1996

First leading role in features, "Just Friends"

2000

Returned to series TV as Michael Chiklis' wife in the NBC family sitcom "Daddio"

Bibliography