Birthday: 30 January 1967, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Height: 170 cm
Norbert Leo Butz was born on January 30, 1967, in St. Louis, MO, the seventh child of Elaine and Norbert A. Butz. He has German, French, and Irish ancestry. Norbert went to audition for the Alabama Shakespeare festival in 1993 without using his middle name, but because people kept getting him confused with his father, he quickly decided to add Leo....
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Norbert Leo Butz was born on January 30, 1967, in St. Louis, MO, the seventh child of Elaine and Norbert A. Butz. He has German, French, and Irish ancestry. Norbert went to audition for the Alabama Shakespeare festival in 1993 without using his middle name, but because people kept getting him confused with his father, he quickly decided to add Leo. In 1997 his Broadway career began when he moved with his then wife Sydney and their baby daughter Clara, to become swing in the musical "Rent". After a couple of months in the part, he got the full time lead of Roger. After "Rent", Norbert toured as the Emcee in Cabaret when his daughter Maggie was born. Norbert starred in other shows, such as playing the confused heart-throb Jamie in "The Last 5 Years" and the revenge seeking Camille in "Thou Shalt Not". He got his big break in 2003 as the hot, careless Prince Fiyero in "Wicked". During his Wicked run, however, Norbert and Sydney divorced, and Norbert met his future fiancé and wife, Michelle Federer. Norbert left the show on July 7, 2004 to star in the hit "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels", in which he played the clueless but funny Freddy Benson. Norbert continued that role with the national tour until October of 2006, when he filmed "Dan in Real Life". "Dan in Real Life" opened in theaters October 26, 2007. Show less «
If you individualize an audience, it helps up the stakes of your responsibility to that audience.
If you individualize an audience, it helps up the stakes of your responsibility to that audience.
I have 10 brothers and sisters.
I have 10 brothers and sisters.
I don't know if Jesus said it in the Bible, but someone said that 'the love of money is the root of ...Show more »
I don't know if Jesus said it in the Bible, but someone said that 'the love of money is the root of all evil,' and I do think there's a correlation between the ambition that a lot of people have, in terms of financial remuneration, and the loss of core values. Show less «
I hate sitting around a table and talking about what a play might mean. I'm the person who's always ...Show more »
I hate sitting around a table and talking about what a play might mean. I'm the person who's always like, 'Can we get up on our feet and just do it?' Show less «
If you are opening a play, a play that's really about something, a play that's really about ideas, y...Show more »
If you are opening a play, a play that's really about something, a play that's really about ideas, you have to find a way to sell that play. Show less «
I make decisions quickly.
I make decisions quickly.
I was in the original cast of 'Wicked', and that got a bad review in 'The New York Times,' and it's ...Show more »
I was in the original cast of 'Wicked', and that got a bad review in 'The New York Times,' and it's the most successful thing that's ever been put onstage. Show less «
It's thrilling to be onstage and to not know, literally, what the next moment is going to bring. To ...Show more »
It's thrilling to be onstage and to not know, literally, what the next moment is going to bring. To just submit to the not-knowing-ness of it. Show less «