Tina Fey (born May 18, 1970, Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, U.S.) is an American writer and actress whose work on the television shows Saturday Night Live (SNL)—she was its first female head writer (1999–2006)—and 30 Rock (2006–13) helped establish her as one of the leading comedians in the early 21st century.
Fey was educated at the University of Virginia, where she studied drama. Following graduation in 1992, she moved to Chicago to take classes at The Second City, a training ground for comedians. After about two years of instruction in improvisational comedy, she joined the Second City cast, first as a touring company understudy and later as a performer on the company’s main stage.
In 1997 Fey submitted samples of her sketch writing to the Saturday Night Live television show staff. The show’s executive producer, Lorne Michaels, interviewed her, and within a week he hired her to be one of the show’s few female writers. In 1999 Fey became SNL’s head writer, and during the 2000–01 season she debuted onscreen as coanchor of the show’s “Weekend Update” feature. She went on to join the cast as a regular. In 2002, with the rest of the show’s writing staff, she shared the Emmy Award for outstanding writing for a variety, music, or comedy program.
In 2004 Fey extended her reach into motion pictures with the teenage-angst comedy Mean Girls, writing the screenplay and appearing as one of the supporting characters. In 2006 she left Saturday Night Live to produce, write, and star in 30 Rock, a comedy based on her SNL experiences. Fey played Liz Lemon, the uptight head writer of a comedy sketch show. During the seven-season run of 30 Rock, she, with the other producers, won three consecutive Emmy Awards for outstanding comedy series (2007–09), and she earned additional Emmys in 2008 for her portrayal of Lemon and for her writing for the show. Also in 2008 Fey returned multiple times as a guest on SNL in order to satirize Republican vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, to whom she bore a striking resemblance.
While still working on 30 Rock, Fey continued to star in motion pictures, notably Baby Mama (2008), a female buddy movie that also featured Fey’s former SNL costar Amy Poehler, and Date Night (2010), an action comedy about mistaken identities that paired her with Steve Carell. She appeared in a supporting role in The Invention of Lying (2009), and she lent her voice to the animated films Ponyo—the English version of Miyazaki Hayao’s Gake no ue no Ponyo (2008; “Ponyo on the Cliff”)—and Megamind (2010). Fey later starred in the romantic comedy Admission (2013), as a university admissions officer thrown into a midlife crisis.
After 30 Rock ended in 2013, Fey continued to work behind the scenes. She notably cocreated the Netflix series Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt (2015–19), a comedy about a woman who moves to New York after being rescued from a doomsday cult. In 2018 she added Broadway to her credits with the premiere of the musical Mean Girls. Fey wrote the script for the stage production, which was based on the 2004 comedy.
During this time Fey also maintained her acting career. In 2014 she played a Russian prison guard in Muppets Most Wanted and a woman who has to return home to sit shivah for her dead father in the comedy This Is Where I Leave You. Fey and Poehler costarred as siblings who decide to throw a party at their childhood home in Sisters (2015). After narrating the nature documentary Monkey Kingdom (2015), Fey portrayed a reporter who is sent to cover the Afghanistan War in the dark comedy Whiskey Tango Foxtrot (2016). She had guest spots on various TV shows and a recurring role in the series Great News (2017–18). In 2019 Fey appeared in the Poehler-directed Netflix movie Wine Country and the Amazon anthology series Modern Love, which was based on the popular New York Times column. The following year she reprised the role of Lemon for 30 Rock: A One-Time Special, which included promotions for NBCUniversal TV’s 2020–21 TV lineup. She then lent her voice to the Pixar animated film Soul (2020).
In 2010 Fey received the Kennedy Center’s Mark Twain Prize for American Humor. The following year she released the memoir Bossypants, which included humorous essays on work and motherhood. She cohosted (with Poehler) the Golden Globe ceremonies in 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2021.