Kelsey Grammer (born February 21, 1955, St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands) is an American actor, perhaps best known for his portrayal of the pompous, acerbic, but somehow lovable psychiatrist Dr. Frasier Crane on the television series Cheers and its spin-off Frasier.
Grammer grew up in New Jersey and Florida and began acting in high school. Encouraged by his teachers to consider acting as a career, he enrolled in the Juilliard School in New York City. After two years there, Grammer joined the Old Globe Theatre company in San Diego, California, where he acted in plays by William Shakespeare and George Bernard Shaw. He also performed in regional theatres throughout the United States and in Off-Broadway productions of Plenty, Sunday in the Park with George, A Month in the Country, and Quartermaine’s Terms. On Broadway he appeared in Macbeth (1981) and Othello (1982).
Grammer acted in the television daytime dramas Another World, One Life to Live, and Guiding Light and in the miniseries Kennedy before joining the cast of the sitcom Cheers in 1984. Cheers followed the workers and patrons of a Boston bar, and Grammer’s Dr. Frasier Crane became a popular character. In 1988 his career was threatened when he was arrested for drunken driving and possession of cocaine. He eventually served a short jail stint and later spent time in a drug rehabilitation clinic. Cheers aired until 1993, and Frasier debuted the following season. The new series, set in Seattle, featured a cast of characters that included Dr. Frasier Crane’s brother and father as well as employees of his radio call-in show. For his acting on Frasier, Grammer won the Emmy Award for outstanding lead actor in a comedy series in 1994, 1995, and 1998. He also won Golden Globe Awards for best actor in a television series (musical or comedy) in 1995 and 2000. Frasier ended in 2004, marking Grammer’s 20th year playing Dr. Frasier Crane. His longevity tied the record set by James Arness (as Marshal Matt Dillon on Gunsmoke) for consecutive years of appearing as the same character on prime-time television.
Following the end of Frasier, Grammer continued to appear in movies and television. His later films included Even Money (2006); X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), which was based on the comic book series; Swing Vote (2008); Fame (2009), a remake of the 1980 film musical, and I Don’t Know How She Does It (2011). In 2007 Grammer returned to the small screen with Back to You, a sitcom about a news program; it was canceled after one season. He then appeared in Hank (2009–10), another short-lived sitcom, in which he played a fired executive who moves his family from New York to a small town in Virginia. Grammer turned to dramatic television with a starring role as a ruthless Chicago mayor, portrayed with Shakespearean gravitas, in the cable series Boss (2011–12). In 2012 he won a Golden Globe Award for his performance on the show.
Grammer was paired with Martin Lawrence in 2014 in Partners, a series about two Chicago lawyers. That year he also assumed villainous roles on the big screen in the action thrillers Transformers: Age of Extinction and The Expendables 3. He then played the father of a hard-partying sorority girl (Chloë Grace Moretz) in the broad comedy Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising (2016) and a workaholic father who ends up with his estranged daughter (Kristen Bell) on a cruise that was meant for her honeymoon in Like Father (2018). Grammer later appeared in the legal drama Proven Innocent (2019), portraying a tough prosecutor, and was cast as a congressman in Charming the Hearts of Men (2020), a romantic drama set in the 1960s. His films from 2021 included The Space Between, about an aging rock star.
For much of his career, Grammer was also a highly sought-after voice artist. In 1990 he began working on the animated series The Simpsons, providing the voice of Sideshow Bob, who frequently tried to bring harm to the Simpson family. Grammer also voiced numerous characters in animated movies, including Stinky Pete the Prospector in Toy Story 2 (1999), the Tin Man in Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return (2013), and one of the title characters in Storks (2016).
Grammer occasionally acted onstage, and in 2000 he returned to Broadway, starring as the title character in Macbeth. In 2010 he appeared in La Cage aux folles, which won the Tony Award for best revival of a musical. He later starred in Finding Neverland (2015–16). Grammer also performed on the London stage, notably appearing in the musicals Big Fish (2017) and Man of La Mancha (2019).