Grey's Anatomy
Biography / Bio
James Pickens Jr. / Dr. Richard Webber


Character Name: Dr. Richard Webber
Birth Name: James Pickens Jr.
Birth Date: October 26, 1954
Birth Place: Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Height: 1.83 m
Weight:
Marital Status: Gina Taylor-Pickens (m. 1984)
Flimography: Click here! to read about his other roles
Parents: James Pickens Sr.
Children: 2 - Carl Tharps and Gavyn Pickens
Trivia: Featured briefly in the American Quarter Horse Association's publication, America's Horse. He is a horseman, roper and philanthropist. The James Pickens Jr. Foundation is a nonprofit organization focusing on the sport of rodeo.
Schooling: Bachelor's degree in Fine Arts from Bowling Green State University in 1976.

About the character:

About the actor:
Original “Grey’s Anatomy” cast member James Pickens Jr. started acting in his hometown of Cleveland at the Karamu House, distinguished as the oldest African-American theater in the United States. He performed a reading of the play “Home” by Samm-Art Williams, in celebration of the theater’s centennial.

After moving to New York, he performed in the historic 1981 production of Charles Fullers’ “A Soldier’s Play” at the Negro Ensemble Company with fellow cast members Denzel Washington and Samuel L. Jackson. He was a member of the famed Circle Rep/Steppenwolf Theatre Company co-production of Lanford Wilson’s “Balm in Gilead,” and starred as Walter Lee in the 25th anniversary revival of “A Raisin in the Sun” at the Roundabout Theater.

Pickens moved to the West Coast and began a run of film and television performances. On the big screen, he has been directed by some of the film industry’s finest, including Steven Soderbergh in “Traffic,” Oliver Stone in “Nixon” and Warren Beatty in “Bulworth,” and he appeared in four Barry Levinson films – “Sleepers,” “Sphere,” “Jimmy Hollywood” and “Liberty Heights.” He portrayed slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers in “Ghosts of Mississippi” (directed by Rob Reiner), and played Angela Bassett’s ex-husband in “How Stella Got Her Groove Back.” Other films include “Menace II Society,” “Home Room,” “Gridlock’d” and “Just Wright,” starring Queen Latifah and Common. He also appeared in “42,” the film about baseball legend Jackie Robinson, which starred Harrison Ford and the late Chadwick Boseman, and was directed by Brian Helgeland.

Pickens performed in the Los Angeles stage reading of “8,” the story of the historic Proposition 8 marriage equality case, which was directed by Rob Reiner and included an all-star cast of George Clooney, Martin Sheen, Kevin Bacon, Jamie Lee Curtis, Christine Lahti, John C. Reilly and Brad Pitt.

As Dr. Richard Webber, Pickens is one of the few original cast members of ABC’s award-winning, critically acclaimed drama “Grey’s Anatomy” to remain with the show throughout its 17 seasons. Television viewers may also remember him for his recurring roles on such series as “NYPD Blue,” “The X-Files,” “The Practice,” “Philly,” “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” “Six Feet Under,” “The West Wing,” “Roseanne” and “Beverly Hills 90210,” Pickens also starred opposite Rob Lowe in “The Lyon’s Den” (NBC) and with William H. Macy and Felicity Huffman in “A Slight Case of Murder” (TNT). For his role on “Grey’s Anatomy,” he received a Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Drama Ensemble and, most recently, won an NAACP Image Award, which he describes as “especially gratifying after seven consecutive nominations!”

He and his wife oversee the James Pickens Jr. Foundation, whose mission is to enhance the lives of families and children in underserved communities. He hosts an annual charity roping event in Los Angeles, which draws some of the best team ropers in the sport. He and his wife, Gina, a singer, have a son and a daughter.

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