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Kimberly Hébert Gregory
American actress (1972–2025) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kimberly Rochelle Hébert Gregory (née Hébert; December 7, 1972 – October 3, 2025) was an American actress. She began her career in theatre, appearing in such plays as Tarell Alvin McCraney's triptych, The Brother/Sister Plays, produced in 2009 at New York's The Public,[2] and many others, before her breakthrough role as Dr. Belinda Brown in the HBO comedy series Vice Principals in 2016. She also voiced Nicole Williams in Craig of the Creek.[3]
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Early life
Kimberly Hébert was born on December 7, 1972, in Houston,[4] the youngest of three. She graduated from The High School for the Performing and Visual Arts in her native Houston. She received a BA in psychology from Mount Holyoke College in 1994, spent a term at The Theatre School at DePaul University for an MFA in acting, and earned a master's in social work from the School of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago in 2002.[5]
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Career
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Theatre
Acting for the theater was Kimbery Hébert Gregory’s first love, if not her life partner, as she jokingly explained during a 2017 appearance on New York’s “Build Series.”[6] After graduating from Mount Holyoke in 1994, Hébert Gregory moved to Chicago to attend Depaul's Theatre School and starred in a number of Chicago Theatre Company productions in the late 1990s, including McKinley Johnson’s Train is Comin' in 1996 and a theater adaptation of Walter Mosley's A Red Death in 1997.[7][8] For her performance as "Daughter" in The Chicago Theatre Company's production of Shay Youngblood's Shakin' the Mess Outta Misery, she earned a Black Theatre Alliance Award and was nominated for a 1998 Equity Branch Jeff Award.[9][10][11][12] The actor went on to play Ida Jackson in James Baldwin's The Amen Corner for the 2001–2002 season at the Goodman Theatre, also appearing that year as Zerbinette in the Court Theatre's production of Moliére's Scapin.[9][13] Hébert Gregory was selected to participate in the 2006 Sundance Institute Theatre Laboratory (founded in 1969 by Robert Redford).[14] Other roles included a part in Filloux, McCraney, and Sutton’s The Breach in 2008; Sadie in Elyzabeth Gregory Wilder's gospel play Gee's Bend at the Hartford Stage in 2010; Charmian in Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra in 2010; Lanford Wilson’s The Hot L Baltimore at Steppenwolf's Downstairs Theatre in Chicago in 2011; Lisa Kron’s The Ver**zon Play at The Public in 2011; and Aunt Elegua/Shun in Tarell Alvin McCraney's Brother/Sister Plays in New York between 2009 and 2011, with a reprisal of the role in LA in 2012.[15][16][17][18]
In 2012, Hébert Gregory was nominated for the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play and a Lucille Lotrel award for her performance opposite Sanaa Lathan in By The Way, Meet Vera Stark.[19][20]
Her theatre acting work did not end there. Among others, in 2013, she appeared in Goddess, by Mkhululi Mabija and Michael Thurber at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center; in 2016, she featured in Robert O'Hara's Barbecue, directed by Colman Domingo at LA's Geffen Playhouse; in 2019, she appeared in Black Super Hero Magic Mama by Inda Craig-Galván at the Geffen; and in 2020, she contributed The Homebound Project in work by Loy A. Webb.[21][22][23] During her 2017 appearance on Build Series, the actor said she would always welcome theatre acting opportunities.[6]
Film and television
Hébert Gregory's first film role was in Chris Rock's romantic comedy I Think I Love My Wife (2007), after which she appeared in Spike Lee's Red Hook Summer (2012), Viviana Leo's White Alligator (2012), and The Genesis of Lincoln (never released). She first appeared on the smaller screen in the late 1990s in the CBS comedy Early Edition, going on to guest star on Gossip Girl, Law & Order, Grey's Anatomy, Private Practice, Two and a Half Men, and The Big Bang Theory.[9][24][25][26] In 2014, she had a recurring role as Lucinda Miller in the Lifetime comedy-drama series, Devious Maids.[27] In 2016, she starred as series regular Dr. Belinda Brown in the HBO comedy series Vice Principals, opposite Danny McBride.[28] In September 2016, trade publication TheWrap described Hébert Gregory as the show's "breakout star."[3]
In early 2017, she was cast opposite Toni Collette in the ABC action comedy-drama pilot Unit Zero produced by Kenya Barris, although ABC later declined to produce the series.[29] She had recurring roles in Brooklyn Nine-Nine and Better Call Saul. Later in 2017, Hébert Gregory was cast in a female leading role in the ABC comedy-drama Kevin (Probably) Saves the World.[30][31]
That same year, Hébert Gregory was cast on the Cartoon Network animated series Craig of the Creek, in which she had a starring role as Nicole Williams, the mother of the titular character. She also appeared in the 2023 spinoff Jessica's Big Little World[32] and the 2023 prequel film Craig Before the Creek.[33]
Hébert Gregory later appeared on The Act, The Chi and All Rise.[26] In 2019, she co-starred in the romantic drama film Five Feet Apart.[34]
In 2019, Hébert Gregory got the opportunity to work with sister Mount Holyoke college alum, Suzan-Lori Parks, who served as showrunner for the National Geographic anthology series Genius: Aretha, starring Cynthia Erivo. Hébert Gregory was cast as talent agent Ruth Jean Baskerville Bowen.[35] In 2023, for the Netflix original animated limited series Carol & the End of the World, she voiced the titular character's bestie.[36]
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Personal life and death
Hébert Gregory married fellow Chicago actor, Chester Gregory, with whom she had a son; the couple later divorced.[1] The actor's October 3, 2025, death was confirmed by her Vice Principals co-star Walton Goggins, who paid tribute to her on his Instagram account.[37][25]
Filmography
Film
Television
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References
External links
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