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Jason Kravits
Jason Kravits
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Jason Kravits (born May 28, 1967) is an American character actor. He is best known for portraying A.D.A. Richard Bay on ABC's The Practice.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Kravits was born on May 28, 1967, in Passaic, New Jersey. In 1975, his family moved to Rockville, Maryland where he later attended Colonel Zadok A. Magruder High School.[1] Kravits attended the University of Maryland, College Park, where, in 1986, he co-founded the university's first improv group, Erasable Inc.[citation needed] Kravits is Jewish.[2]

Career

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Washington, D.C.

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In 1980, while still in middle school, Kravits landed his first professional acting job, playing Lolo Knopke on the short-lived 1982 PBS series Powerhouse. Upon graduation from University of Maryland, Kravits started working in theater in the Washington, D.C. area, performing regularly at the Washington Jewish Theater and Shakespeare Theater as well as The Round House Theater and Woolly Mammoth Theater companies. He was nominated for two Helen Hayes Awards for his performances in “Free Will and Wonton Lust” by Nicky Silver and “All in the Timing” by David Ives.[3]

While living in the DC area, Kravits also appeared in Major League II and Homicide: Life on the Street.

New York City

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In 1995, Kravits moved to New York City, where he began performing with the writer/performer collective “A Rumble in the Redroom.” Over several years, he, along with fellow performer Joel Hurt Jones developed enough material to create the two-man musical sketch show An Evening with Kravits and Jones. In 1998, after bringing the show to the famous Improv Comedy Club in Los Angeles, the duo was asked to perform at 1999's HBO Comedy Festival in Aspen, Colorado, where they took home the Jury Award for Best Sketch Show.[4]

Los Angeles

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In 1999, Kravits moved to Los Angeles, where he started working regularly in TV and film. Later that year, he guest starred on ABC's The Practice as A.D.A. Richard Bay. Kravits became a recurring character during the show's fourth season and a series regular during its fifth. On the show's 100th episode in 2001, Bay was assassinated after refusing to throw a murder trial.[5]

Kravits continued to work in television and film, landing roles in Gilmore Girls, Everybody Loves Raymond, Curb Your Enthusiasm, and the final episode of Friends. He also appeared regularly as a panelist on several game shows, including NBC's Hollywood Squares and CBS's To Tell the Truth.

Return to New York City

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In 2003, Kravits moved back to New York. That same year, he made his Broadway debut in Larry Gelbart's comedy play Sly Fox. In 2006, he originated the role of “Gangster Number 1” alongside his brother, Garth Kravits, who played "Gangster Number 2" in the Tony-winning musical The Drowsy Chaperone, directed by Casey Nicholaw.[6]

In 2011, Kravits joined the cast of Relatively Speaking, three one-act plays by Ethan Coen, Elaine May, and Woody Allen (directed by John Turturro).[7][8]

In 2015, Kravits developed the solo, improvised cabaret “Off the Top," featuring entirely improvised songs and music derived from audience suggestions.[9] He has performed the show at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and Adelaide Cabaret Festival, as well as venues in London, Amsterdam, Melbourne, Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and at the Birdland Theatre in New York.

In 2017, the show won a Bistro Award for Best Comedy, and was nominated for a MAC Award in 2021.[10][11]

Kravits continued to work in television and film, including guest appearances on many Chuck Lorre shows like The Big Bang Theory, Young Sheldon, and B Positive.[12] He provided the voices of Michael Bloomberg, Alan Dershowitz, and others on Our Cartoon President.[13]

Kravits has created several viral parody videos, include a Hamilton-inspired song "Harrison", about William Henry Harrison, and "The Kvetch", an animated parody of Dr. Seuss’s The Grinch.[14] In 2024 he created "The Project 2025" song, an animated short inspired by Schoolhouse Rock! detailing the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025 initiative.[15]

In 2025, Kravits was cast as Vice Principal Douglas Paunch in the off-broadway revival of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at New World Stages.[16]

Filmography

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Film

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Year Title Role Notes
1994 Major League II Accountant
1999 Blue Streak Customs guy
2000 The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas Choreographer
2000 Dancing at the Blue Iguana Gordon
2001 Sweet November Manny
2001 Monkeybone Guest Uncredited
2002 The Third Wheel Stage manager
2002 H.O.L.E.: The Disillusionment of Mike and Eva Rad Blitzstein
2004 The Stepford Wives Vic Stevens
2005 Wheelmen Percy
2006 Waltzing Anna Dr. Meyer
2008 What Just Happened Pollster
2010 See You in September Stevie
2010 Morning Glory Television executive
2011 The Adjustment Bureau New Yorker in courthouse lobby
2013 Twenty Million People Twenty Million People
2013 Chinese Puzzle L'avocat de Xavier
2014 Lullaby Ira
2016 Bling Oscar Voice
2016 My Dead Boyfriend Medical examiner
2017 Laura Gets a Cat Adam
2018 Accommodations Warren
2018 Barking Mad Irwin Cates
2021 Either Side of Midnight Bowles
2022 Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile Cy
2025 Snow White Sneezy Voice and facial motion capture

Television

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Year Title Role Notes
1982–1983 Powerhouse Lolo Knopke 16 episodes
1995 Homicide: Life on the Street P.R. Lacques Episode: "Cradle to Grave"
1996 Remember WENN Mr. Bedlow Episode: "Some Good News, Some Bad News"
1998 LateLine Elliot Episode: "Mona Moves Up"
1999 Jackie's Back Wimpy Bald Man Television film
1999–2001 The Practice A.D.A. Richard Bay 31 episodes
2001 Strong Medicine Dr. Idinger Episode: "Bloodwork"
2002 Ed Barry Gleep Episode: "Nice Guys Finish Last"
2002 Wolf Lake Bradley Episode: "Leader of the Pack"
2002 Gilmore Girls Dwight Episode: "Eight O'Clock at the Oasis"
2002 Do Over Dr. Nachman 3 episodes
2003 Becker Mr. Whitford Episode: "Mr. and Ms. Conception"
2003 Wanda at Large Roger 4 episodes
2003 Charlie Lawrence Walter Kornbluth Episode: "New Kid in School"
2004 Yes, Dear Tim Episode: "Greg Needs a Friend"
2004 CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Pierce Episode: "Bad Words"
2004 Friends Man in Cab Episode: "The Last One"
2004 Everybody Loves Raymond Sam Episode: "The Mentor"
2004 According to Jim Dr. Schulman Episode: "A Vast Difference"
2004, 2020, 2022 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Joelle's Attorney / Principal Andrew Kilgore 3 episodes
2007 Law & Order: Criminal Intent Jim Kettle Episode: "Smile"
2008 As the World Turns Dr. Brody Episode #1.13206
2008 30 Rock Keith Episode: "Reunion"
2009 Grey's Anatomy Chuck Rubin Episode: "Sympathy for the Devil"
2009 Life on Mars Jerry Episode: "Home Is Where You Hang Your Holster"
2009 Sherri Dr. Flemming Episode: "Birth"
2009–2010 Royal Pains Dr. Dan Irving 3 episodes
2010 Law & Order Attorney Baron Episode: "Blackmail"
2010 Gravity Credit card asshole 3 episodes
2010 Edgar Floats Leonard Chaskes Television film
2010–2011 Are We There Yet? Travel Agent / Banker / loan guy 2 episodes
2011 Curb Your Enthusiasm Ron Solotaroff Episode: "Palestinian Chicken"
2012 The Good Wife Nestor Episode: "Pants on Fire"
2012 Harry's Law ADA Odom 2 episodes
2013 Blue Bloods Dave Greenwald Episode: "Inside Jobs"
2013 Dallas Pamela's Lawyer 2 episodes
2013 Smash Timothy 3 episodes
2013 Raising Hope Rabbi Zwerin Episode: "Burt Mitzvah: The Musical"
2013 Sullivan & Son James Franklin Episode: "Over the Edge"
2013 Masters of Sex Doctor Episode: "Manhigh"
2013–2014 The Michael J. Fox Show Doug 7 episodes
2014 Hot in Cleveland Dr. Ira Klein Episode: "Dr. Who?"
2014 Deadbeat Buddy Silvers Episode: "The Comedium"
2014 Married Weberman Episode: "Uncool"
2014 The Blacklist Dr. Gordon Albee Episode: "Dr. James Covington (No. 89)"
2015 Blindspot Doctor Episode: "Eight Slim Grins"
2015 Madam Secretary Senator Parisi 2 episodes
2015–2016 Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt Gary Dubbin 4 episodes
2016 Madoff Frank Avellino
2016 Major Crimes D.D.A Barry Rosen 2 episodes
2017 Disjointed Franklin Young Episode: "Omega Strain"
2017 The Mick Barry 3 episodes
2017 Young Sheldon Dr. Ronald Hodges Episode: "A Patch, a Modem, and a Zantac"
2018 Kevin Can Wait Malcolm Episode: "Fight or Flight"
2018 Instinct Theodore Burton Episode: "Flat Line"
2018 The Deuce Photographer Episode: "What Big Ideas"
2018 The Kominsky Method Woody Littlehales Episode: "Chapter 2: An Agent Grieves"
2018–2020 Our Cartoon President Michael Bloomberg / Alan Dershowitz / Security Guard 1 10 episodes
2019 The Big Bang Theory Danny Episode: "The Conference Valuation"
2020 Hunters Rabbi Grossman 3 episodes
2020 The Goldbergs Dr. Mittleman Episode: "Pretty in Pink"
2020 Little Voice Dale Episode: "Ghost Light"
2020 The Undoing Dr. Stuart Rosenfeld 2 episodes
2020–2021 B Positive Dr. Baskin 5 episodes
2021 Search Party Leonard Episode: "The Imposter"
2021 Halston Carl Epstein 2 episodes
2024 Only Murders in the Building Big Mike Episode: "Valley of the Dolls"

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Jason Kravits (born May 28, 1967) is an American character actor best known for his recurring role as Assistant District Attorney Richard Bay on the ABC legal drama The Practice, which he portrayed from 1999 to 2004. Beginning his professional acting career at age 13 with a role in the PBS children's series Powerhouse in 1982, Kravits has appeared in over 50 television productions, including guest spots on Law & Order franchises, Gilmore Girls, Curb Your Enthusiasm, and more recent shows such as Veep and Only Murders in the Building. His film credits include supporting roles in The Stepford Wives (2004) and Sweet November (2001). In addition to acting, Kravits has performed in improvisational theater and received a Screen Actors Guild ensemble nomination in 2001 for The Practice.

Early life and education

Childhood and family background

Jason Kravits was born on May 28, 1967, in Passaic, New Jersey. In 1975, when he was eight years old, his family relocated to Rockville, Maryland. He has a brother, Garth Kravits, who pursued a career as an actor. Kravits demonstrated an early interest in performance, beginning at age 13 with the role of Lolo Knopke, an insecure short character who wears glasses, in the short-lived PBS children's series Powerhouse (1982), filmed in Washington, D.C.

Formal education

Kravits attended Colonel Zadok A. Magruder High School in Rockville, Maryland, where he participated in theater activities. He later enrolled at the University of Maryland, College Park, graduating with a focus on theater studies rather than strictly acting training. In 1986, while at the university, Kravits co-founded Erasable Inc., the institution's inaugural improvisational theater group, which provided foundational experience in comedic performance and ensemble work relevant to his subsequent career.

Professional career

Early work in Washington, D.C.

Kravits secured his first professional acting role at age 13, portraying the character Lolo Knopke in the PBS children's series Powerhouse, a 16-episode production by the Educational Film Center at Northern Virginia ETV that depicted the crime-fighting efforts of inner-city youth at a community center. The series, which aired in 1982, received acclaim for its educational focus but lasted only one season. Even before this debut, Kravits had gained initial stage experience through community theater performances in the Washington, D.C., area, beginning around age 10. After graduating from the University of Maryland, he immersed himself in the regional professional theater circuit, becoming a recognized presence at key D.C. institutions such as the Shakespeare Theatre, Arena Stage, and Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, where he honed character-driven roles in diverse productions. In the early 1990s, he served as a company member at Round House Theatre in nearby Silver Spring, Maryland, contributing to ensemble works that emphasized ensemble dynamics and versatile acting. These engagements provided foundational training in live performance and improvisation amid the competitive local scene.

Initial pursuits in New York City

After completing his early professional engagements in Washington, D.C., Jason Kravits relocated to New York City in 1995 at the age of 28 to pursue opportunities in the competitive theater and audition circuits. Upon arrival, he encountered significant industry hurdles, including a sudden decline in theater work compared to his prior experiences and difficulty securing a theatrical agent, which limited access to major productions and callbacks. Kravits persisted through persistent auditions for off-Broadway and regional theater roles during the mid-1990s, navigating a landscape marked by high competition and frequent rejections typical of aspiring performers entering New York's established scene. To build his skills amid these challenges, he joined the writer-performer collective A Rumble in the Red Room, collaborating with other artists on original sketches and performances that emphasized quick adaptation and creative output under resource constraints. This period honed Kravits' improvisational abilities, as the collective's format required spontaneous development of characters and material, fostering resilience in an environment where consistent bookings were elusive and required relentless self-promotion and networking. Despite the scarcity of principal roles, these efforts laid foundational experience in New York's audition ecosystem, where actors often balanced day jobs with cattle-call tryouts for ensemble parts in emerging plays and musicals.

Transition to Los Angeles

In 1999, Kravits relocated from New York to Los Angeles to capitalize on the city's concentration of television production and pursue screen acting amid the annual pilot season cycle. This geographic pivot marked a deliberate shift from East Coast theater and improvisation toward episodic television and film, where opportunities for character actors hinged on auditions for supporting parts in network pilots and established series. Upon arrival, Kravits quickly obtained a guest-starring role on ABC's The Practice as Assistant District Attorney Richard Bay, a part that evolved into a recurring arc spanning multiple episodes from 1999 to 2004. The series, created by David E. Kelley and filmed in Los Angeles, provided an early foothold in primetime drama, demanding adaptation to the faster-paced demands of on-camera performance, including tighter dialogue delivery and collaboration with ensemble casts under studio constraints. As a journeyman character actor in Hollywood's star-driven ecosystem, Kravits faced the inherent challenges of securing consistent work without leading-man appeal, often competing for brief guest spots or recurring supporting roles that required versatility in accents and archetypes to stand out in a market favoring A-list talent. He supplemented these with auditions during pilot season, a high-stakes period where networks greenlit potential series, though success remained sporadic and tied to typecasting in authoritative or comedic relief figures.

Return to New York City and ongoing endeavors

In 2003, following an extended period of television and film work in Los Angeles, Kravits returned to New York City, where he continued building his career across both coasts. This relocation aligned with the final years of his tenure as Assistant District Attorney Richard Bay on ABC's The Practice (1997–2004), a role that showcased his versatility in legal dramas and culminated in a high-profile storyline involving the character's shooting death by a vengeful defendant in 2001. Post-The Practice, Kravits maintained a steady presence in television through recurring and guest roles, leveraging his East Coast base for New York-filmed projects. In the 2020s, he appeared as Big Mike, husband to Melissa McCarthy's character, in the fourth season episode "Valley of the Dolls" of Hulu's Only Murders in the Building (2024). His ongoing work reflects sustained demand for his character-driven performances in ensemble comedies and dramas. Kravits has also revitalized his stage career with improvisational and musical endeavors. In 2025, he took on the role of Vice Principal Douglas Panch in the off-Broadway revival of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee at New World Stages, with previews starting November 7 and opening night on November 17, scheduled to run through February 15, 2026. Complementing this, he has toured and performed his solo improvisational cabaret Off the Top!, including sold-out runs at Joe's Pub, blending comedy, music, and audience interaction to affirm his live performance roots.

Notable works and performances

Television appearances

Kravits first achieved significant recognition for his role as Assistant District Attorney Richard Bay on the ABC legal drama The Practice, appearing recurrently in season 4 (1999–2000) and as a main cast member in season 5 (2000–2001). Portrayed as a diminutive yet aggressive prosecutor convinced of defendants' guilt, Bay's arc culminated in his on-screen murder by a hitman in retaliation for a conviction, a plot point that aired on May 13, 2001. The series earned Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Drama Series in 1998 and 1999 prior to his involvement. He has accumulated over 50 television credits, with frequent guest spots in procedural dramas, including multiple appearances across the Law & Order franchise. In Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, Kravits played Principal Andrew Kilgore in the season 6 episode "Mean" (February 1, 2005) and attorney Sandy Braun in "Ballad of Dwight and Irena" (season 21, October 1, 2020) and "Breakwater" (season 24, October 27, 2022). Additional roles include attorney Baron in Law & Order's "Blackmail" (season 20, May 24, 2010) and Jim Kettle in Law & Order: Criminal Intent's unspecified episode. Later recurring work includes Doug on The Michael J. Fox Show (7 episodes, 2013), a rabbi in Raising Hope (1 episode, 2013), and three episodes of the musical drama Smash (2013). In comedy, he guest-starred as Barry across three episodes of Fox's The Mick in season 1 (2017), including "The Country Club" (February 7, 2017). More recent credits encompass Dr. Ronald Hodges on Young Sheldon (season 1, episode 6, November 2, 2017) and appearances on Hulu's Only Murders in the Building.

Film roles

Kravits has primarily worked as a supporting actor in feature films, often in brief but memorable roles that highlight his ability to portray neurotic or quirky professionals within ensemble casts. His cinematic output is modest compared to his television appearances, reflecting a career emphasis on episodic and stage work rather than leading film parts. Notable early credits include uncredited cameos and small roles in early 2000s productions. In Sweet November (2001), directed by Pat O'Connor, Kravits played Manny, a friend of the protagonist who provides comic relief amid the film's exploration of terminal illness and fleeting romance. He followed with a guest appearance in Monkeybone (2001), an uncredited role in the fantasy comedy starring Brendan Fraser. In 2002, he appeared as the stage manager in The Third Wheel, a romantic comedy focused on mismatched relationships. His role as Vic Stevens in Frank Oz's remake of The Stepford Wives (2004) involved portraying a conformist husband in the dystopian suburb, contributing to the film's satirical take on gender roles and consumerism. Later films featured Kravits in bureaucratic or eccentric minor characters, such as a television executive in Morning Glory (2010), a newsroom satire with Rachel McAdams and Harrison Ford. In The Adjustment Bureau (2011), he had a small part as a New Yorker in the courthouse lobby during a pivotal scene involving Matt Damon and Emily Blunt's characters navigating fate and free will. Subsequent credits include Ira in the drama Lullaby (2014), Oscar in the animated Bling (2016), the medical examiner in My Dead Boyfriend (2016), and Adam in the independent comedy Laura Gets a Cat (2017). These roles underscore his persistence in niche supporting capacities without transitioning to protagonists.

Theater and improvisational shows

Kravits developed his improvisational skills through foundational training, which became central to his live performance style, enabling spontaneous musical and comedic creations drawn from audience input. His signature work in this vein is the solo cabaret Off the Top!, an award-winning one-man show consisting entirely of improvised songs and comedy generated from suggestions written by patrons on slips of paper. The production premiered in the early 2010s and has since achieved sold-out runs, with performances at New York venues including Joe's Pub, Birdland, and the Duplex, as well as international tours to London and Australian cities like Adelaide. In structured theater, Kravits holds Broadway credits that complement his improvisational foundation, such as his debut as Lawyer Craven in the 2004 revival of Sly Fox at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre and a two-year run (2006–2008) as one of the villainous Tall Brothers in the Tony Award-winning musical The Drowsy Chaperone at the Marquis Theatre. Off-Broadway appearances include roles in productions like Relatively Speaking and Honeymoon Motel. More recently, he joined the cast of the 20th-anniversary off-Broadway revival of The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, directed by Lianah Staiger, with previews beginning October 28, 2025, and opening night on November 17, 2025, at the Lucille Lortel Theatre.

Personal life

Family and relationships

Kravits has a brother, Garth Kravits, who pursues a parallel career as an actor, singer, songwriter, composer, and musician. The siblings share familial ties that underscore mutual encouragement in their entertainment endeavors, distinct from professional overlaps. Little public information exists on other family relationships or marital status, reflecting Kravits's discretion regarding private matters.

Public commentary and satire

Engagement with political topics

In September 2024, Jason Kravits wrote, animated, and performed "The Project 2025 Song," a parody released on YouTube that critiques the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025 initiative. Project 2025 consists of a detailed policy blueprint, personnel database, training resources, and implementation playbook designed to enable a conservative administration to restructure the federal government, emphasizing reductions in regulatory overreach, restoration of constitutional separations of power, and efficiency reforms supported by analyses of bureaucratic expansion. Kravits' production, styled as a Schoolhouse Rock educational segment, uses child-directed animation and lyrics to portray the agenda's proposals—such as agency consolidations and policy shifts on education and environment—as authoritarian threats, employing hyperbolic scenarios that diverge from the document's focus on evidence-based critiques of administrative state growth. This satirical effort aligns with Kravits' improvisational performance roots, prioritizing entertainment through exaggeration over policy dissection, which limits its role in substantive causal analysis of governance reforms. The video amassed over 1.7 million views and circulated widely in progressive online forums and theater networks, where it was hailed by left-leaning commentators as an incisive takedown revealing hidden dangers, though such endorsements reflect outlets' systemic opposition to conservative frameworks often framed without equivalent scrutiny of empirical counterarguments for deregulation. Right-leaning observers, in broader discussions of Project 2025 critiques, have dismissed similar parodies as distortions that amplify unrepresentative elements while eliding data on federal inefficiencies, such as duplicated programs and cost overruns documented in the blueprint. Kravits' output exemplifies left-leaning political expression common in entertainment, facing no reported professional backlash or legal issues amid industry norms favoring such viewpoints over balanced engagement. Earlier instances, like his 2020 parody mashing Donald Trump's cognitive test with "Cell Block Tango" from Chicago, similarly targeted Republican figures through musical satire, underscoring a pattern of partisan humor without venturing into right-leaning topics.

References

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