Beth Behrs
Elizabeth Ann Behrs (born December 26, 1985) is an American actress recognized primarily for her portrayal of Caroline Channing, a dispossessed socialite working as a waitress, in the CBS sitcom 2 Broke Girls, which aired from 2011 to 2017 across six seasons.[1][2] Behrs, a graduate of the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television, began her career with guest appearances on television before achieving breakthrough success with 2 Broke Girls, co-starring Kat Dennings.[3][4] Following the series' conclusion, she took on the recurring role of Gemma Johnson, the optimistic wife of a family man navigating cultural clashes, in the CBS comedy The Neighborhood from 2018 to 2024.[5][1] Beyond acting, Behrs has authored works including the 2014 memoir The Blonde, the Freak & the Awkward One, detailing her early life and entry into Hollywood, and the 2017 wellness guide The Total ME-Tox, focusing on holistic health practices derived from her personal experiences.[6]Early life
Upbringing and family background
Elizabeth Ann Behrs was born on December 26, 1985, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.[3] She is the elder daughter of David Behrs, a college administrator who later served as president of Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College and head of school at San Domenico School in San Anselmo, California, and Maureen Behrs, a first-grade teacher.[7][8] Behrs has one younger sister, Emily Jeannette Behrs, born six years later.[9][3] Behrs spent her early childhood on the East Coast, with her family relocating from Lancaster to locations including Springfield and Lynchburg, Virginia, amid her father's professional commitments in educational administration.[10] At age 15, around 2000, the family moved to Marin County, California, following David Behrs's appointment at San Domenico School, necessitating adjustments to a new coastal environment and community.[8] This relocation aligned with the family's pattern of prioritizing stability through educational and administrative roles, fostering an upbringing centered on academic and institutional achievement.[11]Education and initial pursuits
Behrs pursued her early education in Marin County, California, attending Archie Williams High School, where she studied drama and participated in theatrical activities.[12] She further developed her performance skills through training at the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco, appearing in multiple stage productions prior to college.[3] Complementing this, Behrs received classical vocal training, which informed her foundational approach to expressive arts.[3][13] In 2004, Behrs relocated to Los Angeles to enroll in the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Theater, Film and Television, focusing on acting.[13] She graduated from the program in 2008, having honed her craft amid a competitive academic environment that emphasized practical stage and screen techniques.[14] During her undergraduate years, she began auditioning for professional opportunities while balancing coursework, laying groundwork for her transition into the industry without prior commercial credits.[4] In 2006, she was named Miss Marin County, reflecting early public poise developed through her performative background.[15]Professional career
Early roles and breakthrough (2006–2011)
Behrs secured her screen acting debut in the 2009 direct-to-video teen comedy American Pie Presents: The Book of Love, portraying the character Heidi alongside leads Bug Hall, Kevin M. Horton, and Brandon Hardesty.[16] The production filmed over seven weeks in Vancouver, providing her initial experience in a feature-length project within the franchise's established comedic framework.[17] Transitioning to television, Behrs appeared in minor guest capacities on established series, including as a female caroler in the NCIS: Los Angeles episode "Disorder," which aired January 11, 2011.[18] She followed with a role as Ginger in the Castle episode "Slice of Death," broadcast February 21, 2011, amid a period of supplementing acting pursuits with jobs such as nannying and bartending at the Geffen Playhouse to navigate financial constraints in Los Angeles.[19][20] These limited appearances represented her efforts to accumulate credits through persistent auditions in a saturated market dominated by aspiring performers. Her persistence culminated in 2011 with casting as Caroline Channing in the pilot for CBS's 2 Broke Girls, a role that positioned her opposite Kat Dennings and established her in a sustained lead capacity on prime-time network comedy following prior sporadic bookings.[21]2 Broke Girls era (2011–2017)
Beth Behrs gained prominence portraying Caroline Channing, a formerly affluent business student who loses her wealth due to her father's financial scandal and becomes a waitress at a Brooklyn diner while aspiring to launch a cupcake business with her roommate Max Black.[22] The CBS sitcom 2 Broke Girls, co-starring Kat Dennings as Max, premiered on September 19, 2011, and ran for six seasons, concluding on April 17, 2017, with 138 episodes centered on the protagonists' entrepreneurial efforts amid financial hardship.[23] The series drew from post-recession economic realities, emphasizing the duo's incremental savings toward their business goal as a narrative of perseverance.[24] The show achieved strong initial viewership, with its pilot episode attracting 19.37 million viewers and season one averaging 11.27 million, ranking it among CBS's top performers in the 18-49 demographic during early seasons.[25] Despite later declines—season six averaged 5.6 million viewers and a 1.3 rating in adults 18-49—it sustained a dedicated audience, contributing to syndication deals valued at $1.5–1.7 million per episode.[26] [27] Achievements included a 2012 People's Choice Award for Favorite New TV Comedy and a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Art Direction for a Multi-Camera Series in 2012, alongside multiple nominations for cinematography and editing.[28] [29] These successes elevated Behrs' profile, fostering a personal fanbase drawn to Caroline's optimistic, entrepreneurial traits and enabling Behrs to earn approximately $150,000 per episode, which provided financial stability and positioned her for future industry opportunities.[30] The program's humor, blending rapid-fire banter on class contrasts with the protagonists' rags-to-riches aspirations, elicited mixed reception; some praised its unvarnished depiction of diner life and the American Dream's challenges, as in the characters' realistic budgeting for business startup costs.[31] However, critics frequently condemned its reliance on ethnic stereotypes, particularly the portrayal of diner owner Han Lee as a diminutive, socially awkward Korean immigrant, which outlets like The Guardian described as "so racist it's baffling" for perpetuating asexual, work-obsessed Asian tropes.[32] [33] Accusations extended to classist undertones in mocking lower-income struggles, though creator Michael Patrick King defended the jokes as non-malicious, citing his own identity and intent to satirize broadly without targeting harm, a stance echoed by cast member Matthew Moy who argued the content was "never mean."[34] [35] [36] During this period, Behrs' primary focus remained 2 Broke Girls, with limited concurrent roles underscoring the series' demands, though it afforded her leverage for selective voice and guest appearances that complemented her rising visibility without diluting her lead status.[1] The show's formula, prioritizing the odd-couple dynamic of Caroline's polished ambition against Max's cynicism, propelled Behrs toward financial independence, amassing wealth estimated at $20 million largely from the production, while critiques highlighted tensions between its commercial viability and representational shortcomings.[37]Subsequent television and film work (2018–present)
Behrs assumed the lead role of Gemma Johnson in the CBS sitcom The Neighborhood, which premiered on October 1, 2018, and aired until its conclusion after the eighth season in 2025.[38] [39] As Gemma, a bubbly school principal and self-described progressive, she depicted the wife of a dentist relocating from the Midwest to a predominantly Black Los Angeles neighborhood, where the family encounters cultural and ideological tensions with their outspoken neighbors portrayed by Cedric the Entertainer and Tichina Arnold.[40] The character's arc often highlighted earnest but occasionally tone-deaf attempts at allyship, contributing to the series' exploration of racial dynamics through situational comedy.[38] The show achieved steady performance, with IMDb user ratings averaging 6.7/10 across 169 episodes and Rotten Tomatoes audience scores consistently above 80% for multiple seasons, reflecting reliable network viewership in a competitive broadcast landscape.[38] [41] Beyond The Neighborhood, Behrs took on selective film projects, including a voice role in the Chinese animated feature Boonie Bears: The Big Shrink released in 2018, and a supporting part as Rachel in the independent comedy The Opening Act (2020), which followed an accountant's late-in-life entry into stand-up comedy.[42] [1] These roles underscored a pattern of prioritizing quality-driven opportunities over high-volume output, aligning with her transition from ensemble sitcoms to centered narratives amid the post-network era's emphasis on long-form television.[1] Behrs maintained visibility through episodic television appearances, such as guest-starring as Nell, a love interest for Raj Koothrappali, in the 2018 episode "The Conference Valuation" of The Big Bang Theory, which drew 12.5 million viewers.[1] [17] She also recurred as Sophie Beyers in the 2019 season of the comedy series No Activity.[1] By 2024, with The Neighborhood in its later seasons, her on-screen work remained anchored in that series, evidencing a deliberate focus on sustained character development rather than diversified short-term engagements.[1]Authorship and other creative pursuits
Published works
Behrs authored the self-help book The Total ME-Tox: How to Ditch Your Diet, Move Your Body & Love Your Life, co-written with Wendy Shanker and published by Weinstein Books on May 2, 2017.[6] The work draws from her personal experiences overcoming a junk-food-dependent lifestyle and related health challenges, emphasizing practical steps for sustainable wellness rather than restrictive dieting.[43] It advocates self-directed changes in eating habits, physical activity, and mindset, including original recipes, grocery shopping strategies, and at-home exercises tailored for busy individuals.[44] Central themes include rejecting fad diets in favor of intuitive, evidence-based nutrition informed by trial-and-error outcomes, such as prioritizing whole foods to address emotional eating triggers.[45] Behrs promotes accountability for one's bodily responses to habits, critiquing external quick-fixes that ignore causal links between diet, movement, and long-term energy levels, while encouraging forgiveness for setbacks as part of habit reformation.[46] The book frames health recovery as rooted in observable personal data—like improved mood from consistent activity—over generalized prescriptions, aligning with a realistic view of individual variability in metabolic and psychological responses.[43] Reception has been generally positive among self-help readers for its approachable tone and relatable anecdotes, with an average rating of 3.84 out of 5 on Goodreads based on over 260 reviews.[44] Critics and endorsers, including wellness outlets, praised its emphasis on authenticity and non-perfectionist progress, though some noted its reliance on anecdotal evidence limits scientific depth.[46] No major sales figures are publicly detailed, but it achieved visibility through Behrs' media appearances tying her acting career to wellness advocacy.[47]Additional endeavors
Behrs voiced the character PNK Carrie, a sorority pledge in the fraternity party scene, in the 2013 Pixar animated film Monsters University.[1] She also provided the voice for Moochie, a mischievous alien pet, in the Netflix animated series Home: Adventures with Tip & Oh, which aired from 2016 to 2018.[1] These voice roles demonstrated her versatility in animation, leveraging her comedic timing from television without requiring on-screen presence.[48] In June 2016, Behrs made her New York stage debut starring as Marla, a stand-up comedian character, in the Off-Broadway world premiere of Halley Feiffer's dark comedy A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Gynecologic Oncology Unit at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center of New York City at MCC Theater's Lucille Lortel Theatre.[49] The production, directed by Leigh Silverman, ran from May 26 to July 3, 2016, and explored themes of illness and performance through two women bonding in a hospital ward.[50] Behrs drew on her theater training from the American Conservatory Theater to prepare, marking a return to live performance amid her television commitments.[51]Philanthropic efforts
Founding of SheHerdPower
SheHerdPower was established in 2016 as a program under the nonprofit Reflective Horse Foundation, co-founded by Beth Behrs and equestrian professional Amanda Ogier, to deliver equine-assisted therapy specifically to survivors of sexual assault.[52] The initiative began with a pilot program pairing participants with horses to facilitate trauma recovery, drawing on Behrs' prior personal experience with equine therapy since 2011 for managing anxiety.[53] Operations emphasize hands-on interactions with horses to build trust, emotional regulation, and resilience, positioning the herd dynamic as a model for human empowerment rather than passive victim support.[54] The program's therapeutic approach leverages evidence from equine-assisted interventions, which multiple studies indicate can reduce PTSD symptoms through mechanisms like lowered cortisol levels and enhanced interpersonal mirroring with animals.[55][56] For instance, a Columbia University trial found significant decreases in PTSD and depressive symptoms persisting three months post-treatment among participants.[56] Behrs has actively participated in sessions and promoted funding through personal contributions, donor events, and merchandise sales, such as bracelets channeling proceeds to the foundation.[52][57] Early outcomes included positive participant feedback on regained agency, with the pilot's success prompting expansion, though large-scale randomized metrics remain limited compared to broader equine therapy research.[52] This evidence-based focus prioritizes causal pathways to self-efficacy—such as mastering nonverbal cues with horses—over indefinite therapeutic dependence, aligning with findings that short-term animal interactions yield measurable symptom relief without supplanting individual accountability.[58]Broader charitable involvements
Behrs has engaged in animal welfare initiatives beyond her equine-focused foundation, particularly supporting rescues and awareness campaigns for at-risk horses. In April 2016, she partnered with the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) to promote Help a Horse Day, highlighting the plight of neglected and abused equines through public outreach.[59] In January 2021, she became an EQUUStar for the EQUUS Foundation, leveraging her platform to aid in fundraising and advocacy for horse protection programs, including emergency rescues.[60] She has also participated in hands-on efforts, such as a February 2020 collaboration with the EQUUS Foundation and Rising Starr Horse Rescue to save five Thoroughbreds from slaughter, emphasizing coordinated private-sector interventions over government dependency.[61] In recent years, Behrs has extended support to causes promoting self-reliance among women in agriculture. In September 2025, she collaborated with Range Revolution on a boot line, directing a portion of proceeds to Women in Ranching, an organization that provides practical training in land stewardship and regenerative farming to female ranchers, fostering individual skill-building in rural economies. This involvement aligns with sporadic appearances at events underscoring personal empowerment through hands-on expertise rather than institutional frameworks.[62] Additional endorsements include backing for environmental groups like Oceana, focused on ocean conservation, as documented in celebrity philanthropy trackers, though specific actions remain limited to promotional support.[63] Her broader giving prioritizes targeted, verifiable donations to animal and rural women's initiatives, with no extensive record of large-scale or ongoing commitments to other sectors.Personal life
Marriage and family
Behrs married actor Michael Gladis on July 21, 2018, at Moose Creek Ranch in Victor, Idaho.[64] The couple had met in 2007 at an after-party for the premiere of the television series Mad Men, where Gladis's sister took a photograph of Behrs, and they began dating in 2012 after maintaining acquaintance through professional circles.[65] [66] They announced their engagement on July 11, 2016.[67] Behrs and Gladis welcomed their first child, daughter Emma George Gladis, in June 2022; Behrs shared the news via Instagram on June 13 without disclosing the precise birth date.[68] [69] In the announcement, Behrs described the family's response as one of profound joy, reflecting an adjustment to parenthood alongside ongoing professional commitments.[70] The family resides in the Los Angeles area, where Behrs owns property in the Hollywood Hills, and has prioritized privacy in family matters amid her acting career.[71] No further children have been publicly confirmed as of 2025.[65]Health and lifestyle
Behrs practices yoga nidra, a guided meditation technique, to manage anxiety by calming her nervous system, which she compares to the effects of equine interactions.[72] She has incorporated equine activities into her routine for mental resilience, rescuing a horse approximately seven years prior to 2020 and crediting horses with reducing her lifelong anxiety through their grounding presence.[72][73] In her 2017 wellness guide The Total Me-Tox, Behrs detailed adopting evidence-based habits like balanced nutrition and regular exercise after a six-month stress-induced viral rash covered her body, triggered by daily consumption of funnel cakes, doughnuts, and lack of physical activity during her early acting career.[45][74] These changes addressed inflammation from poor dietary choices rather than restrictive dieting, emphasizing sustainable health over transient trends.[75] Behrs experienced perimenopausal symptoms starting at age 35 around 2020, including hot flashes, insomnia, heavy periods, and fatigue, linked to her low ovarian reserve discovered during egg freezing that year.[76][77] She reported initial dismissal of these symptoms by certain physicians, particularly male ones, who deemed her "too young," prompting her to advocate for earlier awareness among women in their mid-30s via public disclosures in late 2024 and 2025.[78][79] Following the birth of her daughter in June 2022, Behrs maintained proactive self-care routines incorporating reading, social connections, and nature-based activities to sustain well-being amid motherhood demands.[68][80] No major adverse health events have been reported as of 2025.Public reception and controversies
Critical assessments of work
Behrs' portrayal of Caroline Channing in 2 Broke Girls (2011–2017) contributed to the series' commercial viability, with episodes averaging over 7 million viewers in early seasons and sustaining a Nielsen demo rating of around 3.0–3.7 across its six-season run, reflecting broad audience appeal despite critical reservations.[81] Critics offered mixed assessments, praising the lead actresses' chemistry and Behrs' polished delivery of the character's aspirational optimism, yet faulting the show for reliance on formulaic, raunchy humor and occasional insensitivity toward class and ethnic stereotypes.[82][83] The first season garnered a 64% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 42 reviews, with detractors highlighting repetitive setups and uneven tonal shifts between slapstick and social commentary.[82] In The Neighborhood (2018–2025), Behrs played Gemma Johnson, a role that extended the sitcom's run to seven seasons and earned her a 2024 Family Film Award nomination for outstanding actor in a TV series, underscoring sustained viewer engagement amid a competitive broadcast landscape.[84] Reviews, however, were predominantly negative, with the pilot season scoring only 24% on Rotten Tomatoes from 17 critics, who critiqued the series for superficial handling of interracial dynamics, overreliance on sitcom tropes, and underdeveloped characterizations that rendered Behrs' performance as earnest but constrained by weak scripting.[85] Outlets described the ensemble's efforts, including Behrs', as undermined by gag-heavy writing and regressive stereotypes, though some acknowledged her ability to inject relatability into the well-meaning but quirky principal.[86][40] Aggregate metrics position Behrs as a reliable supporting player in ensemble comedies, with her major roles averaging IMDb user ratings of 6.7/10, indicative of competent timing and likability offset by perceptions of typecasting in bubbly, optimistic archetypes lacking dramatic range.[23][38] She received early recognition via a 2012 Teen Choice nomination for breakout TV performance but no major wins, with the shows' longevity serving as a proxy for her marketability rather than critical acclaim.[14] Performances in films like American Pie Presents: The Book of Love (2009) drew tepid responses for fitting the genre's lightweight demands without standout impact.[87]Public persona and viewpoints
Beth Behrs presents a public image that prioritizes interpersonal dialogue and mutual understanding across racial lines, exemplified by her longstanding friendship with co-star Tichina Arnold on the CBS sitcom The Neighborhood. In a 2020 New York Times interview, Behrs expressed gratitude for Arnold's candor in addressing difficult topics, underscoring how such open exchanges foster genuine interracial bonds amid broader societal tensions.[88] Arnold, in turn, stressed the obligation in cross-racial friendships to communicate truths directly rather than withhold them, a dynamic Behrs affirmed as essential for navigating differences.[88] Behrs has consistently advocated for humor and education as tools to mitigate division, aligning with The Neighborhood's premise of unlikely neighbors learning from one another. During a 2018 Parade discussion, she described the series as tackling race relations through heartfelt scenarios that encourage viewers to confront ignorance by laughing at variances, absorbing lessons, and sharing insights, ultimately strengthening community ties.[89] This approach reflects her broader viewpoint that personal relationships, rather than ideological silos, drive progress in polarized environments, without endorsing partisan stances.[89] Behrs avoids overt political commentary, instead implying resilience against cultural pressures through narratives of self-reliance, as in her 2017 wellness book The Total ME-Tox, where she recounts overcoming self-destructive habits like chronic overwork and poor nutrition—exacerbated by entertainment industry demands—that led to a full-body stress rash in 2012.[6][90] Controversies remain sparse and tied to her projects' comedic elements, such as 2 Broke Girls' ethnic stereotypes, which drew backlash for insensitivity; Behrs has countered by emphasizing positive personal experiences and audience agency in interpreting humor, dismissing escalation as disproportionate.[32][91]Filmography
Television appearances
Behrs began her television career with guest appearances on procedural dramas, including a role as Ginger in an episode of Castle in 2011 and a part in NCIS: Los Angeles around the same period.[1] She achieved her breakthrough as Caroline Channing, a formerly wealthy aspiring entrepreneur reduced to waitressing after her family's financial ruin, in the CBS sitcom 2 Broke Girls, which ran for 138 episodes across six seasons from September 19, 2011, to April 17, 2017.| Year(s) | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2011–2017 | 2 Broke Girls | Caroline Channing | Lead role; 138 episodes |
| 2014 | The Big Bang Theory | Nell | Guest role (1 episode) |
| 2017 | No Activity | Sophie Beyers | Recurring role [92] |
| 2018–2025 | The Neighborhood | Gemma Johnson | Lead role; 8 seasons, concluded with final season premiere on October 13, 2025 [93] |