Bobby Cannavale
Born: May 3, 1971
Roberto "Bobby" Cannavale was born on May 3, 1970 (year unconfirmed) in Union City, New Jersey to a Cuban mother and an Italian father. When Bobby was growing up, his mother made sure that he wasn't going to get into trouble in the streets so she enrolled him into Catholic school, where he started performing in the church theater company. When he was eight, he was the lisping kid in "The Music Man". Bobby lived in New Jersey until he was thirteen. After his parents divorced, Bobby and his mother moved for two years to Puerto Rico. Later on he moved to Coconut Creek, Florida, where he graduated from high school before returning to New Jersey to live with his grandmother. He began his acting career on stage, his numerous credits include Paul Rudnick's "The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told"; Lanford Wilson’s "Virgil Is Still the Frog Boy", "Noel Coward's In Two Keys", "The Young Man and the World" and his favorite Georges Feydeau’s farce "A Flea in Her Ear". He is a member of the Circle Repertory Theatre and the Lab Theatre Company, both based in New York City. Bobby's big-screen break came when he starred in two Sidney Lumet's features: "Gloria" with Sharon Stone and "Night Falls On the Manhattan" with Andy Garcia.It was the role of the paramedic Bobby Caffey on the NBC's drama "Third Watch", however, that made him a true celebrity.
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