Polly Draper


Polly Carey Draper is an American actress, writer, producer, and director. Draper has received several awards, including a Writers Guild of America Award, and is noted for speaking in a "trademark throaty voice." She first gained recognition for her starring role in the ABC primetime television drama Thirtysomething.
Draper co-starred in her screenwriting debut The Tic Code and Off-Broadway in her play Getting into Heaven. In mid-2004, she wrote her directing debut , and created and produced the Nickelodeon musical comedy series The Naked Brothers Band, which won her a WGA for Children's Script: Long Form or Special. Draper also wrote, directed, and co-starred in Stella's Last Weekend.

Personal life

Draper was born in Gary, Indiana, to Phyllis, a Peace Corps administrator, and William Henry Draper III, a venture capitalist who was the former CEO of the United Nations Development Programme and president and chairman of the US Export-Import Bank under president Ronald Reagan's administration in the 1980s. She is the sister of venture capitalist Tim Draper and Rebecca Draper, and granddaughter to banker and diplomat William Henry Draper Jr.
Draper grew up in Chicago, Illinois, as well as in Palo Alto and Arlington, California. She earned her B.A. from Yale University and Master of Fine Arts from the Yale School of Drama.
Following a seven-year marriage with playwright Kevin Wade, Draper remarried musician Michael Wolff after meeting him in 1991 when making a cameo appearance on the syndicated late-night talk show Arsenio Hall, where Wolff served as the bandleader. Wolff's life with Tourette syndrome influenced The Tic Code; he provided the score. She and Wolff have two sons, Nat and Alex; the latter three played the father and sons in The Naked Brothers Band series and, which also featured Draper's niece, Jesse, as the band's babysitter. More recently, she starred with her sons as their mother in the film Stella's Last Weekend.
Draper is a member of the Democratic Party; she voted for Democratic presidential candidates John Kerry and Barack Obama in 2004 and 2008, respectively. Her father and late grandfather, William Henry Draper Jr., were members of the Republican Party. Draper's late mother, Phyllis, was also a friend of former US first lady Barbara Bush's since the late 1980s; the two first met when Draper's father was leading the United Nations.

Career

Draper began her acting career appearing Off-Broadway, including a role in Split. She later starred as Ellyn Warren in the ABC television drama Thirtysomething, and in 1993, as Adrian in the NBC television movie adaptation of Danielle Steel's Heartbeat.
She starred in the off-Broadway production of Four Dogs and a Bone, and also made appearances on TV shows, such as The Larry Sanders Show ; Monk; and , both in 2002; as well as in the Lifetime TV movie Too Young to Marry in 2007.
Draper played Laura Caraday in her screenwriting debut The Tic Code. In 2003, she starred in, provided lead vocals and lyrics for her playwriting Getting Into Heaven at The Flea Theater; the music was also composed and performed by her husband. She played Nina in the Broadway production of Brooklyn Boy in 2005. In addition, Draper was the creator, showrunner, head writer, and director of the hit Nickelodeon musical comedy series The Naked Brothers Band, which was adapted by that she originally wrote and directed as an independent film in mid-2004.
In 2010, she appeared with a recurring guest role in the Showtime comedic television drama The Big C. Draper directed her youngest son's play What Would Woody Do? at The Flea Theater. In 2011, she also wrote and starred in an episode of the Current TV science fiction series Bar Karma and appeared in the play My Brilliant Divorce at the Bay Street Theater. Since then, she appeared in the film Side Effects and in the CBS television drama Golden Boy, both in 2013. In 2014, Draper appeared in the film Obvious Child.
Draper portrayed Sally in her film, Stella's Last Weekend, released in 2018. In 2020, she appeared in Emma Seligman's film Shiva Baby.

Awards

In 1988, Draper’s work on Thirtysomething earned her an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series. In addition, Four Dogs and a Bone won her a New York Magazine award for Best Broadway Actress. For The Tic Code, she received the Bronze Gryphon award for Best Actress at the Giffoni Film Festival.
Draper obtained the Audience Award for a Family Feature Film for at the Hamptons International Film Festival in 2005. She received two Writers Guild Award nominations for The Naked Brothers Band TV series. The first, in 2007, Draper was nominated in the section of Children's Episodic Shows & Specials for the episode "Nat is a Stand Up Guy". She also won the Children's Script: Long Form or Special category for the TV movie "Polar Bears" in 2009.
In August 2018, Stella's Last Weekend won Draper the Grand Prize at the San Antonio Film Festival.