Paul Lieberstein

American actor and screenwriter (born 1967) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paul Bevan Lieberstein (born February 22, 1967) is an American actor, screenwriter, television director and television producer. A Primetime Emmy Award winner, he is best known as a writer, executive producer, and supporting cast member on the NBC sitcom The Office, playing the role of Toby Flenderson. He served as the series' showrunner from seasons five to eight.

Born
Paul Bevan Lieberstein

(1967-02-22) February 22, 1967 (age 59)
Occupation
  • Screenwriter
  • director
  • producer
  • actor
AlmamaterHamilton College (BA)
Quick facts Born, Occupation ...
Paul Lieberstein
Lieberstein in 2023
Lieberstein in 2023
Born
Paul Bevan Lieberstein

(1967-02-22) February 22, 1967 (age 59)
Occupation
  • Screenwriter
  • director
  • producer
  • actor
Alma materHamilton College (BA)
GenreSituation comedy
Years active1992–present
Spouse
Janine Serafin Poreba
(m. 2008)
RelativesWarren Lieberstein (brother)
Susanne Daniels (sister)
Greg Daniels (brother-in-law)
Angela Kinsey (former sister-in-law)
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Early life

Lieberstein grew up in Westport, Connecticut,[1][2] the son of Judith and Stanley Lieberstein.[3] He is Jewish.[4] He attended Staples High School where he wrote his first comedy script with some friends; he also played the vibraphone in the band.[1] He then attended Hamilton College, where he joined Chi Psi as well as a band called "Picture This" (not the pop band of the same name). He graduated in 1989[5] with a major in economics[5] (he "wanted to be a financier of some kind").[2] He wrote references to the fact that Office character Andy Bernard was a member of Chi Psi from Cornell into the storyline of several episodes. After college, Lieberstein moved to New York City, where his first job was as an auditor at Peat Marwick International, a job that lasted six months.[1][5] He followed that with part-time work at his father's law firm, "working as little as I could so I could write".[5]

Career

Lieberstein and a writing partner got an agent with William Morris and moved to Los Angeles, living just off Hollywood Boulevard.[1] He landed his first writing job on Clarissa Explains It All, but was fired after one season when he and his writing partner split up.[1] He then had short stints in a few other writer rooms, including Weird Science and The Naked Truth, before his brother-in-law Greg Daniels asked him to join the King of the Hill staff.[1] He was a co-executive producer for 25 episodes in Season 6 of The Drew Carey Show, and a supervising producer for two episodes in that season: the season-opening "Drew Pops Something on Kate" (which he also wrote, along with "Drew and the Motorcycle" and "Drew and the Activist, Part I"), and "Buzzie Wuzzie Liked His Beer".

Lieberstein was also a producer on the third and final season of the television drama series The Newsroom.[6] In November 2017, it was announced that he would replace Kevin Etten as showrunner of Ghosted.[7] In 2018, Lieberstein wrote and directed his first feature film, Song of Back and Neck, which made it into Tribeca Film Festival.[1] On April 3, 2020, he announced plans for a sitcom about office life while isolated due to the COVID-19 pandemic; the project eventually became the television film Out of Office.

Lieberstein in 2008

The Office

On June 12, 2008, Variety magazine reported that Lieberstein would become one of the executive producers of The Office.[8] He worked in the writer's room from the start of the American adaptation and was asked by Greg Daniels to act as well, as Daniels wanted some of the writers to know what it was like on the other side of the camera.[1] Lieberstein has said he "attended 'The Office' acting school" and was often thrown by Steve Carell's improv during scenes.[1]

On March 22, 2012, it was announced that Lieberstein would step down from his showrunner role to focus on a planned spin-off series featuring Rainn Wilson as Dwight Schrute, tentatively called The Farm.[9] Lieberstein was set to be the showrunner,[10] but in October 2012, it was announced that NBC was not accepting the series.[11]

In a SuicideGirls interview, Lieberstein said that "as an actor, which is just a very small percentage of me, I don't feel Toby while I'm writing. It's the hardest of the characters to access".[2] In an interview for his alma mater, Hamilton College, he commented on the bigger picture:[5]

When we are in pre-production, this is the best job in the world. Working 10 to 7, sitting around and brainstorming with the other writers, making things funnier, and writing and rewriting scenes—that's as fun as it gets. Adding acting on top of all that makes for incredibly long, grueling days, sometimes 6 to midnight. But acting has its rewards. Comedy becomes intensified in short scenes. Doing a scene with Steve Carell, trying to keep up with him, is as tough and fun and weird as any part of the process.

Personal life

Lieberstein's sister, Susanne, was the president of programming for YouTube Premium (previously holding this position at MTV), and is married to screenwriter and producer Greg Daniels.[2] His brother, Warren Lieberstein, was married to Paul's The Office co-star Angela Kinsey. His cousin, Paul Faust, inspired and portrayed "Cool Guy Paul", as seen in The Office episode "Chair Model".[citation needed]

Lieberstein married Janine Serafin Poreba on July 19, 2008, at the New York City restaurant Battery Gardens.[3]

He has served on the advisory board of directors for Young Storytellers, an arts education nonprofit organization based in Los Angeles.[12]

Awards

Lieberstein's first Emmy Award was as a producer, sharing a 1999 Emmy for "Outstanding Animated Program (For Programming One Hour or Less)" for his work in King of the Hill.

Lieberstein's work on The Office has resulted in numerous awards. In June 2007, he shared in a Daytime Emmy Award for "Outstanding Broadband Program – Comedy", for his work on The Office: Accountants webisodes.[13] As an actor, Lieberstein shared in a 2006 Screen Actors Guild Award for "Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series"; as a writer, he shared a 2006 Writers Guild of America Award for the series, in addition to a WGA Award nomination for "The Coup". As co-executive producer, he shared a 2006 Emmy Award for "Outstanding Comedy Series".

Lieberstein received an Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts degree from Hamilton College on May 22, 2011.[14]

Filmography

Acting

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleRoleNotes
2005–2013 The Office Toby Flenderson 141 episodes
2008 The Office: The Outburst 2 episodes
2009 The Office: Blackmail Episode: "Pay Day"
The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard Selleck Last Customer
2014 Bad Teacher Evaluator Episode: "Evaluation Day"
The Newsroom Richard Westbrook 2 episodes
2016 Togetherness Greg Episode: "Geri-ina"
The Mindy Project Cuddle Spot Man Episode: "Mindy Lahiri is DTF"
2017 People of Earth Assessor 5 episodes
2018 Song of Back and Neck Fred Also director, writer, and producer
2019 The Big Break Ted Short film
Top Shelf Singles Evan Caldwell Post-production; short film
2026 Rick and Morty Little Mike (voice) Episode: "Rick Days, Seven Nights"
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Directing, producing, writing

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes
Director Producer Writer
1992Clarissa Explains It AllNoNoYesEpisode "President Ferguson"
1994Weird ScienceNoNoYes3 episodes
1995–1996The Naked TruthNoNoYes3 episodes
1997–2000King of the HillNoYesYesProduced 50 episodes, wrote 12 episodes
2000–2001The Drew Carey ShowNoYesYesProduced 27 episodes, wrote 3 episodes
2002Greg the BunnyNoYesYesProduced 2 episodes, wrote "Greg Gets Puppish"
2002–2003The Bernie Mac ShowNoYesYesProduced 22 episodes, wrote 2 episodes
2003Dead Like MeNoNoYesEpisode "The Bicycle Thief"
2005–2013The OfficeYesYesYesDirected 7 episodes
Produced 166 episodes
Wrote 16 episodes
2006The Office: The AccountantsNoNoYes10 episodes
2013–2014The Mindy ProjectYesNoNo3 episodes
2014The NewsroomYesYesNoDirected "Oh Shenandoah", produced 6 episodes
2018Song of Back and NeckYesYesYes
GhostedNoYesYesProduced 6 episodes, wrote "The Wire"
2020Space ForceNoYesYesProduced 4 episodes, wrote "It's Good to Be Back on the Moon"
2022Out of OfficeYesNoYes
2023Lucky HankNoExecutiveYesCo-wrote three episodes; also co-developer
2025The PaperYesNoYesDirected "TTT vs the Blogger", wrote "The Ohio Journalism Awards"
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References

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