Samantha Bee

Author

Birthday October 25, 1969

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Age 54 years old

Nationality Canada

Height 170 cm

#30431 Most Popular

1969

Samantha Anne Bee (born October 25, 1969) is a Canadian-American comedian, writer, producer, political commentator, actress, and television host.

Bee rose to fame as a correspondent on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, where she became the longest-serving regular correspondent.

2003

Bee became a correspondent for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart on July 10, 2003.

Bee was the sole female correspondent on The Daily Show from her debut in 2003 until Kristen Schaal joined the show in March 2008.

She was The Daily Show's first non-US citizen correspondent.

2004

On that program, Bee demonstrated an ability to coax people into caricaturing themselves—particularly in segments like "Kill Drill", on hunters and fossil fuel executives claiming to be environmentalists; "They So Horny?", on the dearth of Asian men in U.S. pornography; "Tropical Repression", on Ed Heeney, a Florida politician running his campaign based on opposition to gay rights; "The Undecided", an over-the-top look at the undecided voters leading up to the 2004 US presidential elections; the "Samantha Bee's So You Want To Bee A..."

report series, which humorously caricatured the way in which one can easily obtain a certain job, like becoming a 527 group; and a segment entitled "NILFs" ("News I'd Like to F#@k"), discussing the sexiness of news anchors: "CNN has the wholesome girl-next-door NILFs, the kind you can bring home to meet your mother. MSNBC has the dirty-over-30 NILFs. Fox has the filthy NILFs who will report anything. They're the Hustler of NILFs."

Bee had her first starring role in a feature film in 2004 with the Canadian independent film Ham & Cheese, co-written by her husband Jason Jones and starring Canadian comics Scott Thompson and Dave Foley.

The film marked Bee's first starring role.

She won a Canadian Comedy Award for "Pretty Funny Female Performance" for her role.

Bee joked it was obvious that the footage O'Reilly showed was a year old (it originally aired in 2004) because she had different highlights in her hair, before stating that her water had just broken.

2005

Jones joined The Daily Show as a correspondent in 2005, two years after his wife.

Jones became a freelance correspondent for the show while Bee reduced her workload during her pregnancy.

In December 2005, on The O'Reilly Factor, Bill O'Reilly used a clip of Bee from The Daily Show as an example of "The War on Christmas", presenting it as having aired recently.

The satirical clip featured Bee mentioning how Christmas was the only religious holiday that's also a federal holiday in the United States, with O'Reilly talking about "Secular Central...excuse me, Comedy Central".

Jon Stewart responded on his show; inviting Bee out for a discussion, and unlike in the clip that aired on Factor, Bee was visibly eight months pregnant.

Bee was recognized with a 2005 Canadian Comedy Award for Best Female TV Performance for her work on The Daily Show.

2008

On January 20, 2008, Bee finished as the highest scoring celebrity in the CBC game show Test the Nation.

She had a minor role in Episode 15, "Spy Something or Get Out", of Little Mosque on the Prairie.

2010

Bee also appeared in the 12th episode of Season 20 of Law & Order ("Blackmail", episode 445), which aired on January 15, 2010.

She played a minor role in an episode of the HBO series Bored to Death.

She appeared as herself on the "Madame President" episode of The Electric Company.

2015

In 2015, she departed the show after 12 years to start her own show, Full Frontal with Samantha Bee.

The show was canceled in 2022 as a "business-based decision" by TBS.

2017

In 2017, Time named her one of the 100 most influential people in the world on their annual Time 100 list.

Bee was born in Toronto, Ontario, the daughter of Debra and Ronald Bee.

She has said of her family: "Dating from well before the turn of the 20th century, if there has ever been a successful, happy marriage in my family lineage, I've yet to hear about it."

Bee's parents split up soon after her birth, and she was initially raised by her grandmother, who worked as a secretary at the Catholic school Bee attended, on Roncesvalles Avenue during her childhood.

She attended Humberside Collegiate Institute and York Memorial Collegiate Institute.

After graduating from high school, Bee attended McGill University, where she studied humanities.

Dissatisfied with a range of issues at the school, she transferred to the University of Ottawa after her first year.

At the University of Ottawa, Bee signed up for a theatre class, thinking it would be easy.

The class led to Bee discovering her love of performing.

Bee later enrolled in the George Brown Theatre School in Toronto.

Bee started auditioning for acting roles in Toronto while working as a waitress.

At age 26, Bee toured with a stage production of Sailor Moon where she played the titular role.

Bee performed in Sailor Moon's "A" cast and future husband Jason Jones was a member of the "B" cast.

Bee was one of the four founding members of Toronto-based sketch comedy troupe The Atomic Fireballs.

The Fireballs were all women.

Demonstrating mutual support, the group would try to perform as many of each other's ideas as they could.