Debra Winger is a well-known American actress. She won the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress for her performance in Terms of Endearment.
Debra Winger was named Best Actress at the Tokyo International Film Festival (1993). Urban Cowboy (1980), Legal Eagles (1986), Black Widow (1987), Betrayed (1988), The Sheltering Sky (1990), Forget Paris (1995), and Rachel Getting Married is a few of her other film roles (2008).
The actress made his cinematic debut as “Debbie” in the 1976 picture Slumber Party ’57. In 2012, she made her Broadway debut in David Mamet’s original production of The Anarchist.
Debra received the Transilvania International Film Festival’s Lifetime Achievement Award in 2014. She also appeared as a series regular in the Netflix original television series The Ranch. Learn more about her earnings and lifestyle in the sections below.
Net Worth
Debra Winger is a producer and actress with an estimated net worth of $8 million. Her acting career is her principal source of income. Debra is also a successful movie producer. Arliss Howard, Debra’s spouse, has a net worth of $16 million in the United States as an actor, writer, and film director. The husband and wife have a combined net worth of approximately $24 million.
She is most known for her roles in An Officer and a Gentleman (1982), Terms of Endearment (1983), and Shadowlands (1993), all of which earned her Academy Award nominations. Debra’s annual salary is approximately $2.53 million, with monthly earnings of $211,111.11 and weekly earnings of $48,717.95. Her husband makes $800,000 per year, $66,666.67 per month, and $15,384.62 each week.
Debra Winger’s Residence
The Hollywood couple has found a comfortable refuge on Manhattan’s Upper West Side after largely avoiding the spotlight. Debra Winger, an Academy Award nominee, and her husband, actor, and director Arliss Howard, have purchased a two-bedroom, two-bathroom co-op at 300 West 109th Street.
According to public records, the couple closed on the two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment at 300 West 109th Street on September 1. Rio de Janeiro filmmakers Richard Parker and Vagner de Almeida sold them the 1,700-square-foot co-op.
The couple paid $1.85 million for the prewar property, which was somewhat higher than the asking price of $1.75 million. The apartment includes high ceilings, oak woodwork, and a dining room that may “easily” be converted into a third bedroom, despite the fact that it was not recently renovated.