She was born July 16, 1963, and you can already feel the rhythm in the name—Denise Faye Greenbaum—like a woman meant to move before she ever learned how to stand still. Some people come into show business chasing fame. Some people come in chasing the work. Denise Faye has always been about the work.
Not the pretty kind of work either.
The bruising kind.
She trained at the School of American Ballet, which is less like a school and more like a furnace. Ballet doesn’t teach you grace, it demands it. It demands your body, your hours, your pain tolerance. She danced with the New York City Ballet, which means she lived in that world where perfection is the minimum requirement and exhaustion is just part of breakfast.
Then she did something unusual: she went to Barnard College and studied Urban Studies and Psychology. Imagine that combination—dance discipline in the body, human systems in the mind. That tells you she wasn’t only interested in performance. She wanted to understand people. Cities. Movement as more than decoration.
Eventually she moved into choreography, and choreography is where dancers go when they want control. When they want to shape the room instead of just surviving inside it.
Her career became a long list of credits that most people don’t notice until they realize how much they’ve watched her work without knowing it.
She was part of Chicago, the 2002 film that won awards and made musical-style glamour look sharp as a razor. She earned a Screen Actors Guild Award for it, because even in a world of stars, the dancers and choreographers are the blood pumping underneath.
She worked with her mentor Rob Marshall, and that matters. In this business, mentorship is inheritance. You learn from someone who survived. Then you survive too.
And then she choreographed Burlesque, earning awards and nominations, because choreography is storytelling with bodies. It’s sex and humor and precision all at once. She wasn’t making people dance. She was making them speak without words.
Her work spilled everywhere: films like My Week with Marilyn, We’re the Millers, and even Jennifer Aniston’s striptease—because even comedy needs choreography if it’s going to land right.
She re-staged Catherine Zeta-Jones doing “All That Jazz” for the Academy Awards, which is the kind of job that means you’re trusted with the crown jewels. You don’t get that gig if you’re a hobbyist. You get it if you’re a pro who knows exactly where every hand belongs.
She choreographed television too—Dancing with the Stars, The X Factor UK, the American Music Awards. Big stages, big lights, the kind of pressure where one missed beat becomes everyone’s problem.
Commercial work too—GoDaddy at the Super Bowl, Dasani for the Olympics. Even a thirty-second ad needs movement that sells a feeling.
Broadway credits: Chicago, Guys and Dolls, Jerome Robbins Broadway. Theater credits at places like Lincoln Center, Second Stage, Williamstown. That’s the résumé of someone who belongs to the craft, not the gossip.
She didn’t stop at choreography. She directed too.
In 2014 she co-directed and choreographed Cher’s “Dressed to Kill” tour—think about that scale, the money, the costumes, the machinery of spectacle. Cher doesn’t hire amateurs. Cher hires people who know how to make magic look effortless.
She directed concert films, staged readings, music videos. She stepped behind the curtain and started calling the shots.
As an actress, she’s appeared in films like Rock of Ages, alongside Tom Cruise, Mary J. Blige, Alec Baldwin. She lent her voice to animated films like ParaNorman and Legends of Oz. Little performances tucked into a career that was always bigger than acting.
And then, around 2013, she narrowed her focus completely.
Choreography only.
That’s a choice. That’s a woman deciding what she is. Not dabbling. Not chasing every spotlight. Choosing the art form that belongs to her bones.
Even recently, she’s still shaping movement—working on films, series, music videos, including choreography for Davina Michelle’s “Heartbeat” in 2023.
Denise Faye Greenbaum isn’t the kind of name people scream at airports.
She’s the name behind the movement.
She’s sweat in rehearsal studios.
She’s legs counting beats.
She’s the invisible architect of spectacle.
Her story isn’t about scandal or tabloid tragedy.
It’s about discipline.
A dancer who learned pain.
A choreographer who learned control.
A director who learned how to turn music into bodies and bodies into story.
She’s proof that the heart of entertainment isn’t always the star.
Sometimes it’s the woman off to the side, counting quietly:
Five, six, seven, eight.

