Steven Weber Sees 2 Children Move Into Music and Entertainment

Steven Weber Sees 2 Children Move Into Music and Entertainment

steven weber has two children with Juliette Hohnen, and both are already working in music and entertainment. Jack Alexander Hohnen-Weber and Alfie James Weber have each taken public-facing jobs in the business their parents know well, turning a family story into a working career profile.

Jack Xander and 10xtantrum

Jack Alexander Hohnen-Weber, born in 2001, performs under the name Jack Xander and is one of the lead singers in 10xtantrum. He is also a visual artist and producer, which gives him a wider lane than a single-band résumé.

10xtantrum released “MONEY!” and “WORK” in 2024, then followed with “Trains” and “BABYGIRL” in 2025. That sequence shows a project still building its catalog rather than trading on a one-off release.

Alfie H-W in the studio

Alfie James Weber, born in 2003, uses the stage name Alfie H-W and is active as a producer, audio engineer, and drummer. He has released singles including “Catalina,” “Best Me,” and “Hazy Days,” placing him on the production side of the same industry his brother is entering from the front of the stage.

2001 and 2003 also tell the broader story here: the children are old enough to have careers of their own, not just family profiles. Their work is public, named, and ongoing, which makes this more than a celebrity-kids item.

Juliette Hohnen and the split

Steven Weber married Juliette Hohnen in 1995 after his first marriage to Finn Carter ran from 1985 to 1994. Weber and Hohnen separated and filed for divorce in 2013 after citing irreconcilable differences, yet they continue to co-parent together.

Hohnen’s own career path runs from MTV Europe to MTV’s Big Picture and then to bureau chief for MTV News in Los Angeles before she moved into real estate, where she became one of the Top 30 Hollywood Real Estate Agents on The Hollywood Reporter’s list. That mix of entertainment and business is part of why the family’s next generation in music reads less like a detour than a continuation.

Weber has talked about the value of staying close to longtime friends, saying, “We all look at each other and say, 'We're still here,'” and “It's been a real lifeline and it's been very grounding.” For readers tracking the family, the practical takeaway is simple: both sons are already building credits, so the story is no longer about whether they will enter show business, but about how far those credits go next.

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