Diana Muldaur | |
---|---|
Born | [1] Brooklyn, New York, U.S. | August 19, 1938
Alma mater | Sweet Briar College |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1963–present |
Known for | |
Spouses | James Vickery (m. 1969;died 1979)Robert Dozier (m. 1981;died 2012) |
Diana Muldaur (born August 19, 1938) is an American film and television actress. [2] Muldaur's television roles include Rosalind Shays on L.A. Law and Dr. Katherine Pulaski in the second season of Star Trek: The Next Generation . She appeared in two episodes of Star Trek: The Original Series in the late 1960s, playing different roles (Drs. Miranda Jones and Ann Mulhall). She has been nominated for an Emmy twice, as a supporting actress on L.A. Law in 1990 and 1991. [3]
Born in Brooklyn, New York, and raised on the Massachusetts island of Martha's Vineyard, Muldaur started acting in high school and continued on through college, graduating from Sweet Briar College in Virginia in 1960. [4] [5] She studied acting under Stella Adler, and made her name on the New York stage. [4] [6] She was at one point a board member of the Screen Actors Guild and was the first woman to serve as president of the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (1983–1985). [7]
In 1965, Muldaur landed the role of Ann Wicker in the CBS daytime soap opera The Secret Storm . She then did a five-episode arc as Jeannie Orloff in the final season of Richard Chamberlain's NBC medical drama Dr. Kildare .
Various roles as a guest star in episodes of numerous television shows followed, including Bonanza , I Spy , The Courtship of Eddie's Father , The Invaders , Mannix , Mod Squad , Hawaii Five-O , The F.B.I. , The Virginian , a two-episode arc on the Ben Gazzara drama Run for Your Life , and as a guest star in 1975 in S.W.A.T. playing Kate Darby in the episode "Terror Ship".
Collaborations between Muldaur and Burt Reynolds began when Muldaur appeared in an episode of Hawk (1966), a weekly procedural with Reynolds in the title role. Subsequently, they guest-starred in a third-season episode of The F.B.I. (1968), and Muldaur guest-starred in an episode of Reynolds' series Dan August (1970).
In 1967, Muldaur guest-starred on the Gunsmoke episode "Fandango" with James Arness. An excerpt of that episode's dialogue was sampled on the Pink Floyd album The Wall , after "Hey You" and before the brief song "Is There Anybody Out There?" [8]
In 1968, she appeared in the original Star Trek episodes "Return to Tomorrow" as Science Officer Dr. Ann Mulhall, and in "Is There in Truth No Beauty?" as Dr. Miranda Jones. During this time, a friendship with creator Gene Roddenberry formed that led to him casting Muldaur as Marg in the television film Planet Earth (1974) with John Saxon. Later, she appeared as Dr. Katherine Pulaski in 20 episodes of the second season of Star Trek: The Next Generation (1988–1989).
Muldaur's first major role was as Belle in the ABC primetime serial Harold Robbins' The Survivors (1970). The soap, intended as a comeback vehicle for Hollywood star Lana Turner, was cancelled early into the 1970 television season after 15 episodes.
After the cancellation of The Survivors, Muldaur accepted a number of supporting roles in motion pictures, including The Swimmer (1968) with Burt Lancaster, football film Number One (1969), and psychological thriller The Other (1972) with Uta Hagen. She also appeared in Sidney J. Furie's The Lawyer (1970), One More Train to Rob (1971) with George Peppard and the John Wayne crime drama, McQ (1974).
Muldaur appeared in the ensemble-apocalypse thriller Chosen Survivors (1974) with Jackie Cooper, Richard Jaeckel, and Barbara Babcock. In 1977, she played Elaine Mati, the concerned wife of mentally unstable doctor Telly Savalas in the independent film Beyond Reason .
In 1967, Muldaur guest-starred on Mannix episode "Coffin for a Clown". In 1971, she appeared as Rachel Bonham in The Men From Shiloh (rebranded name for the TV Western The Virginian) in the episode titled "The Politician". Muldaur guest-starred in a first-season episode of Alias Smith and Jones , "The Great Shell Game" in 1971. In the second season of Kung Fu in 1973, opposite David Carradine, she guest-starred in the episode "The Elixir" playing a traveling-show woman who yearned for freedom from men—topical at the time—and starred in the pilot episode of Charlie's Angels . In a 1972 Hawaii Five-O episode, she was a guest star along with Ricardo Montalbán.
She had a recurring role as Judge Eleanor Hooper on The Tony Randall Show during the show's 1976–1978 run, and was a guest star in season two of Fantasy Island . Muldaur guest-starred on The Incredible Hulk , playing the part of Helen Banner, David Banner's sister, in the season-three episode "Homecoming" in November 1979. In 1981, she played a nun in the fifth-season episode "Sanctuary".
In 1975, she made a guest appearance in an episode of The Rockford Files as Mrs. Bannister, a married woman who has an affair with a former cellmate of the series' title character. During this time, Muldaur also appeared on Police Woman , Quincy M.E. , The Streets of San Francisco , The Love Boat , The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries , and Hart to Hart , among others. She appeared in the first season of Angela Lansbury's Murder, She Wrote . In 1986, she also appeared in a commercial for Muzzy in Gondoland .
Muldaur had a recurring role on the seven-season Dennis Weaver mystery anthology McCloud as Chris Coughlin, McCloud's love interest. Her character was introduced in the pilot episode in 1970, and made her last of 16 appearances in April 1977. She reprised her role as Chris for the 1989 reunion movie The Return of Sam McCloud.
Muldaur was cast as conservationist Joy Adamson in the television drama Born Free about Elsa the Lioness. Filming for the ambitious project, which co-starred Gary Collins, took place in Kenya, and the NBC series, which debuted in the fall of 1974, lasted one season. Guest stars on Born Free included several of Muldaur's future co-stars, including Alex Cord (Chosen Survivors) and Susan Dey (L.A. Law).
In 1979, Muldaur starred with David Huddleston in the short-lived NBC sitcom Hizzonner , which lasted just seven episodes and co-starred Kathy Cronkite, daughter of news presenter Walter Cronkite. She played the mayor's secretary, Ginny.
First an Emmy-winning miniseries and then a weekly drama, A Year in the Life was a critical success for NBC, with a cast including Richard Kiley and Sarah Jessica Parker. As Dr. Alice Foley, Muldaur praised the show as an example of how television was becoming more realistic about women. [7]
Muldaur is known for playing "dignified, sophisticated characters". [9] Gene Roddenberry was already familiar with Muldaur from her second-season appearance in the Star Trek episode, "Return to Tomorrow", and later in a third-season appearance in "Is There in Truth No Beauty?". He subsequently cast her in his 1973 TV movie Planet Earth. Consequently, for the second season of Star Trek: The Next Generation, Roddenberry chose her specifically to replace the outgoing Gates McFadden (who was let go at the insistence of the show's first-season producer Maurice Hurley). [10] Muldaur was cast to play the role of Dr. Pulaski, the new chief medical officer. "We needed someone with a little more of an edge," Rick Berman explained of the choice. "Kate's a strong, confident woman with an edge who can hold her own with Captain Picard. Their relationship is not all that unlike the one between Kirk and McCoy ... although from the onset we had no intention of trying to duplicate the original team." [11]
Muldaur said after her casting
I hadn't kept in touch with Gene over the years. I'd only done a pilot of his, Planet Earth , in 1974, so this call was totally out of the blue. I love being back in Star Trek. It's a challenge, but a healthy challenge. I find so much TV depressing—even the sitcoms. The chances of shows working and being funny or meaningful are very slim, but this show is very exciting. It has such an uplifting view of humanity in the 24th century. They want the crafty old doctor, so basically I'm a woman Dr. McCoy. [4]
Of Pulaski's willingness to stand up to the captain, Muldaur said
We've been in a fairly stormy relationship due to two very strong personalities, but we end up admiring each other. I'm also giving Brent Spiner (as the android, Data) a very hard time, treating him as a total machine, because that's how I see him, a machine that I can't treat and I don't deal with. But I'm also beginning to see the wonderful android that he is. [4]
Some television critics praised Muldaur's performance, with one noting her "wry, no-nonsense warmth that plays nicely off of some of the icier regulars". [12] The addition of Muldaur, along with Whoopi Goldberg, also served to redress the absence of women from the principal cast, as the departure of McFadden and Denise Crosby had left only Marina Sirtis, a rapid attrition of women that recalled the imbalance of the original Star Trek series. [9]
Ultimately, Muldaur found working on the syndicated show an "unhappy" experience, saying, "The imagination and joy wasn't there". [13] "Everybody was out for themselves. I don't think they were happy to have me there." [6] "It wasn't what I hoped it would be. I thought it would be wonderfully inventive and wonderfully creative, and I found it was not any of those things, but it did give me Trekkies. I love Trekkies. I find them very dear." [5]
The character also proved unpopular with some fans, who among other things found her treatment of the lovable android Data to be mean-spirited. [14] Muldaur left the series after a season. Show representatives denied that she had been fired, saying, "Technically, she's just not returning", while other sources said that her option had not been renewed. [15] Roddenberry described Muldaur as "a most talented actress" and said that the decision "to let her go was made solely because the hoped-for chemistry between her and the rest of the starship cast did not develop." [15] [16] [17] Berman added, "The thought of bringing Gates back was a good idea to us. The feeling was that we had perhaps made a mistake, and the best way to remedy it was to bring her back." [18] The "revolving door" and the limited opportunities for female crew led critics to suggest that the mostly male series still had a problem featuring women. [19] [20] [21]
Muldaur subsequently earned two Emmy nominations for her role as lawyer Rosalind Shays on L.A. Law . Of Roz's creation, by prolific television writer David E. Kelley, Muldaur said:
We didn't think of her as an evil wench at the time. I don't think they knew, and I don't think I knew, what she was going to evolve into. Obviously, they wanted her to stir things up in the office. I don't think they quite understood how she was going to stir things up in America ... The hardest part is having to gear up to play her because some of the things she does are so horrifying. I just say, "Oh, no, they can't have her doing that." If it were a man doing the same thing, no one would blink. In fact, it wouldn't even be good copy. It goes on every day. It's that a woman is doing... things a man has done forever and ever. [5]
In one episode of the Stephen Bochco drama, Jill Eikenberry's character Ann Kelsey tells Shays: "If you were a man, you'd be applauded for your achievements." [5] Muldaur insisted her character "was just too strong for a lot of men". [6]
Muldaur described the L.A. Law actors as "the closest family", [6] and said she was "thrilled" to play a villain like Shays after portraying "everybody's mistress for 20 years", [13] and expressed fascination with the public reception for Shays:
Not my kind of lady at all. I often read a script and am just horrified. I can't believe they'd be having me do these things. I find very little to like about her. But I'm shocked by the reaction of people. They say, "Yea! Rosalind!" A lot of women come up to me and say, "I wish I could have said something like that when so-and-so said such-and-such to me." I think, "What a terrible thing to want to do," but they mean it. I don't think anybody would have really noticed if it had been a man. They would have said, "He's a pain in the neck," or something, but they wouldn't have doubted his word for a second. I'm doing some things now that horrify me, but if Leland had done the same things, nobody would be reacting the way they are now. [13]
The surprise scene where Roz and Leland are seen in bed together was ranked as the 38th-greatest moment in television in an issue of EGG magazine. Equally spectacular was Roz's fatal exit from the show, falling down an elevator shaft. [19] [22] Muldaur joked: "I was as shocked as everybody else. I thought maybe I had asked for too much money!" [6]
Jill Eikenberry, who played Ann Kelsey on L.A. Law, said on E! True Hollywood Story that the whole L.A. Law cast loved the dynamic between Muldaur and Richard Dysart, and that they were all very sad to see Muldaur leave the show.
In 1975, Muldaur appeared in one episode in the first season of The Rockford Files . In 1977, she guest-starred in the second episode ("Mirror Image") of the short-lived CBS espionage series Hunter . Early in 1979, she guest-starred in the second episode ("Dewey and Harold and Sarah and Maggie") of the NBC anthology series $weepstake$ . In the early 1990s, she also guest-starred on two episodes of Matlock , as well as Empty Nest with Richard Mulligan and the pilot for Aaron Spelling's Hearts Are Wild . Muldaur provided the voice of Dr. Leslie Thompkins on Batman: The Animated Series from 1992 to 1994.
In 1973, Muldaur co-starred in the television film Call to Danger as Carrie Donovon, a Justice Department investigator. In 1974, Muldaur starred in The Wonderful World of Disney presentation of Hog Wild! with John Ericson and Kim Richards for NBC. In 1979, she starred in the made-for-television film version of The Miracle Worker in which she played the role of Katie Keller, the mother of Helen Keller. The NBC film starred Melissa Gilbert and Patty Duke Astin.
In an attempt to capitalize on Burt Reynolds' international superstardom, Muldaur's performance in the pilot episode of the Reynolds-Norman Fell crime series, Dan August (1970–1971) was edited together with a subsequent episode and repackaged as a 1980 ABC Movie of the Week titled Dan August: The Jealousy Factor.
In 1991, Muldaur played Lauren Jeffreys, the main client of Perry Mason (Raymond Burr) in the NBC television film Perry Mason and the Case of the Fatal Fashion . Muldaur had previously worked with Burr as a guest star on the detective series Ironside (1971) and his short-lived series Kingston: Confidential (1977).
Her other television films include the Black Beauty miniseries (1977), Pine Canyon is Burning (1977), Maneaters Are Loose! (1978), The Word (1978), and Joseph Wambaugh's two-hour film Police Story: A Cry for Justice (1978) with Dennis Weaver and Larry Hagman. Muldaur teamed with The Smothers Brothers for Terror at Alcatraz (1982) and turned in strong dramatic performances in Murder in Three Acts (1986) opposite Peter Ustinov and Locked Up: A Mother's Rage (1991) with Jean Smart and Angela Bassett.
Muldaur is a 1960 graduate of Sweet Briar College, a small, private, women's school in central Virginia. She is the older sister of singer-songwriter Geoff Muldaur, who is the former husband of singer Maria Muldaur. She is also the aunt of singer-songwriter Jenni Muldaur and singer-songwriter Clare Muldaur-Manchon. She lived in Los Angeles from 1970 to 1991. [4] Muldaur was married to actor James Vickery, her co-star on The Secret Storm, until his death from cancer in 1979. [6] She then married writer and producer Robert Dozier (son of producer William Dozier), who died of prostate cancer in 2012. [23] Muldaur is a former Airedale Terrier breeder and owner. [24] At one point, Muldaur contemplated a face lift, noting in 2000 at the age of 61, "You don't see many people my age on television", but eventually decided against it, remarking, "Somebody has to look the right age". [6] Her stated ambition is "to play all the great women's roles... I'd love to play Lady Macbeth." [6]
Title | Year | Role | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Swimmer | 1968 | Cynthia | ||
Number One | 1969 | Ann Marley | ||
The Lawyer | 1970 | Ruth Petrocelli | ||
One More Train to Rob | 1971 | Katy | ||
The Other | 1972 | Alexandra | ||
McQ | 1974 | Lois | ||
Planet Earth | 1974 | Marg | ||
Chosen Survivors | 1974 | Alana Fitzgerald | ||
Pine Canyon is Burning | 1977 | Sandra | ||
Beyond Reason | 1985 | Elaine | ||
Murder in Three Acts | 1986 | Angela Stafford | ||
Locked Up: A Mother's Rage | 1991 | Frances | ||
Finding Hannah | TBA | Anat Bergman | [25] |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1963 | The Doctors | Carol Carter, Ann Carwell | 2 episodes: "Twice Born", "The Sacred Disease" |
1964 | The DuPont Show of the Week | Dorothy | Episode: "Ambassador at Large" |
Mr. Broadway | Receptionist | Episode: "Don't Mention My Name in Sheboygan" | |
1965 | For the People | The Woman | Episode: "Seized, Confined and Detained" |
1966 | Dr. Kildare | Jeannie Orloff | 5 episodes: "The Encroachment", "A Patient Lost", "What Happened to All the Sunshine and Roses?", "The Taste of Crow", "Out of a Concrete Tower" |
Hawk | Laura Case | Episode: "The Man Who Owned Everyone" | |
T.H.E. Cat | Lilah Hadis | Episode: "None to Weep, None to Mourn" | |
New York Television Theatre | Episode: "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets" | ||
1967 | Gunsmoke | Laurel Tyson | Episode: "Fandango" |
Judd, for the Defense | Gloria Morton | Episode: "The Money Farm" | |
Run for Your Life | Dr. Jean Winters | Episode: "Cry Hard, Cry Fast | |
1968 | I Spy | Sally | Episode: "This Guy Smith" |
The Invaders | Claire | Episode: "The Life Seekers" | |
The Outcasts | Peg Skinner | Episode: "A Ride to Vengeance" | |
Bonanza | Mary Roman | Episode: "The Passing of a King" | |
Star Trek: The Original Series | Ann Mulhall / Thalassa, Dr. Miranda Jones | 2 episodes: "Return to Tomorrow", "Is There in Truth No Beauty?" | |
The Felony Squad | Margaret Collins | Episode: "The Distant Shore" | |
1969 | The Courtship of Eddie's Father | Lynn Bardman | Episode: "And Eddie Makes Three" |
The Survivors | Belle | 10 episodes: "Chapter Two", "Chapter Four", "Chapter Five", "Chapter Seven", "Chapter Eight", "Chapter Nine", "Chapter Ten", "Chapter Eleven", "Chapter Twelve", "Chapter Thirteen" | |
1970 | The Mod Squad | Claire Tragis | Episode: "The Loser" |
Dan Oakland | Elizabeth | Episode: "Murder by Proxy" | |
1967-1971 | The Virginian | Laura Messinger, Rachel Bonham | 2 episodes: "The Masquerade", "The Politician" |
1971 | Alias Smith and Jones | Grace Turner | Episode: "The Great Shell Game" |
The Name of the Game | Terry Lanson | Episode: "Beware of the Watchdog" | |
Marcus Welby, M.D. | Ann Rolf | Episode: "Tender Comrade" | |
Ironside | Captain Pauline Daniels | Episode: "Good Samaritan" | |
1968-1972 | The F.B.I. | Irene Davis, Irene Devers | 2 episodes: "Act of Violence", "Escape to Nowhere" |
1970-1972 | Hawaii Five-O | Cathy Wallis, Angela Storey | 2 episodes: "Time and Memories", "Death Wish on Tantalus Mountain" |
1972 | Medical Center | Dr. Harper | Episode: "Doctor and Mr. Harper" |
Banyon | Paula Vander | Episode: "Dead End" | |
The Bold Ones: The New Doctors | Ann Dahms | Episode: "The Velvet Prison" | |
1973 | Hec Ramsey | Rose Ryan, Miss Savannah | Episode: "Mystery of the Yellow Rose" |
Call to Danger | Carrie Donovan | Television film | |
Search | Sheila | Episode: "Ends of the Earth" | |
1972-1973 | Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law | Gloria Shields, Janet | 2 episodes: "Charlie Gave Me Your Number", "A Lesson in Loving" |
1973 | Ordeal | Kay Damian | Television film |
The ABC Afternoon Playbreak | Episode: "A Special Act of Love" | ||
1967-1973 | Mannix | Fran Webber Leslie Carlson Jan Holloway | 3 episodes: "Coffin for a Clown", "A Gathering of Ghosts", "Cry Danger" |
1973 | Kung Fu | Theodora | Episode: "The Elixir" |
1974 | Hog Wild | Martha Melborne | Television film |
Disneyland | Martha Melborne | Episode: "Hog Wild | |
Cannon | Ava Brannigan | Episode: "Blood Money" | |
Planet Earth | Marg | Television film | |
Born Free | Joy Adamson | Main role (13 episodes) | |
1975 | The Rockford Files | Linda Bannister | Episode: "Charlie Harris at Large" |
Caribe | Laura Springman | Episode: "Counterfeit Killer" | |
S.W.A.T. | Kate Darby | Episode: "Terror Ship" | |
1976 | Ellery Queen | Paulette Sherman | Episode: "The Adventure of the Judas Tree" |
Bicentennial Minutes | Self - Narrator | 1 episode | |
Charlie's Angels | Rachel LeMaire | Episode: "Charlie's Angels" | |
1977 | Police Woman | Helen Murphy | Episode: "Solitaire" |
Hunter | Frieda Scott | Episode: "Mirror Image" | |
Kingston: Confidential | Eileen Partridge | Episode: "Triple Exposure" | |
1970-1977 | McCloud | Chris Coughlin | 15 episodes: "Portrait of a Dead Girl", "Who Says You Can't Make Friends in New York City?", "Horse Stealing on Fifth Avenue", "The Disposal Man", "A Little Plot at Tranquil Valley", "Give My Regrets to Broadway", "The New Mexican Connection", "The Park Avenue Rustlers", "The Million Dollar Round Up", "Return to the Alamo", "Fire!", "Three Guns for New York", "'Twas the Fight Before Christmas...", "London Bridges", "McCloud Meets Dracula" |
1977 | The Streets of San Francisco | Judith Winters | Episode: "Dead Lift" |
Pine Canyon is Burning | Sandra | Television film | |
The Deadly Triangle | Edith Cole | Television film | |
Rosetti and Ryan | Elaine | Episode: "Everybody Into the Pool" | |
1978 | Lucan | Carol Damaree | Episode: "How Do You Run Forever?" |
1976-1978 | The Tony Randall Show | Judge Eleanor Hooper | 6 episodes: "His Honor vs. Her Honor", "Franklin in Love", "The Hooper Affair", "Dream Maker", "Love vs. Excitement", "Philadelphia Triangle" |
1978 | The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries | Leta Manheim | Episode: "Sole Survivor" |
Carter Country | Ms. Barrington | Episode: "Roy Pays His Taxes" | |
To Kill a Cop | Florence | Television film | |
Maneaters Are Loose! | May Purcell | Television film | |
1968-1978 | Insight | Betty, Stella, Mrs. Gleason, Julie Sears | 4 episodes: "The 34th Hour", "The Day God Died", "I'm Gonna Be Free", "It Can't Happen to Me" |
1978 | The Word | Claire Randall | 4 episodes: "Part I", "Part II", "Part III", "Part IV" |
1979 | Fantasy Island | Mrs. Castle | Episode: "Photographs/Royal Flush" |
Sweepstakes | Melinda | Episode: "Dewey and Harold and Sarah and Maggie" | |
The Love Boat | Laura Akers | Episode: "Best of Friends/Aftermath/Dream Boat" | |
1977-1979 | Police Story | Margaret Wilson, Jessica Bentley | 2 episodes: "Trigger Point", "A Cry for Justice" |
1979 | Hizzonner | Ginny Linden | 7 episodes: "Daughter on 10th Avenue", "Mizzonner", "Nails Gets Kidnapped", "Tea and Synthesizers", "The Book Story", "Mr. Perfect", "The Election Story" |
Black Beauty | Elizabeth | Episode: "#1.4" | |
The Miracle Worker | Kate Keller | Television film | |
1980 | B.J. and the Bear | Dr. Nivens | Episode: "Bear Bondage" |
The Return of Frank Cannon | Sally Bingham | Television film | |
1979-1981 | The Incredible Hulk | Helen Banner, Sister Anita | 2 episodes: "Homecoming", "Sanctuary" |
1981 | Fitz and Bones | Terri Seymour | 4 episodes: "Terror at Newsline 3", "Blue Pigeon Blues", "To Kill a Ghost", "A Difficult Lesson" |
1980-1981 | Quincy M.E. | Dr. Janet Carlyle | 2 episodes: "Deadly Arena", "Slow Boat to Madness" |
1982 | Terror at Alcatraz | Terri Seymour | Television film |
1983-1984 | Hart to Hart | Claire Beaumond, Janet | 2 episodes: "Harts on the Scent", "Harts on the Run" |
1984 | The Master | Maggie Sinclair | Episode: "Juggernaut" |
1985 | Murder, She Wrote | Alexis Post | Episode: "Footnote to Murder" |
1986 | Murder in Three Acts | Angela Stafford | Television film |
A Year in the Life | Dr. Alice Foley | 2 episodes: "Springtime/Autumn", "Christmas '86" | |
1987-1988 | A Year in the Life | Dr. Alice Foley | 7 episodes: "Don't I Know You from Somewhere?", "What Do You Think Love Is?", "What Do People Do All Day?", "Goodbye to All That", "The Go-Between", "The Politics of Being", "Love Mother" |
1988 | Hour Magazine | Self | |
1988-1989 | Star Trek: The Next Generation | Doctor Katherine Pulaski | 20 episodes: "The Child", "Where Silence Has Lease", "Elementary, Dear Data", "Loud as a Whisper", "The Schizoid Man", "Unnatural Selection", "A Matter of Honor", "The Measure of a Man", "The Dauphin", "Contagion", "The Royale", "Time Squared", "The Icarus Factor", "Pen Pals", "Samaritan Snare", "Up the Long Ladder", "Manhunt", "The Emissary", "Peak Performance", "Shades of Gray" |
1989 | The Return of Sam McCloud | Chris Coughlin | Television film |
1991 | Matlock | Judge Diana Levin | Episode: "The Trial" |
1989-1991 | L.A. Law | Rosalind Shays | 24 episodes: "One Rat, One Ranger", "Lie Down and Deliver", "The Good Human Bar", "Noah's Bark", "The Pay's Lousy, But the Tips Are Great", "True Brit", "On Your Honour", "Whatever Happened to Hannah?", "Ex-Wives and Videotape", "Blood, Sweat and Fears", "Bound for Glory", "Justice Swerved", "Watts a Matter?", "Bang...Zoom...Zap", "Forgive Me Father, for I Have Sued", "Outward Bound", "The Bitch Is Back", "Happy Trails", "Lie Harder", "God Rest Ye Murray Gentleman", "Pump It Up", "He's a Crowd", "The Beverly Hills Hangers", "Good to the Last Drop" |
1991 | Perry Mason: The Case of the Fatal Fashion | Lauren Jeffreys | Television film |
Locked Up: A Mother's Rage | Frances | Television film | |
1992 | Hearts Are Wild | Episode: "Pilot" | |
Empty Nest | Sonya Phillips | Episode: "The Boomerang Affair" | |
1993 | The Legend of Prince Valiant | Lady Morgana (voice) | 2 episodes: "A Light in the Dark", "The Gathering Storm" |
1992-1993 | Batman: The Animated Series | Leslie Thompkins (voice) | 5 episodes: "Appointment in Crime Alley", "Perchance to Dream", "I Am the Night", "Blind as a Bat", "Paging the Crime Doctor" |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1962 | Seidman and Son | Doreen (Original) Laura Menken (Understudy - Original) | [26] Belasco Theatre October 15, 1962 - April 20, 1963 (216 performances) |
1964 | Poor Bitos | Victoire (Lucille Desmoulins) (Original) | Cort Theatre November 14, 1964 - November 28, 1964 (17 performances) |
1965 | A Very Rich Woman | Miss Moran (Original) | Belasco Theatre September 30,1965 - October 23, 1965 (28 performances + 12 performances) |
Year | Award | Category | Production | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|
1990 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series | L.A. Law | Nominated |
1991 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series | L.A. Law | Nominated |
1990 | Q Award | Best Supporting Actress in a Quality Drama Series | L.A. Law | Nominated |
1991 | Best Supporting Actress in a Quality Drama Series | L.A. Law | Nominated |
Star Trek: The Next Generation (TNG) is an American science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry. It originally aired from September 28, 1987, to May 23, 1994, in syndication, spanning 178 episodes over seven seasons. The third series in the Star Trek franchise, it was inspired by Star Trek: The Original Series. Set in the latter third of the 24th century, when Earth is part of the United Federation of Planets, it follows the adventures of a Starfleet starship, the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D), in its exploration of the Alpha quadrant and Beta quadrant in the Milky Way galaxy.
Star Trek is an American science fiction television series created by Gene Roddenberry that follows the adventures of the starship USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) and its crew. It acquired the retronym of Star Trek: The Original Series to distinguish the show within the media franchise that it began.
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Christine Chapel is a fictional character who appears in all three seasons of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Original Series, as well as Star Trek: The Animated Series and the films Star Trek: The Motion Picture and Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. Portrayed by Majel Barrett, she was the ship's nurse on board the Starfleet starship USS Enterprise. A younger version of Chapel appears in the 2022 series Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, portrayed by Jess Bush.
"Space Seed" is the 22nd episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek. It was first broadcast by NBC on February 16, 1967. "Space Seed" was written by Gene L. Coon and Carey Wilber and directed by Marc Daniels.
Denise Michelle Crosby is an American actress and model known for portraying Security Chief Tasha Yar mainly in season one of Star Trek: The Next Generation, and Yar's daughter, the half-Romulan Commander Sela, in subsequent seasons. She is also known for her numerous film and television roles, and for starring in and producing the film Trekkies.
"The Child" is the first episode of the second season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, the 27th episode overall. It was originally released on November 21, 1988, in broadcast syndication. The story was originally written by Jaron Summers and Jon Povill for the cancelled late 1970s series Star Trek: Phase II. Due to the tight deadlines caused by the 1988 Writers Guild of America Strike, the producers of The Next Generation searched the records of that earlier television project, resulting in the script being amended by show runner Maurice Hurley.
Janice Rand is a fictional character in the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Original Series during its first season, as well as three of the Star Trek films. She is the Captain's yeoman on board the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), and first appeared in the episode "The Man Trap". She had significant roles in the episodes "The Enemy Within", where she fights off an evil version of Captain James T. Kirk; "Charlie X" where a young man with god-like powers falls in love with her; and "Miri" where she is infected with a deadly disease while on an away mission and is kidnapped by jealous children.
Grace Lee Whitney was an American actress and singer. Her entertainment career spanned over a half century in a variety of capacities in radio, on stage, in music as a singer and songwriter, in television and in movies. She played Janice Rand on the original Star Trek television series and subsequent Star Trek films.
Marina Sirtis is a British actress. She is best known for her role as Counselor Deanna Troi on the television series Star Trek: The Next Generation and four Star Trek feature films, as well as other appearances in the Star Trek franchise.
Norway Corporation also called Norway Productions, Inc., is a motion picture and television production company established by Gene Roddenberry in 1959. Norway Corporation is best known for having been the production company that brought Star Trek to television on the NBC network in association with Desilu Studios, which later became part of Paramount Television.
A Trekkie or Trekker is a fan of the Star Trek franchise, or of specific television series or films within that franchise. The show developed a dedicated and enthusiastic following shortly after it premiered, with the first fanzine premiering in 1967. The first fan convention took place the year the original series ended.
Biff Elliot was an American actor. He is perhaps best known for his role as popular detective Mike Hammer in the 1953 version of I, the Jury and for his guest appearance as Schmitter in the Star Trek episode "The Devil in the Dark".
The first season of the American television science fiction series Star Trek: The Next Generation commenced airing in broadcast syndication in the United States on September 28, 1987, and concluded on May 16, 1988, after 26 episodes were broadcast. Set in the 24th century, the series follows the adventures of the crew of the Starfleet starship Enterprise-D. It was the first live-action television series in the franchise to be broadcast since Star Trek: The Original Series was cancelled in 1969, and the first to feature all new characters. Paramount Television eventually sought the advice of the creator of Star Trek, Gene Roddenberry, who set about creating the new show with mostly former The Original Series staff members. An entirely new cast were sought, which concerned some members of The Original Series crew, as Roddenberry did not want to re-tread the same steps as he had in the first series to the extent that well-known Star Trek aliens such as Vulcans, Klingons and Romulans were banned at first.
The second season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation commenced airing in broadcast syndication in the United States on November 21, 1988, and concluded on July 17, 1989, after airing 22 episodes. Set in the 24th century, the series follows the adventures of the crew of the Starfleet starship Enterprise-D. Season two featured changes to the main cast, following the departure of Gates McFadden. Diana Muldaur was cast as Dr. Katherine Pulaski for a single season before the return of McFadden in season three. Academy Award winner Whoopi Goldberg also joined the cast after pursuing a role from the producers.
The third season of the American science fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation commenced airing in broadcast syndication in the United States on September 25, 1989 and concluded on June 18, 1990 after airing 26 episodes. Set in the 24th century, the series follows the adventures of the crew of the Starfleet starship Enterprise-D. This season featured the return of Gates McFadden as Dr. Beverly Crusher after she was replaced by Diana Muldaur for the second season. The season also saw the debut of several actors who would reappear in the same roles and others throughout the franchise, such as Dwight Schultz as Lt. Reginald Barclay, and Tony Todd as Kurn.
The development of Spock, a fictional character first introduced in the American science fiction television series Star Trek, began prior to the start of the series. The first known mention of Spock was in a discussion between Gene Roddenberry and Gary Lockwood, where the latter suggested Leonard Nimoy for the role. Roddenberry agreed with the suggestion, and Nimoy became the first choice actor for the part. However, Roddenberry was required to audition other actors for the role. It was offered to both DeForest Kelley and Martin Landau before Nimoy. Nimoy disliked the prosthetic ears he was required to wear, and there were concerns from the studio that they made him appear satanic. Roddenberry fought to keep the character in the second pilot, "Where No Man Has Gone Before" after the rest of the main cast was dropped from the initial pilot, "The Cage".
Gates McFadden fired at end of first season because head writer Maurice Hurley