Shelley Long
(Actor)
.. Elizabeth Gates
Born:
August 23, 1949
Birthplace: Fort Wayne, Indiana, United States
Trivia:
Northwestern University drama student Shelley Long began picking up work in Chicago TV commercials in the mid-1970s. She went on to host the WMAQ-TV "magazine" program Sorting it Out, and honed her comic timing with the Second City troupe. While her actual film debut was in 1980's A Small Circle of Friends, Long prefers to list the 1981 spoof Caveman as her first film. After a handful of TV guest appearances (notably as one of Alan Alda's lady friends on MASH) and an attention-grabbing performance as a freewheeling hooker in Night Shift (1982), Long was cast as the pretentious, garrulous waitress Diane Chambers on the weekly sitcom Cheers. She won an Emmy for this role, but all was not roses on the Cheers set. According to most sources, Diane's overbearing personality spilled over into Long's off-camera behavior; when she left the series in 1987, many of the cast members, especially star Ted Danson, breathed a rather loud and public sigh of relief. Shelley Long's post-Cheers efforts to establish herself as a movie star have thus far fallen short of expectations; her most successful film assignment to date has been as retro housewife Carol Brady in 1995's The Brady Bunch: The Movie. She reprised the role of Carol in the 1996 sequel A Very Brady Sequel. She returned to the part of Diane Chambers with a guest appearance on Frasier in 1996, and she would play Carol Brady again in A Very Brady Sequel that same year. At the beginning of the next decade she had a memorable turn in Robert Altman's Dr. T & the Women, and she would appear again on Frasier in the part that made her famous. There was a third Brady Bunch movie in 2002. She appeared in light fare such as Honeymoon with Mom and A Holiday Engagement.
Bruce Kirby
(Actor)
.. Santa/Robert George
Born:
April 24, 1928
Trivia:
American actor Bruce Kirby made his Broadway bow at age 40 in the 1965 production Diamond Orchid. More stage work followed, and then movie assignments, commencing with the all-star Catch 22 (1970), and continuing into the 1980s with such productions as Sweet Dreams (1985) and Throw Momma from the Train (1987). Kirby's TV career has embraced both series successes (1989's Anything But Love, as Jamie Lee Curtis' father), ignoble failures (1976's Holmes and Yoyo, as Henry Sedford), and a few projects which never sold (Kirby was in two busted pilots for something called McNamara's Band). In 1984, Kirbyreturned to Broadway to understudy Dustin Hoffman as Willy Loman in the revival of Death of a Salesman. Bruce Kirby, sometimes billed as Bruce Kirby Sr., was the father of actor Bruno Kirby, who formerly billed himself as B. Kirby Jr.
Barry Bostwick
(Actor)
.. Frank Mallory
Born:
February 24, 1945
Birthplace: San Mateo, California, United States
Trivia:
Tall leading man Barry Bostwick began his professional acting career while still a sophomore at the United States International University School of Performing Arts in San Diego; his first stage gig was opposite Walter Pidgeon in Take Her, She's Mine. Completing his training at the New York University Graduate School of the Arts, Bostwick made his Broadway bow in Cock-a-Doodle Dandy. He went on to play Danny Zuko in the smash-hit musical Grease, and in 1978 won a Tony Award for his work in The Robber Bridegroom. In films from 1971, Bostwick is best known for his calculatedly cloddish portrayal of Brad Majors in the midnight-movie perennial The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Equally enjoyable was his characterization of the aspiring songwriter ("It Just Shows to Go Ya") who agrees to write an entire Broadway musical in 24 hours in the 1979 spoof Movie, Movie. Barry Bostwick has also excelled on television, playing movie idol John Gilbert in Garson Kanin's The Silent Lovers (1980) and George Washington in two mid-'80s miniseries based on the life of the first U.S. president. He continued to work steadily on the big and small screen in projects such as the miniseries War & Remembrance and its sequel, Challenger, Praying Mantis, and Weekend at Bernie's II. At the beginning of the 21st century he appeared in The Skulls 3 as well as other productions including Hannah Montana: The Movie. In 2012 he appeared in the action comedy FDR: American Badass!
Nathan Lawrence
(Actor)
.. Tommy Gates
Michael E. Knight
(Actor)
.. Alan Schaeffer
Born:
May 07, 1959
Birthplace: Princeton, New Jersey, United States
Trivia:
Attended a boys' preparatory school where his father was a faculty member. Graduated from Wesleyan University in just three years. Joined the cast of All My Children in 1983. Won Daytime Emmy Awards in 1986, 1987 and 2001. Appeared in the independent film Hungry Years (2009). Made a guest appearance on the sitcom Hot in Cleveland in 2011.
Nancy Mcloughlin
(Actor)
.. Susan Estin
Rebecca Koon
(Actor)
.. Marguerite
Robert Raiford
(Actor)
.. Judge Whitman
Richard K. Olsen
(Actor)
.. Henry
Janell McLeod
(Actor)
.. Fran
Keith Flippen
(Actor)
.. Michael
Troy Simmons
(Actor)
.. Lester
Wells Struble
(Actor)
.. Charlie
John Pontrelli
(Actor)
.. Homeless Father
Jemila Ericson
(Actor)
.. Deborah
Richard Olsen
(Actor)
.. Henry
Ralph Wilcox
(Actor)
.. Dr. Nichols
Lorri Lindberg
(Actor)
.. Elaine
Margo Moorer
(Actor)
.. Madeline Parker
Robert D. Raiford
(Actor)
.. Judge Whitman
Lydia Harris
(Actor)
.. Teenage Elizabeth
Shane McLoughlin
(Actor)
.. Danny