All Good Things


3:00 pm - 5:00 pm, Saturday, January 17 on WFTY UniMás 67 HDTV (67.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Parece que un agente de buenas raíces asesinó a su esposa, quien desapareció poco después de su boda. Más tarde, una serie de muertes sospechosas tiene a un policía convencido de que él sabe la verdad sobre lo ocurrido. Basado en una historia real.

new 2010 Spanish, Castilian
Drama Sobre Crímenes Drama Romance Misterio Crímen Suspense

Cast & Crew
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Ryan Gosling (Actor) .. David Marks
Kirsten Dunst (Actor) .. Katie Marks
Frank Langella (Actor) .. Sanford Marks
Lily Rabe (Actor) .. Deborah Lehrman
Philip Baker Hall (Actor) .. Malvern Bump
Diane Verona (Actor) .. Janice Rizzo
Michael Esper (Actor) .. Daniel Marks
Nick Offerman (Actor) .. Jim McCarthy
Kristen Wiig (Actor) .. Lauren Fleck
Stephen Kunken (Actor) .. Todd Fleck
John Cullum (Actor) .. Richard Panatierre
Maggie Kiley (Actor) .. Mary McCarthy
Liz Stauber (Actor) .. Sharon McCarthy
Marion Mccorry (Actor) .. Ann McCarthy
Mia Dillon (Actor) .. Katie's Aunt
Tom Kemp (Actor) .. Katie's Uncle
Trini Alvarado (Actor) .. Sarah Davis
Tom Riis Farrell (Actor) .. Barry Davis
Bruce Norris (Actor) .. Brian Callender
Francie Swift (Actor) .. Kelly Callender
David Margulies (Actor) .. Mayor
Glenn Fleshler (Actor) .. Sidney Greenhaus
Stephen Singer (Actor) .. Solly Sachs
Francis Guinan (Actor) .. Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Ellen Sexton (Actor) .. Moynihan's Wife
William Jackson Harper (Actor) .. Moynihan's Assistant
Ashlie Atkinson (Actor) .. Bonnie Felder
Donna Bullock (Actor) .. Divorce Attorney
Pamala Tyson (Actor) .. Lula Baxter
Julie Moran (Actor) .. Herself
Diane Kagan (Actor) .. Scream Therapist
Socorro Santiago (Actor) .. Nurse
Barbara Ann Davison (Actor) .. Woman at Baby Shower
Zabryna Guevara (Actor) .. Waitress
Lanny Flaherty (Actor) .. Rooming House Landlord
Robert Clohessy (Actor) .. Building Superintendent
Lázaro Pérez (Actor) .. Building Elevator Operator
Michelle Hurst (Actor) .. Newscaster
Craig Walker (Actor) .. Assistant District Attorney
Lola Pashalinski (Actor) .. Woman at Luxor
Jerry Grayson (Actor) .. Man at Luxor
Anthony Torn (Actor) .. Theater Manager
Zoe Lister Jones (Actor) .. Press Conference Reporter
Tristan Comeau (Actor) .. Young David
Amelia Martin (Actor) .. David's Mother
Matthew Floyd Miller (Actor) .. Young Sanford
Peter Becerra (Actor) .. Officer at Search
Mary A. Kelly (Actor) .. Vermont Realtor
Jeong Kim (Actor) .. Waiter at Disco
Andy Tsay (Actor) .. Waiter
Ruel Jusi (Actor) .. Butler

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Ryan Gosling (Actor) .. David Marks
Born: November 12, 1980
Birthplace: London, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: Despite his confident good looks and his role as the son of Zeus on television's popular Hercules: The Legendary Journeys, Ryan Gosling ironically used to get chuckles by donning a Speedo and flexing like a professional weightlifter as a scrawny six-year-old. Born in London, Ontario, Canada, in November 1980, and raised in nearby Cornwall, Gosling was withdrawn for private schooling early on due to harassment by his classmates. Quickly learning the value of confidence, the bright youngster focused his energy into acting and landed a two-year role on The Mickey Mouse Club at age 12. Soon moving on to television commercials and roles in such films as Disney's Frankenstein and Me (1996), Gosling returned to television in 1997 for the short-lived Breaker High before finding more sturdy television ground in his Hercules role the following year. Since then, the actor has tackled increasingly challenging roles such as his turn as a conflicted Jewish student in The Believer (2001) and as a teen who commits murder in the name of mercy in The United States of Leland (2002). That same year, the increasingly busy Gosling starred in both The Slaughter Rule, and alongside Sandra Bullock in the crime thriller Murder by Numbers.Though he was racking up credibility as a serious young actor in indie features, Gosling became an unlikely box-office heartthrob with the 2004 summer-season romance The Notebook. Starring opposite another young break-out Canadian actor, Rachel McAdams, Gosling added some depth to the otherwise treacly adaptation of Nicholas Sparks' popular tome of enduring love before and after World War II. Rather than parlay his newfound fame into leading-man action roles, Gosling chose a route not unlike Edward Norton before him, alternating between indie features and challenging, bigger-budget Hollywood productions. This strategy didn't yield great dividends with the spooky 2005 misfire Stay, but it did bring Gosling high praise for the 2006 Sundance Festival favorite Half Nelson. A slice-of-life drama focusing on a young, cocaine-addicted, inner-city middle-school teacher and the student with whom he forms a bond, the film offered Gosling the opportunity to play another intense, conflicted young man in a natural, effortless style, a performance aided in large part by his bracing young co-star Shareeka Epps. Helped by glowing reviews, the micro-budgeted Half Nelson became an arthouse success through awards season, when Gosling's name was mentioned by numerous critics' organizations in year-end honors. Though ignored by the Golden Globes, the dark-horse Gosling was recognized among a formidable group of Best Actors when Oscar nominations were announced.Having cemented himself as one of the most formidable actors of his generation, Gosling next signed on for a quirky 2007 drama called Lars and the Real Girl, about a small town man who falls in love with a life sized doll. His performance in the film earned him a Golden Globe nod, but Gosling still had other goals he wanted to pursue. He spent the next few years playing and recording with his band, Dead Man's Bones, which released a self-titled debut in 2009. When Gosling returned to acting the following year, it was for a heart-wrenching independent relationship drama called Blue Valentine, opposite Michelle Williams. Based on a short film, the movie told the story of a relationship by showing its beginning and its end. Gosling was nominated for yet another Golden Globe, but was still up for a challenge. For his next project, he took on the thriller All Good Things, playing an upper class husband who turns violent and psychotic in All Good Things. Next on the docket was 2011's Drive, which found Gosling playing a stunt man turned getaway driver, quickly followed by the political thriller The Ides of March, opposite George Clooney. Shortly afterward, Gosling took on a supporting role in the award-winning romantic comedy Crazy Stupid Love, which follows a divorced man as he finds his footing in life once again.Gosling expanded his producing credits in 2013, with Only God Forgives, in which he co-starred, and released his directorial debut, Lost River, in 2014. In 2015, he co-starred in the Oscar-nominated The Big Short, and, the following year, teamed with Russell Crowe for The Nice Guys.
Kirsten Dunst (Actor) .. Katie Marks
Born: April 30, 1982
Birthplace: Point Pleasant, New Jersey, United States
Trivia: One of the leading actors of her generation, Kirsten Dunst made her name in teen films without succumbing to entrapment in the teen film ghetto. Skinny, blonde, and possessing a charmingly crooked Pepsodent smile, she has repeatedly demonstrated her talent and charisma in projects ranging from kiddie comedies to high school romances to towering summer blockbusters.Born in Point Pleasant, NJ, on April 30, 1982, Dunst first appeared in front of a camera at the age of three, when she became a Ford model and commercial actor. She continued to model and do commercials until 1989, when she made her film debut in Woody Allen's New York Stories. Her uncredited role led to a part as Tom Hanks' daughter in the infamously troubled 1990 adaptation of Tom Wolfe's The Bonfire of the Vanities.Three years later, Dunst got her first big break when director Neil Jordan chose her over 5,000 hopefuls for the role of Claudia, the child vampire in his 1994 adaptation of Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire. Dunst made a big impact on audiences and critics alike with her portrayal of a woman trapped eternally in the body of an 11-year-old, kissing co-star Brad Pitt, and gorging herself on human and animal blood. That same year, Dunst also appeared alongside Winona Ryder and Susan Sarandon in Gillian Armstrong's adaptation of Little Women; the combined success of these two movies propelled Dunst to the top of the child-actor hierarchy, in terms of both bankability and exposure.Dunst followed up with a lead role in the Robin Williams action-fantasy Jumanji (1995), and lent her voice to a few animated features, including Disney's Anastasia (1997). She also had a brief but memorable turn as a refugee from a war-torn country in Barry Levinson's highly praised satire Wag the Dog (1997).1999 marked a turning point in Dunst's career, as she began appearing in films that cast her as a young woman instead of a precocious child. She starred as a small-town beauty queen contestant in the satirical comedy Drop Dead Gorgeous and as one of two teenage girls (the other played by Michelle Williams) who unwittingly uncover the Watergate scandal in Dick, another satirical comedy. Dunst further lived up to her title as one of Teen People's 21 Hottest Stars Under 21 with her leading role as the sexually rebellious Lux in Sofia Coppola's acclaimed adaptation of Jeffrey Eugenides' novel The Virgin Suicides (1999). Her work in the film proved to be a critical breakthrough for Dunst, whom critics praised for her portrayal of the conflicted, headstrong character.Dunst subsequently did her bit for the high school comedy-romance genre, starring as a cheerleader in Bring It On (2000), and as another teen queen in Get Over It (2001); she also forsake makeup and a hairdresser for her role as the archetypal poor little rich girl in crazy/beautiful (2001), a teen romantic drama.Subsequently cast as the actress Marion Davies in Peter Bogdanovich's The Cat's Meow, Dunst got her first shot at playing a grown woman. She garnered praise for her work in the period drama, but any notice she received was quickly eclipsed by the maelstrom of publicity surrounding her starring role as Mary Jane Watson, true love of Peter Parker in Sam Raimi's big-budget adaptation of Spider-Man. Playing opposite Tobey Maguire as the web-spinning superhero, Dunst spent a lot of the movie running around as a damsel in distress, but there was nothing distressing about the 110-million dollars the film grossed in its opening weekend, breaking new box-office records and catapulting both Dunst and Maguire into the rarefied realm of full-fledged movie stars. She would stick with the franchise as it became a trilogy, and she became a bigger star than ever before.Even though Spider-Man gave her a great deal of box-office clout, Dunst would continue to appear in more independent minded films as the years wore on as well. While appearing in films like Mona Lisa Smile and Elizabethtown, Dunst would also earn accolades for appearances in films like Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Marie Antoinette, and Melancholia. After spending a couple of years making small appearances in even smaller movies, Dunst resurged in a big way, playing the lead in season 2 of Fargo on FX. Dunst earned raved reviews for her work on the series and spent the next seasons on the awards circuit.
Frank Langella (Actor) .. Sanford Marks
Born: January 01, 1940
Birthplace: Bayonne, New Jersey, United States
Trivia: An imposing and highly memorable presence on the Broadway stage, actor Frank Langella has won only a fraction of the acclaim he's received in the theater for his film career; still, his brooding good looks and his ability to play both villains and comic foils with a touch of menace has made him a welcome (and increasingly familiar) fare to film buffs. Frank Langella was born in Bayonne, NJ, on New Year's Day, 1940. Langella caught the acting bug when he was 11, after playing an elderly man in a school play on the life of Abraham Lincoln, and he went on to earn a degree in Theater from Syracuse University. After studying acting with Elia Kazan, Langella began working with regional theater companies in the East Coast and the Midwest, and in 1963, made his New York stage debut when he landed the leading role in an off-Broadway revival of The Immoralist. Between 1964 and 1966, Langella would win three Obie awards for his work in off-Broadway theater, and in 1969, he received a Drama Desk award for his work in the drama A Cry of Players. In 1974, he made his Broadway debut in Edward Albee's Seascape, and, the following year, won another Drama Desk award as well as a Tony for his performance. Langella made his film debut in 1970 with a supporting role in Diary of a Mad Housewife, and later that same year, scored a larger part in The Twelve Chairs, written and directed by Mel Brooks. While Langella landed occasional television and film roles through much of the 1970s, he was still busiest as a stage actor. In 1977, Langella was cast in the leading role of a Broadway revival of Dracula, and his con brio performance as the bloodthirsty count earned rave reviews, turning the production into an unexpected hit. Langella was tapped to reprise his performance for a film version of Dracula released in 1979, but he was forced to tone down his unique take on the role for the screen, and what would have seemingly been the perfect screen vehicle for his talents became a critical and box-office disappointment. However, Langella maintained a busy schedule of stage work, and in the 1990s, finally scored a breakthrough screen role in the comedy Dave as the deceitful political puppet master Bob Alexander. A busy schedule of character roles in such films as Junior, Lolita, and The Ninth Gate followed, though Langella still remained a frequent and distinguished presence in the New York theatrical community. He worked steadily at the beginning of the twenty-first century in films as diverse as the romantic drama Sweet November, and David Duchovny's directorial debut House of D. He scored an artistic and critical success in 2005 playing William Paley in George Clooney's historical docudrama about Edward R. Murrow Good Night, and Good Luck. He was then tapped by Bryan Singer to embody Daily Planet editor Perry White in the 2006 summer blockbuster Superman Returns. In 2007, Langella earned strong reviews and some awards buzz for his starring role in Starting Out in the Evening, but it was actually the next year, 2008 when he captured a Best Actor Academy Award nomination, a well as a SAG nomination, for his portrayal of disgraced former president Richard Nixon in Ron Howard's big-screen adaptation of Frost/Nixon. Over the next several years, Langella would appear in many more films, includign The Box, All Good Things, Unknown, and Robot and Frank.
Lily Rabe (Actor) .. Deborah Lehrman
Born: June 29, 1982
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Both parents were influential members of the theatre: her mother was actress Jill Clayburgh and her father is playwright David Rabe. Wanted to become a ballerina as a child. Didn't start acting until her high-school years, when she was asked to perform a monologue at a summer arts camp in Connecticut. Made her Broadway debut in 2005 as Annelle in Steel Magnolias; she earned a Drama Desk Award nomination for her performance.
Philip Baker Hall (Actor) .. Malvern Bump
Born: September 10, 1931
Died: June 12, 2022
Birthplace: Toledo, Ohio, United States
Trivia: Primarily a supporting and character actor, Philip Baker Hall has also played the occasional lead on stage, screen, and television. Hall made his film debut playing a priest in Cowards (1970). He then appeared in three television series during the mid-'70s, including Man From Atlantis (1977). He became best known during the '80s for his portrayal of Richard Nixon in Robert Altman's brilliant Secret Honor (1984), for which Hall also wrote the screenplay. Though the film garnered mixed reviews, the actor's portrayal of Nixon was hailed as a tour de force. Through the '80s and '90s, Hall continued to work steadily in films and on television; his talents were perhaps best, and most famously, utilized by director Paul Thomas Anderson, who cast Hall in substantial roles in Hard Eight (1996), Boogie Nights (1997), and Magnolia (1999), the last of which saw the actor in fine form as a game show host dying of cancer. Hall also had a memorable turn as a private investigator who is far too convinced of the infallibility of his own instincts in Anthony Minghella's The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999); that same year, he gave a strong performance as CBS producer Don Hewitt in Michael Mann's The Insider. Clearly, Hall had no intention of slowing down, and he would spend the next several years remaining extremely active, appearing in such films as The Matador, Rush Hour 3, The Lodger, 50/50, and Mr. Popper's Penguins.
Diane Verona (Actor) .. Janice Rizzo
Michael Esper (Actor) .. Daniel Marks
Born: December 01, 1976
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Father is the founder of the William Esper Studio, a well-respected acting studio dedicated to Meisner-based actor training. Used to fence while in high school, but claims he was really bad at it. Played guitar in the band The Red + The Black. Studied writing and philosophy at Oberlin College for a year, but struggled so much that they suggested he take a year off. Received his Equity card when he did a play at Trinity Repertory Company called Henry Flamethrowa. Made his Broadway debut in the 2008 revival of A Man for All Seasons. Won the Clarence Derwent Award, which honors promising performers on the New York theater scene, in 2008 for his role in A.R. Gurney's Crazy Mary. Sang the song "Boxcar" by the band Jawbreaker for his American Idiot audition.
Nick Offerman (Actor) .. Jim McCarthy
Born: June 26, 1970
Birthplace: Joliet, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Actor Nick Offerman honed an immediately identifiable image -- that of a rugged, imposing presence with an unmistakably menacing onscreen aura, occasionally tempered by nuttiness -- and parlayed it into a long string of offbeat characterizations. After guest spots on such prime-time series as ER and Gilmore Girls, and bit parts in features including Treasure Island (1999), Groove (2000), and November (2003), Offerman graduated to lead status with a decidedly wacky triple role in Martin Hynes' road movie The Go-Getter (2007). That same year, audiences could also catch Offerman via his small supporting role as a cop in Goran Dukic's jet-black comic romance Wristcutters: A Love Story. Meanwhile, Offerman also signed for one of the lead roles -- as an auto mechanic -- on the satirical Comedy Central series American Body Shop (2007). In 2009 he was cast as Ron Swanson in the NBC sitcom Parks and Recreation, and this turned out to be his breakthrough role. He parlayed that success into appearances in films like The Men Who Stare at Goats, All Good Things, Casa de me Padre, and the big-screen comedy version of 21 Jump Street.
Kristen Wiig (Actor) .. Lauren Fleck
Born: August 22, 1973
Birthplace: Canadaguia, New York, United States
Trivia: Initially known as one of the cast members of Saturday Night Live (she joined in 2005), comedian Kristen Wiig cemented her reputation as a schtickmeister with hilarious and memorable SNL characterizations of such personalities as Drew Barrymore, Katharine Hepburn, and Megan Mullally, and performed a particularly memorable recurring bit on that program as an overanxious Target employee. Like Will Forte, Will Ferrell, and others, Wiig arrived on SNL as an alumnus of The Groundlings, Los Angeles' legendary comedic ensemble. Wiig broke through to feature-film acclaim in 2007, with supporting roles in the comedies Bill, Knocked Up, and The Brothers Solomon. Brothers, a picture co-starring a number of Wiig's fellow SNL cast mates including Maya Rudolph and Will Arnett, told the story of two socially backward loser brothers seeking a woman to have their baby. In 2007, Wiig also showed up in the music-biopic spoof Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, playing the rock star's first wife.She continued to work steadily in films even as she became one of the most celebrated SNL performers in that show's rich history, becoming one of the few performers to get nominated for an acting Emmy for her work on the program. Big-screen credits like Whip It, MacGruber, and Date Night, eventually led to her starring role in Bridesmaids, the R-rated comedy that not only became a box-office smash, but garnered Wiig an Oscar nomination as well as a WGA nod for Best Original Screenplay. In 2012 she left SNL, getting a memorable send-off where she was serenaded by Mick Jagger and danced with every other member of the cast. In the years to come, Wiig would continue her upward trajectory in the comedy world, appearing in numerous projects as well as continuing to flex her muscles behind the camera as a writer and producer.
Stephen Kunken (Actor) .. Todd Fleck
Birthplace: Stephen Michael Kunken
Trivia: Was raised in Upper Brookville, Long Island, New York.Started his acting career at a young age.The first music tape he owned was Rick Springfield's Working Class Dog.Worked briefly in a hospital lab encouraged by his parents, who wanted him to pursue a career in medicine.Is skilled at photography. Is a fan of the Tottenham Hotspur soccer team.
John Cullum (Actor) .. Richard Panatierre
Born: March 02, 1939
Birthplace: Knoxville, Tennessee
Trivia: A graduate of the University of Tennessee, American actor John Cullum made his Broadway debut as one of the many singing knights in Camelot in 1960. Four years later, he was reunited with Camelot star Richard Burton in Sir John Gielgud's modern-dress Hamlet; despite the formidable talent lineup in that production -- including Hume Cronyn, Alfred Drake, William Redfield, and Eileen Herlie -- Cullum earned critical accolades for his portrayal of Laertes. In 1966, he co-starred with Barbara Harris in the musical On A Clear Day You Can See Forever, winning a Theatre World award in the process. The actor's subsequent principal stage activity was in musicals, from old standards such as Man of La Mancha and Carousel to new favorites like Shenandoah (perhaps Cullum's best Broadway assignment) and On the 20th Century. Although more at home on-stage than before the cameras, he began making regular TV appearances in the late '80s, most conspicuously in the controversial nuclear-doomsday special The Day After (1983). He also appeared as a regular on the long-running daytime serial One Life to Live and the nighttime series Buck James (1987). But Cullum became best known as Holling Vincouer, the young-at-heart bar owner and former mayor of Cicely, AK, on the popular CBS comedy drama Northern Exposure, which ran from 1990-1995. Additional appearances on such popular evening dramas as Touched by an Angel, Roswell, and ER found Cullum earning the status of go-to guy for reliable television performers in the 1990s, and though he would continue to appear onstage in such productions as The Dresser and Neil Simon's Rose's Dilemma, it was big screen roles in such efforts as The Notorious Betty Page, The Night Listener, and Charlotte's Web that kept the actor in the public eye during the millennial crossover.
Maggie Kiley (Actor) .. Mary McCarthy
Liz Stauber (Actor) .. Sharon McCarthy
Born: June 27, 1979
Marion Mccorry (Actor) .. Ann McCarthy
Born: October 10, 1945
Mia Dillon (Actor) .. Katie's Aunt
Born: July 09, 1955
Birthplace: Colorado
Tom Kemp (Actor) .. Katie's Uncle
Birthplace: Long Island, New York, United States
Trivia: Was a rock and roll singer for many years while he was at school.Decided to pursue a career as an actor after acting in high school plays.Started acting in small theaters after graduating college.Initially started acting in comedy roles and eventually immersed in dramatic roles.Was cast in a movie while he was doing theater in Boston and then made his debut on the big screen.
Trini Alvarado (Actor) .. Sarah Davis
Born: January 10, 1967
Trivia: A dark-haired starlet whose beauty recalls that of Andie MacDowell, multi-talented stage and screen actress Trini Alvarado has been appearing onscreen since the late '70s, though it wasn't until the following decade that her star truly began to shine. Born in New York City in July of 1967, Alvarado's father was a Spanish singer and her mother a Puerto Rican dancer. The precocious youngster made her stage debut in her parents flamenco troupe at age seven, and by age nine made her professional stage debut in the musical Becca. Alvarado would refine her skills at New York City's Professional Children's School, and subsequently continue her studies at Fordham University. By age 11, the burgeoning young actress had landed her first leading role on Broadway (in Joseph Papp's Runaways) and made her film debut (an uncredited role in 1977's The Magic Pony Ride). Blessed with a remarkable singing voice that virtually ensured a stellar career on Broadway, Alvarado would nevertheless gravitate ever closer to a career in film. Following an impressive lead as a child of divorce struggling to understand her situation in 1979's Rich Kids, it seemed that Alvarado celluloid career was on the rise. And though she would follow up with a handful of roles in made-for-television features in addition to roles in such notable theatrical releases as Mrs. Soffel (1984), Sweet Lorraine (1987), and Stella (1990), it seems that both critics and audiences had yet to recognize that talent so obvious to the directors who hired her. The release of 1994's Little Women proved a bit of a turning point in terms of audience recognition, and her role as the oldest sister was a perfect showcase for Alvarado's remarkable versatility and dramatic ability. Joining another, albeit more nontraditional family with the release of the following year's The Perez Family, Alvarado's turn as a Cuban refugee seeking asylum in the United States showed she could hold her own alongside such talented co-stars as Anjelica Huston and Alfred Molina. Though the following year's The Frighteners may not have been a box-office smash, Alvarado did fare well in the role of a grieving widow doing battle with the undead. With the exception of Paulie, Alvarado's subsequent roles were in the made-for-television features The Christmas Tree (1996), The Last Dance (2000), and Bitter Winter (2001).
Tom Riis Farrell (Actor) .. Barry Davis
Bruce Norris (Actor) .. Brian Callender
Born: May 16, 1960
Francie Swift (Actor) .. Kelly Callender
Born: November 30, 1968
David Margulies (Actor) .. Mayor
Born: February 19, 1937
Died: January 11, 2016
Trivia: Fresh out of CCNY, David Margulies made his off-Broadway bow in Golden 6 (1958). Margulies made his first film, A New Leaf, in 1971, and two years later first appeared on Broadway in The Iceman Cometh. Shuttling between plays, movies and TV in the 1980s and 1990s, Margulies was most often cast as doctors, lawyers and rabbis. In Ghostbusters II (1989), David Margulies has several good scenes as the Mayor of New York. He originated the role of Roy Cohn in Angels in America on Broadway; one of his final roles was as Elie Weisel in the miniseries Madoff. Margulies died in 2016, at age 78.
Glenn Fleshler (Actor) .. Sidney Greenhaus
Born: May 09, 1968
Birthplace: New York, United States
Trivia: Is of Jewish descent.Started his acting career in theaters.Made his debut on television and film in 1993.Used to read novels out loud to his wife when their child was a toddler.In 2019, he supported the Riley's Way Foundation, aimed to provide teen lead projects to inspire them kindness.Is skilled at tennis.
Stephen Singer (Actor) .. Solly Sachs
Francis Guinan (Actor) .. Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Ellen Sexton (Actor) .. Moynihan's Wife
William Jackson Harper (Actor) .. Moynihan's Assistant
Born: February 08, 1980
Birthplace: Dallas, Texas, United States
Trivia: Made his stage debut in a 2006 production of. Full Bloom. Made his Broadway debut in 2014, in All the Way. Starred as Danny Rebus in the 2009 version of The Electric Company. As of 2019, has starred as Chidi Anagonye in The Good Place since its broadcast debut in 2016. Nominated for the 2018 Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series Critics' Choice Award, for his role in The Good Place.
Ashlie Atkinson (Actor) .. Bonnie Felder
Born: August 06, 1977
Donna Bullock (Actor) .. Divorce Attorney
Born: December 11, 1955
Pamala Tyson (Actor) .. Lula Baxter
Julie Moran (Actor) .. Herself
Born: January 10, 1962
Diane Kagan (Actor) .. Scream Therapist
Socorro Santiago (Actor) .. Nurse
Born: July 12, 1951
Barbara Ann Davison (Actor) .. Woman at Baby Shower
Zabryna Guevara (Actor) .. Waitress
Lanny Flaherty (Actor) .. Rooming House Landlord
Born: July 27, 1942
Robert Clohessy (Actor) .. Building Superintendent
Born: June 10, 1958
Birthplace: Bronx, New York, United States
Trivia: Played on the varsity football team in high school. Competed in a Golden Gloves amateur boxing competition at Madison Square Garden at the age of 17, but was soon after diagnosed with elbow tendinitis, ending his boxing career. Made his stage debut in his high school's production of Kismet. In 1999, played the role of Mitch in the Hartford Stage's production of A Streetcar Named Desire. Performed on Broadway as Mike in the Roundabout Theatre Company's production of Pal Joey in 2009.
Lázaro Pérez (Actor) .. Building Elevator Operator
Born: December 17, 1945
Michelle Hurst (Actor) .. Newscaster
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Does narration for the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Was awarded the Segal Award in 1996. Her first series regular role was on Orange is the New Black, which began in 2013. Was in a medically-induced coma for two weeks following a car accident in early 2014. Is involved with the charity Chicago Legal Advocacy for Incarcerated Mothers.
Craig Walker (Actor) .. Assistant District Attorney
Born: September 25, 1960
Lola Pashalinski (Actor) .. Woman at Luxor
Jerry Grayson (Actor) .. Man at Luxor
Born: December 09, 1935
Anthony Torn (Actor) .. Theater Manager
Zoe Lister Jones (Actor) .. Press Conference Reporter
Born: September 01, 1982
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: A child of artists, Brooklyn native Zoe Lister-Jones graduated from the prestigious Tisch School of the Arts before scoring her big break on screen with a role in 2009's State of Play. She would go on to enjoy prominent roles in other films, like the action thriller Salt, before finding particular success in the realm of comedy TV, on shows like Delocated and Whitney.
Tristan Comeau (Actor) .. Young David
Born: November 01, 2001
Amelia Martin (Actor) .. David's Mother
Born: October 22, 1978
Matthew Floyd Miller (Actor) .. Young Sanford
Peter Becerra (Actor) .. Officer at Search
Mary A. Kelly (Actor) .. Vermont Realtor
Jeong Kim (Actor) .. Waiter at Disco
Andy Tsay (Actor) .. Waiter
Ruel Jusi (Actor) .. Butler
Diane Venora (Actor)
Born: August 10, 1952
Trivia: Julliard-trained actress Diane Venora made both her New York stage and film debut in 1981. The play was the off-Broadway production Penguin Touquet; the film was Wolfen. In 1983, Venora became the focus of voluminous press coverage for her appearance in the New York Shakespeare Festival production of Hamlet--not as Ophelia or Gertrude, but in the title role! Her subsequent film roles included Gloria Swanson in The Cotton Club (1984), Ellen in FX (1986), Peg in Ironweed (1987), and, best of all, Chan Parker, the put-upon wife of jazz great Charlie Parker (Forest Whitaker), in director Clint Eastwood's Bird (1988). Previously seen on television as Corinna in the 1985 miniseries AD and as Ed Asner's daughter in the pilot episode of the 1994 weekly series Thunder Alley (Robin Riker played the role in the series proper), Diane Venora was cast as Dr. Geri Infante in the CBS medical drama Chicago Hope (1994- ).

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