JAG: Close Quarters


1:00 pm - 2:00 pm, Tuesday, June 30 on WWOR Heroes & Icons (9.4)

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About this Broadcast
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Close Quarters

Season 9, Episode 7

Turner is sent aboard a US submarine to determine what ten rescued North Korean submariners were doing in South Korean waters when their vessel sank. Meanwhile, Harm helps an elderly war vet accused of being a thief.

repeat 2003 English Stereo
Action Action/adventure Military Crime Drama Mystery & Suspense

Cast & Crew
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David James Elliott (Actor) .. Lt. Cdr. Harmon Rabb Jr.
Catherine Bell (Actor) .. Lt. Col. Sarah MacKenzie
John M. Jackson (Actor) .. Adm. A.J. Chegwidden
Patrick Labyorteaux (Actor) .. Lt. Bud Roberts
Karri Turner (Actor) .. Lt. JG Harriet Sims
Scott Lawrence (Actor) .. Lt. Cdr. Sturgis Turner
Ossie Davis (Actor) .. Terrence Minnerly
Hallee Hirsh (Actor) .. Mattie Grace

More Information
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Did You Know..
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David James Elliott (Actor) .. Lt. Cdr. Harmon Rabb Jr.
Born: September 21, 1960
Birthplace: Milton, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: Played in a band as a teenager and dropped out of high school in his senior year to pursue a career in music. Returned to finish high school at age 19. Was inspired to pursue acting by reading King Lear. Performed with the prestigious Stratford Shakespeare Festival in Ontario. His wife, Nanci Chambers, appeared with him on CBS's JAG as Lt. Loren Singer. The pair also costarred in the 2003 made-for-TV movie Code 11-14. An avid runner, he completed the Boston Marathon in 2004. In 2010, spent two weeks in Ecuador with his family to study the people and culture.
Catherine Bell (Actor) .. Lt. Col. Sarah MacKenzie
Born: August 14, 1968
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia: Tall and athletic actress Catherine Bell was born in London, England, but moved to Los Angeles with her mother when she was still a kid. Intending to study pre-Med in college, she dropped out to pursue a modeling career in Japan. After doing some commercials, she returned to L.A. to made guest star appearances on TV shows and do minor film work. She was Isabella Rosellini's nude body double for Death Becomes Her in 1992, leading her to meet her future husband (Adam Deason) on the film's set. After making a short guest appearance on the NBC show JAG, she wrote a letter to the show's producers expressing her interest in it. In 1996, JAG moved to CBS and she joined the cast as Major Sarah "Mac" Mackenzie, sidekick to Lt. Commander Harmon "Harm" Rabb (David James Elliott). As a real-life kickboxer and snowboarder, her athletic skills lead the way for physically demanding parts in the action movies Men of War, Crash Dive, and Black Thunder. In 2000 she starred in the sci-fi thriller Thrill Seekers with Casper Van Dien, and in 2003 she briefly moved to comedies for Bruce Almighty. In 2007 she was cast in the TV series Army Wives and in 2011 she starred in the thriller Last Man Standing.
John M. Jackson (Actor) .. Adm. A.J. Chegwidden
Born: June 01, 1950
Birthplace: Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Patrick Labyorteaux (Actor) .. Lt. Bud Roberts
Born: July 22, 1965
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California
Trivia: Patrick Laborteaux is primarily known for his television work on the popular series Little House on the Prairie, on which he appeared with his brother, Matthew Laborteaux.
Karri Turner (Actor) .. Lt. JG Harriet Sims
Born: December 21, 1966
Birthplace: Fort Worth, Texas
Scott Lawrence (Actor) .. Lt. Cdr. Sturgis Turner
Born: September 27, 1963
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Growing up, both of his parents were involved in civil rights activism, and he attended rallies and picket lines as a child. Was studying electrical engineering at USC when he went to a friend's acting class; he auditioned for their theater program the next semester, and completely changed tracks after being accepted. Appeared as three different characters in three different Star Trek franchise installments: Star Trek: Into Darkness, Star Trek: Voyager, and the video game Star Trek: Away Team. Voiced Star Wars villain Darth Vader in over a dozen video games between 1994 and 2006. Has also appeared in several Aaron Sorkin productions, including The West Wing, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, and The Social Network.
Ossie Davis (Actor) .. Terrence Minnerly
Born: December 18, 1917
Died: February 04, 2005
Birthplace: Cogdell, Georgia, United States
Trivia: A performer widely regarded as one of the most distinguished and eloquent actors of his or any generation, Ossie Davis combined an overwhelming amount of dramatic talent and instinct (evident via both stage and film work) with an indomitable fervor for social crusade. A native of Cogdell, GA, and a graduate of Howard University, Davis moved to Harlem at an early stage and trained with the Rose McClendon players. The actor then drew a considerable amount of attention -- alongside wife since 1948 Ruby Dee -- for helping to spearhead the American civil rights movement in the 1940s, over 20 years before it caught fire with the general public and mass media. Their combined efforts culminated in involvement with the triumphant March on Washington of August 1963, where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his iconic "I Have a Dream" speech. In subsequent years, Davis also helped Dr. King raise money for the Freedom Riders and delivered a poignant eulogy at the funeral of Malcolm X. Meanwhile, Davis and Dee both established themselves as forces in theater and on film. Davis himself debuted on Broadway in 1946, and took his film bow with the 1950 No Way Out, but 13 years passed before his sophomore cinematic effort, the 1963 Gone Are the Days -- an adaptation of his own play Purlie Victorious. Unfortunately, the actor spent much of the '60s appearing in programmers that were either underappreciated (Shock Treatment, 1964) or unworthy of his talents (Sam Whiskey, 1969), and didn't fully realize his potential until he scripted and directed the 1970 Cotton Comes to Harlem, a gritty crime comedy (with a predominantly African-American cast including Godfrey Cambridge and Redd Foxx) that almost singlehandedly jump-started the blaxploitation movement and predated Sweet Sweetback and Shaft by a year. Several additional directorial projects followed throughout the 1970s and '80s and found Davis growing deeper and more profound, and setting his sights higher; these included the ambitious -- if not quite successful -- Kongi's Harvest (1971) and the finely-wrought, socially charged coming-of-age drama Black Girl (1972), arguably Davis' best film. Unfortunately, Davis' third and fourth efforts behind the camera, Gordon's War (1973) and Countdown at Kusini (1976), disappointed on many counts, relegating him (for better or worse) back to acting. He appeared in the racially themed, made-for-television dramas Roots (1977), King: The Martin Luther King Story (1978, in which he played Dr. King Sr.), and Roots: The Next Generations (1979), then -- around a decade later -- achieved a career resurgence thanks to the intelligence and bravura of wunderkind Spike Lee, who cast Davis in six major films: School Daze (1988), Do the Right Thing (1989), Jungle Fever (1991), Malcolm X (1992, as an off-camera narrator), Get on the Bus (1996), and She Hate Me (2004). Two of those films also included Dee in the cast. Davis also enjoyed a renewed profile on television during the early '90s when he was tapped to play a regular character on the charming and laid-back Burt Reynolds sitcom Evening Shade (1990-1994); he portrayed Ponder Blue, the series' narrator and the owner of a barbecue restaurant. Davis remained not only active but astonishingly prolific over the following ten years. Subsequent projects included small supporting roles in Grumpy Old Men (1993), The Client (1994), and Doctor Dolittle (1998), and participation in a series of documentaries, among them Christianity: The First Thousand Years (1998) and We Shall Not Be Moved (2001). Davis died in February 2005, in Miami, while shooting the movie Retirement. He was 87. Davis and Dee co-authored a dual autobiography, In This Life Together, in 1998.
Hallee Hirsh (Actor) .. Mattie Grace
Born: December 16, 1987

Before / After
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JAG
12:00 pm
JAG
2:00 pm