Mary McDonnell

Mary McDonnell

  • Born: 1952-4-28
  • Birthplace: Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, U.S.
  • Height: 5' 6" (1.68 m)
  • Profession: actor
  • Nationality: America
  • Representative Works: Independence Day, "Major Crimes"
  • Mary McDonnell (Mary McDonnell), born on April 28, 1952 in Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, USA, is an actor. The main works are " Major Crimes " seasons 1 to 6.
    Nominated by Oscars twice . She often plays the female president, once played the first lady who escaped after being attacked by aliens in " Independence Day "; played the female president Rosalind in " Battlestar Galactica ".

    Performing Experience

    In 1993, she received a soap opera contract, and her acclaimed passionate starring earned her a nomination for the Oscars Best Actress Award and a Golden Globe Award. The story depicts a woman and her relationship with a taciturn caretaker government. This role helped McDonald complete the role transition and complete the transition to the only female leader.
    1994
    MacDonald accepts Arthur Miller from TNT.
    the year 1995
    MacDonald plays the showy publisher Dort Ralph Waldo Emerson in the high society of the CBS series. She starred in Rossi Baumler, a prosperous Depression that suddenly struck the home of economic despair. In addition, in 1994, she starred in William Fried's Nick Knott.
    year 1996
    Summer Independence Day starring Jeff Goldblum, Bill Puman and Will Smith . In addition, in the summer of the State of Tennessee and returning to Broadway stars Williams and Harry Hamlin starred in Smoke.
    1997
    She has starred in two TV and movies. You have to thank me for the production of a Jewish family comedy in a crisis of morality and shared values.
    In the fall of 1999, the filmmaker Lawrence Kasdan returned to the film, she worked with him in his famous Grand Canyon to star in Touchstone Films Mumford, a small town that shocked the citizens of the Midwest to learn about the film, a The beloved local psychologist and matchmaker is The Swindlers . Earlier this year, she appeared as the mask behind the acclaimed Columbia Broadcasting System TV movie by Donald Sutherland and Matthew Fox , and she was changing her dad, a Columbia Broadcasting System TV movie, and won rave reviews. The former, the New York Times said, "Ms. MacDonald is the attraction here. She is such an excellent actor, so beautiful, directed by Joyce Pula, and her shock, pain and wisdom blend with an unusually powerful influence. ."
    Her recent works include the famous Art House, Donnie Darko, and the lighthearted Nora. She also starred in the Fox TV series Ryan Caulfield, and as Eleanor Carter in the TV medical emergency room.
     
    Extended Reading

    Blue Chips quotes

    • Happy: I own you, Pete. You're mine!

    • Pete Bell: You know, some place in America right now, there's some 10-year-old kid. He's out there on that playground, and he's playing, he's dribbling between his legs, he's going left, he's going right, he's already above the rim, and he's stuffing it home. And you know what's going to happen to this kid? Five minutes from now he's gonna be surrounded by ya. Agents, corporate sponsors, and coaches, I mean, people like me just drooling over this kid because he holds our future employment in his hands. I mean, that's what we made this game. That's what we've done. You know, the best coaching job I ever did, that wasn't tonight, it was last season. When we were 14-15 and we had a losing season, but goddammit, those kids gave me their heart! They gave me everything they had, they played up to the MAXIMUM of their ability! They gave it everything, and it wasn't good enough! Wasn't good enough for me, wasn't good enough for you, wasn't good enough for anybody! That's pathetic. I mean, it's really pathetic. I've become what I despise. I cheated my profession, cheated myself, I cheated basketball. There's two words I didn't think would ever come out of my mouth, I didn't think I'd ever be able to say... I quit.