Murphy Brown

CBS (ended 1998)

Cast & Crew

EDIT
  • Grant Shaud

    Miles Silverberg (1988-1996)

    9.6
  • Jane Leeves

    Audrey Cohen (Seasons 2-5, Recurring Afterwards)

    9.0
    Jane Leeves, was born in London but raised in East Grinstead, West Sussex, UK. At the age of 5 she recalls writing in a schoolbook that she wanted to be an actress, but until the age of 18, when she had a tragic ankle accident and had to discontinue, she wanted to be a ballerina. After the accident she took to less strenuous dancing, in music videos, like "California Girls." She then decided she wanted to become an actress, and starred in shows with small roles for a while, like "Monty Python and the Meaning of Life", as an angel, and singing every sperm is sacred. Then in 1984, after someone told her she'd have more chances in America, she let her flat go, sold or gave away most of her possessions, packed a suitcase and $1000, and bought a one-way ticket to LA. She said she cried most of the journey and the first weeks she was there, and (of which I am unsure, there are 2 different stories) she either stayed with a man she met in Paris, or in a rented room owned by the mum of a girl she met while dancing. Later she shared a flat with Faith Ford. After Faith got some good roles, Jane began to think lightening wouldn't strike twice in the same flat, but it did. She got some roles too, including virgin Marla Penney, who was in one of the most memorable "Seinfield" episodes, "The Contest", seducing JFK jr. Then she was called to audition for a new series, spun off from "Cheers", called "Frasier" she was the only one they had in mind for the part, and after a bit of reading, received it. She starred on the show for 11 years, as Daphne Moon, the home care specialist from Manchester. She works alongside Peri Gilpin, who plays Roz Doyle, and the two have made a company called "Bristol Cities" Jane married Marshall Coben in 1996, and has had two children with him, one daughter named Isabella Kathryn Coben in January 2001 and one son named Finn William Leeves Coben in December 2003. "Frasier" has ended its 11 year run and at the beginning of 2006 Jane will be starring in a new series "Misconceptions".moreless
  • Faith Ford

    Corky Sherwood

    8.7
    In 1988 Faith Ford vaulted to fame as the plucky Corky Sherwood on Murphy Brown, whom she portrayed for ten years, garnering five Emmy and two Golden Globe nominations. Hope & Faith marks a return to ABC for the actress, who starred in Norm for two seasons after guest-starring on the show; she made an indelible mark on thirtysomething as the ditzy secretary, Janine, and began her career at One Life to Live. Hope played the control freak mom on Hope and Faith co-starring Kelly Ripa for three seasons. Her extensive TV credits range from the series Maggie Winters to numerous telefilms, including Moms on Strike, A Weekend in the Country, Her Desperate Choice and Night Visitors. Her feature films include the Walt Disney comedy Pacifier, with Vin Diesel, the Stephen King film Sometimes They Come Back... for More and North, among others. Ford was named one of People magazine's 50 Most Beautiful People in 1991. She is the author of Cooking with Faith, a multi-generational Southern cookbook inspired by her childhood culinary adventures with her mother and grandmother. Ford resides in Los Angeles and New York with her husband and two dogs.moreless
  • Pat Corley

    Phil (Seasons 1-9, recurring otherwise)

    9.1
  • Joe Regalbuto

    Frank Fontana

    9.4
  • Lily Tomlin

    Kay Carter-Shepley (1996-1998)

    9.2
  • Candice Bergen

    Murphy Brown

    9.4
    Emmy Award winning television and film actress who has enjoyed a sucessful film career but found wider praise and recognition as broadcast journalist Murphy Brown in the show of the same name(1988-98)! Her films include Gandhi, Starting Over(For which she was nominated for an Academy Award in 1979), Soldier Blue, The Group, Rich and Famous and Miss Congeniality! She also has worked as a model and a photo-journalist, and her photos have appeared in Life and Playboy! She was married to Louis Malle, a renowned French Film-maker, who died in 1995 from Lymphoma! Bergen married Real Estate developer Marshall Rose on June 15, 2002! She has one daughter, Chloe(by Malle)! Her father was ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and her mother is Frances Bergen, an actress!moreless
  • Charles Kimbrough

    Jim Dial

    9.6
  • Robert Pastorelli

    Eldin Bernecky (1988-1994, ep. 247)

    8.6
    Known for playing streetwise, savvy and ballsy characters, Robert Pastorelli was an accomplished film, TV and stage actor perhaps best known for the role of house painter Eldin on Murphy Brown.

    Pastorelli was a former boxer, which added to the tough-guy persona of many of his characters. His break-out film role came in 1990 when he appeared in Dances With Wolves, and he also could be seen in Eraser, Michael, and Be Cool.

    Pastorelli is perhaps most famous and most widely remembered for his seven seasons on Murphy Brown as Eldin, the house painter who was always ready to lend an ear and advice to Candace Bergen. The role earned Pastorelli a 1995 Emmy nomination, and paved the way for him to star in his own short-lived sitcom, Double Rush. Pastorelli got to return to his theatre roots later in his career. He appeared alongside Glenn Close in the made-for-TV adaptation of South Pacific and co-starred with her in London onstage in A Streetcar Named Desire. In 1998, he starred in the US version of the British crime drama Cracker, assuming the role created by Robert Coltrane.

    Sadly, drug use dogged Pastorelli throughout his life, and he died of a heroin overdose on March 8, 2004.moreless
  • Jane Leeves

    Audrey Cohen

    9.0
    Jane Leeves, was born in London but raised in East Grinstead, West Sussex, UK. At the age of 5 she recalls writing in a schoolbook that she wanted to be an actress, but until the age of 18, when she had a tragic ankle accident and had to discontinue, she wanted to be a ballerina. After the accident she took to less strenuous dancing, in music videos, like "California Girls." She then decided she wanted to become an actress, and starred in shows with small roles for a while, like "Monty Python and the Meaning of Life", as an angel, and singing every sperm is sacred. Then in 1984, after someone told her she'd have more chances in America, she let her flat go, sold or gave away most of her possessions, packed a suitcase and $1000, and bought a one-way ticket to LA. She said she cried most of the journey and the first weeks she was there, and (of which I am unsure, there are 2 different stories) she either stayed with a man she met in Paris, or in a rented room owned by the mum of a girl she met while dancing. Later she shared a flat with Faith Ford. After Faith got some good roles, Jane began to think lightening wouldn't strike twice in the same flat, but it did. She got some roles too, including virgin Marla Penney, who was in one of the most memorable "Seinfield" episodes, "The Contest", seducing JFK jr. Then she was called to audition for a new series, spun off from "Cheers", called "Frasier" she was the only one they had in mind for the part, and after a bit of reading, received it. She starred on the show for 11 years, as Daphne Moon, the home care specialist from Manchester. She works alongside Peri Gilpin, who plays Roz Doyle, and the two have made a company called "Bristol Cities" Jane married Marshall Coben in 1996, and has had two children with him, one daughter named Isabella Kathryn Coben in January 2001 and one son named Finn William Leeves Coben in December 2003. "Frasier" has ended its 11 year run and at the beginning of 2006 Jane will be starring in a new series "Misconceptions".moreless
  • Scott Bryce

    Will Forrest

    8.8
  • Haley Joel Osment

    Avery Brown

    9.5
    For audiences around the world whose ears ring with the haunting and fateful revelation of a child tortured by terrifying visions of the afterlife, Haley Joel Osment may forever be linked to his role in what would rank among the most popular supernatural thrillers ever made, The Sixth Sense (1999). An Oscar nominee at the age of 11, Osment quickly became one of the most recognized and versatile young actors working in film, proving to audiences that his talents exceeded typecasting by constantly tackling new and challenging roles and characterizations. Born in Los Angeles, CA, on April 10, 1988, Osment set his acting career into motion as many actors do, by appearing in commercials and taking small roles on television. Accompanied by his father to an audition for a Pizza Hut commercial and initially discouraged by the overwhelming amount of children vying for the role, Osment eventually stuck out the wait at his father's request and landed the role that would launch his career. Soon making his feature debut as the youthful counterpart of the titular character in the phenomenally successful Forrest Gump in 1994, Osment alternated between television (Murphy Brown and The Jeff Foxworthy Show) and film (Mixed Nuts and Bogus) while frequently appearing in such made-for-TV movies as The Ransom of Red Chief before making his breakthrough in director M. Night Shayamalan's The Sixth Sense. Following the success of The Sixth Sense with the well-intended but fatally flawed feel-good failure Pay It Forward, Osment escaped relatively unscathed as critics recognized the young actor's exceptional performance in what was otherwise a flop with critics and audiences alike. Imagination was the key to Osment's next project, director Steven Spielberg's long-anticipated, much-hyped A.I. An elaborately futuristic tale of an android that aspires to experience human emotion, A.I. was the first and only collaboration of two of the most influential filmmakers of the 20th century, the late Stanley Kubrick (who conceived the story based on Brian Aldiss' short-story Supertoys Last All Summer Long) and Spielberg. In addition to appearing onscreen, Osment lent his voice to a number of animated films in 2000 and 2001, including the Disney sequels The Hunchback of Notre Dame II and The Jungle Book II. you've seen "Secondhand Lions," the Texas-filmed movie that opened recently, you've probably made one inescapable observation. It's not about whether the movie looks good, it's about Haley Joel Osment's voice. It has changed. This should come as no surprise. Osment, perhaps the best child star of recent years ("The Sixth Sense," "A.I. Artificial Intelligence") is no longer a child star. He's 15, itching for the day next April that he can get his driver's license and amused by the attention his deeper voice is getting. But he's also determined not to become a child star frozen in time. PROVIDED Haley Joel Osment "As an actor, that's the last thing you want to do is stay doing the same character over and over," he says. "The character, while you're doing it, is great, especially if you get to do a performance that you'll always be happy with. I'm very happy with 'Sixth Sense.' But that's on its own. That can't be part of what you do afterward." That's the answer of a seasoned actor, one who's used to talking to the media. Which, of course, Osment is. As he bounces with nervous energy, it's easy to forget that this teenager is already an Academy Award nominee, and that he's already had a career-defining role. In "The Sixth Sense," he played a haunted child, Cole, with such empathy and eeriness that Cole's fear became part of the movie's chills. He also slyly fit into the movie's clever structure, which led to a knockdown twist that only the sharpest viewers could see coming. Most actors wait a lifetime for roles like that; child actors sometimes never recover from them. But Osment already has another beautiful performance to his credit, as David, the android who wants to be a real little boy in "A.I." Osment added wonder, poignancy and even subtle terror to a character that could have been cloying. Even when he's drowned by melodramatic mawkishness, as he was in the well-meaning misfire "Pay It Forward," Osment transcends the story. In "Secondhand Lions," Osment is surrounded by some more melodrama, but there are also heavy doses of humor and adventure in Texan writer-director Tim McCanlies' story about a shy teen who spends a summer with a couple of eccentric uncles. Osment's fourth high-profile movie role shares an earnestness with his other best-known work, and as talented as he is, he risks typecasting and even critical backlash, which is something a teen shouldn't have to worry about.Not that Osment does. "I think most actors don't pay too much attention to reviews," says Osment, adding that he would like to play a villain someday, but that opportunities for that kind of role are limited in his age group. "It's good to know the response that you get. But there's so many reviews, and they're so varied, and you don't know what causes people to respond a certain way. So it's really good not to take them too seriously, good or bad." Osment is known for his maturity, and he has been fortunate to work with directors who are sensitive to young actors. Those include "Lions" director McCanlies, who directed four up-and-coming stars in the regional hit "Dancer, Texas, Pop. 81." With "Lions," McCanlies aims for something bigger, and that includes working with stars such as Michael Caine and Robert Duvall, who play Osment's uncles. These are people who are a little more intimidating and experienced -- and McCanlies counts Osment among them. "This guy has worked with (Steven) Spielberg, (Robert) Zemeckis, M. Night Shyamalan," McCanlies says, adding that it was interesting to see the bonding that went on among Osment and the older actors. With experience has come a reputation for professionalism and politeness, on-set and during interviews. "It's really just what I've learned being around these people, though," says Osment, whose co-stars have also included Bruce Willis, Helen Hunt, Ed Asner and Candice Bergen. "That professionalism comes from what I've watched people do on the set." The true grounding element for Osment is his family, especially his father, Eugene, who doubles as his acting coach and has a bit part in "Lions." (Haley's younger sister, Emily, also acts; she appeared in two of the three "Spy Kids" movies.) Osment aspires to go to Yale, but he's not sure whether he'll pull a Brooke Shields and drop out of acting for a few years to concentrate on college. "It's hard for me to say whether it will be possible for me to do films while I'm in school," he says. "But if I go to Yale or wherever, I definitely will be involved in the drama department."moreless
  • Pat Finn

    Phil Jr.

    8.9
  • Garry Marshall

    Mr. (Stan) Lansing

    7.8
    The career of producer/director Garry Marshall has been marked by many peaks, the highest of which include such classic television sitcoms as The Odd Couple (1970-1975), Happy Days (1974-1984), andMork and Mindy (1978-1982), and the phenomenally popular feature film Pretty Woman (1990). A Brooklyn native, Marshall (born Gary Marsciarelli) is the son of an industrial filmmaker and a dance instructor. His sister, Penny Marshall, is a comic actress and noted film director. Marshall majored in journalism at Northwestern University and subsequently served a stint in the army before becoming a reporter for the New York Daily News. He was also a jazz drummer in a band before becoming a television comedy scriptwriter for such artists as Joey Bishop and Phil Foster and the writer for Jack Parr on The Tonight Show.

    Marshall moved to Los Angeles in 1961, but he didn't make it big until he teamed up with writer Jerry Belson. Together, they penned numerous episodes for several sitcoms, notably The Dick Van Dyke Show and The Lucy Show. In 1970, Marshall produced The Odd Couple, which starred Jack Klugman and Tony Randall and was based on a popular Neil Simon play and movie. He reached his apex as a television producer during the '70s, with such hits as Laverne and Shirley (1976-1983) (a Happy Days spin-off starring sister Penny) and Mork and Mindy. In addition to his producing and television directorial efforts, Marshall occasionally appeared as a supporting actor.

    In features, Marshall co-produced and co-wrote (with Belson) his first film, How Sweet It Is!, in 1968. A year later, the two produced and penned The Grasshopper. Marshall made his directorial feature film debut in 1982 with Young Doctors in Love, a comic look at daytime serials. As a film director, Marshall's output has received uneven critical reviews. Films such as the Goldie Hawn/Kurt Russell vehicle Overboard and the Bette Midler/Barbara Hershey melodrama Beaches (1988) had good box-office business, but were considered of average quality. 1990's Pretty Woman was Marshall's first big movie hit. Following its tremendous success, he tried his hand at a serious drama with Frankie and Johnny (1991) starring Al Pacino and Michelle Pfeiffer. Since then, Marshall's films have tended more toward sentimental and straight dramas such as The Twilight of the Golds (1997) and The Other Sister (1999). Marshall returned to comedy -- and to his teaming of Julia Roberts and Richard Gere -- in 1999 with Runaway Bride.

    In addition to his work behind the camera, Marshall has occasionally appeared as an actor in films and television shows alike. During the mid-'90s, many TV audiences came to recognize him for playing Candice Bergen's ratings-crazy boss, Stan Lansing, on Murphy Brown.moreless
  • Garry Marshall

    Mr.) Stan Lansing

    7.8
    The career of producer/director Garry Marshall has been marked by many peaks, the highest of which include such classic television sitcoms as The Odd Couple (1970-1975), Happy Days (1974-1984), andMork and Mindy (1978-1982), and the phenomenally popular feature film Pretty Woman (1990). A Brooklyn native, Marshall (born Gary Marsciarelli) is the son of an industrial filmmaker and a dance instructor. His sister, Penny Marshall, is a comic actress and noted film director. Marshall majored in journalism at Northwestern University and subsequently served a stint in the army before becoming a reporter for the New York Daily News. He was also a jazz drummer in a band before becoming a television comedy scriptwriter for such artists as Joey Bishop and Phil Foster and the writer for Jack Parr on The Tonight Show.

    Marshall moved to Los Angeles in 1961, but he didn't make it big until he teamed up with writer Jerry Belson. Together, they penned numerous episodes for several sitcoms, notably The Dick Van Dyke Show and The Lucy Show. In 1970, Marshall produced The Odd Couple, which starred Jack Klugman and Tony Randall and was based on a popular Neil Simon play and movie. He reached his apex as a television producer during the '70s, with such hits as Laverne and Shirley (1976-1983) (a Happy Days spin-off starring sister Penny) and Mork and Mindy. In addition to his producing and television directorial efforts, Marshall occasionally appeared as a supporting actor.

    In features, Marshall co-produced and co-wrote (with Belson) his first film, How Sweet It Is!, in 1968. A year later, the two produced and penned The Grasshopper. Marshall made his directorial feature film debut in 1982 with Young Doctors in Love, a comic look at daytime serials. As a film director, Marshall's output has received uneven critical reviews. Films such as the Goldie Hawn/Kurt Russell vehicle Overboard and the Bette Midler/Barbara Hershey melodrama Beaches (1988) had good box-office business, but were considered of average quality. 1990's Pretty Woman was Marshall's first big movie hit. Following its tremendous success, he tried his hand at a serious drama with Frankie and Johnny (1991) starring Al Pacino and Michelle Pfeiffer. Since then, Marshall's films have tended more toward sentimental and straight dramas such as The Twilight of the Golds (1997) and The Other Sister (1999). Marshall returned to comedy -- and to his teaming of Julia Roberts and Richard Gere -- in 1999 with Runaway Bride.

    In addition to his work behind the camera, Marshall has occasionally appeared as an actor in films and television shows alike. During the mid-'90s, many TV audiences came to recognize him for playing Candice Bergen's ratings-crazy boss, Stan Lansing, on Murphy Brown.moreless
  • Scott Bakula

    Peter Hunt

    9.2
    Scott Bakula is perhaps best known for his five-year stint on the innovative television series Quantum Leap, which brought him a Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Drama Series, as well as three additional nominations, and four Emmy nominations. He was also honored an unprecedented five times by the Viewers for Quality Television. Today, Quantum Leap remains one of the most popular series in syndication around the world. Plus, a Quantum Leap album features songs Bakula performed in several episodes. Bakula starred as Jonathan Archer, the captain of Earth's first deep-space exploratory starship, Enterprise NX-01, on Paramount's Star Trek prequel series Enterprise. His work on the show has garnered him a People's Choice Award nomination. Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Bakula moved to New York in 1976 where he pursued a career on the stage. In 1988 he was honored with a Tony nomination for his starring role in the Broadway musical "Romance-Romance." He had earlier made his Broadway debut as Joe DiMaggio in "Marilyn: An American Fable." His other theatre credits include the critically-acclaimed Off-Broadway and Los Angeles productions of "Three Guys Naked From the Waist Down," and the Los Angeles and Boston productions of "Nite Club Confidential." Bakula has received high praise for his work in a variety of feature film roles including the 1999 Academy Award-winning "American Beauty," as well as "Life as a House" with award-winning director Irwin Winkler. Other films to his credit are "Lord of Illusions," "Major League: Back to the Minors," "A Passion to Kill," "Mi Familia/My Family," "Color of Night," and Paramount's football comedy "Necessary Roughness." He made his 1990 film debut in director Carl Reiner's "Sibling Rivalry." Alternating between film and television, Bakula has appeared in such recognized series as Designing Women and Murphy Brown, and in the mini-series "A Girl Thing," "The Invaders," and the ABC mini-series "Tom Clancy's Netforce," as well as the telefilms "Mean Streak," "Papa's Angels," and "Bachelor Baby," which he starred in and produced. Bakula also worked on "What Girls Learn," an original telefilm in which he served as executive producer through his BPI Productions in association with Paramount Network Television. He also starred in the independent film "Ghost of a Chance." His singing ability has afforded him some special opportunities including performances at the Kennedy Center Honors, at Carnegie Hall and at the Hollywood Bowl with Carol Burnett, as well as the animated musical "Cats Don't Dance" as Danny the cat.moreless
  • Janet Carroll

    Doris Dial

    8.5
  • Jay Thomas

    Jerry Gold

    8.5
    Jon Thomas Terrell was born on July 12, 1948 in the small town of Kermit, Texas to T. Harry Terrell Sr. (a World War II Veteran) and Katharine "Kathy" Guzzino Terrell. His only other sibling was an older brother named Timothy Terrell, Jr. He attended Bienville Elementary, Francis Gregory Junior High and graduated from Jesuit High School in New Orleans. Jon won his first award for being an emcee at a Jesuit High School talent show. He attended Gulf Coast Junior College where he had an interest in radio. He later went to University of North Carolina which he graduated from. His early career began in radio. He got his first Dj job in Jacksonville, FL. Jon pursed his acting career finally landing a role in Mork and Mindy as Remo Divinci, he also had small parts in many TV shows including "The Love Boat." He is best known for his role on "Cheers" as Carla's ice hockey playing husband. He won an emmy award for portraying Jerry Gold in TV's "Murphy Brown." He had two TV shows "Married People" with Beth Armstrong and "Love and War" with Susan Dey and later Annie Potts. He currently works as a radio DJ in New York City but resides in Conneticut with his wife and two sons. He got the name Jay Thomas by using the first inital of his first name and his middle name. /IMDB.com/moreless
  • Robin Thomas

    Jake Lowenstein

    8.4
    Born in Carlisle, PA and raised in Harrisburg, PA, Robin went to Carnegie-Mellon University. Started in the acting program and ended up with a degree in sculpture from the art department. Then went to New York City to sculpt and to find a way to make a living. He has two children, a son and a daughter and is currently seperated from his wife of 20 years.moreless
  • Christopher Rich

    Miller Redfield

    8.9
    Born in Dallas, Texas, Christopher Rich began performing in plays while attending high school in the Rio Grande Valley, urged by a teacher to channel in Rowdy tendencies into acting rather than protesting the Vietnam War. He continued performing and studding acting at the University of Texas and later at Cornell University, where he received a master's degree in theater arts.
    Rich moved to New York and began performing on stage highlighted by playing Dionysus in The Bacchae on Broadway, and in many off-Broadway and regional productions. In order to raise funds for plays he was producing, he joined the cast of Another World, playing Alexander Sandy Cory for the next four years.
    He moved to Los Angeles and appeared in many television series, most notably joining the lowed ensemble cast on Murphy Brown and being a series regular on The George Carlin Show.
    On the big screen, Rich starred in The Joy Luck Club as Tamlyn Tornita's husband, John Millus', Vietnam War movie Flight of the Intruder with Danny Glover and William Dafoe, and the independent art film Prisoners of Inertia with Amanda Plummer.
    Rich has appeared in numerous television movies, with credits including Going Home opposite Jason Robards in one of his last performances. He played a villian in and served as a producer for The Gambler IV, which marked his first project with Reba star Reba McEntire and solidified their friendship. He also starred in and produced, In the Line of Duty: Manhunt in the Dakotas with Rod Steiger.
    Rich currently lives in Los Angeles with his wife, Eva Halina, a former Miss Poland and Olypic gymnast at the 1980 Moscow Olypics. When not working, he enjoys collecting fine wines, playing golf and collecting and reading books.moreless
  • John Hostetter

    Stage Manager (John)

    10
  • Alan Oppenheimer

    Eugene Kinsella

    8.6
    Alan started his acting career in the early 1960s as a support actor, guest starring in such shows as I Dream Of Jeannie, Get Smart, Hogan's Heroes, and hasn't stopped working since. Alan is best known for working behind the scenes and supplying voices to many popular children's cartoon characters, and shows.moreless
  • Julius Carry

    Mitchell Baldwin

    9.1
  • Dyllan Christopher

    Avery Brown

    8.3
    Dyllan began his career in a TV commercial for Lemon Clorox at the age of 2, and was immediately hired to play "Avery Brown," Candice Bergen's son, on "Murphy Brown." | In his free time he loves to read, riding a bike, swimming and dives for fun, playing dodge ball, soccer, good with animals and he can whistle.moreless
  • Peter Chew

    Bobby

    0.0
  • Matt Griesser

    Matthew

    0.0

    Matt started his career performing ensemble improv around Los Angeles in 1993. He often performed at The IceHouse in Pasadena, CA while playing the recurring character "Matthew" on the CBS sitcom "Murphy Brown." Matt appeared in six episodes during the 1995 & 1996 seasons. After guest spots on other sitcoms such as Coach and Grace Under Fire, Matt was cast as the character Sign Boy in FootJoy's golf shoe commercials. To date, some 25 International FootJoy television ads have aired. During this time Matt also took part in two feature films. The Flintstones: Viva Rock Vegas and Cameron Crowe's Almost Famous. Both films were released in 2000.

    Since 2002, Matt has played "sidekick" to professional golfer Peter Jacobsen on The Golf Channel's original comedy series - "Peter Jacobsen: Plugged In."
    PJPI is now in it's third season on The Golf Channel.

    moreless
  • Paula Korologos

    McGovern

    0.0
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