Night Court

NBC (ended 1992)

Cast & Crew

EDIT
  • John Larroquette

    Dan Fielding

    9.3
    Best known for his multiple Emmy award winning role (1985-88 inclusive)of Reinhold 'Dan' Fielding, Assistant D.A. on Night Court. He most recently won another Emmy in 1997 for his portrayal of Joey Heric in 4 episodes of The Practice. He has worked beside Rutger Hauer, Bill Murray, Keith Carradine, Bruce Willis and Bette Midler to name but a few.moreless
  • Harry Anderson

    Harry Stone

    5.8
    Harry Anderson was born in Newport, Rhode Island, although his parents came from Manistee, Michigan. Much in Anderson's childhood was unusual, to say the least. His father was a salesman who was rarely around. He spent his younger years with his mother (mostly in Chicago). To reports that his mother was a hooker, he responds, "She was a hustler, yeah; she did a lot of things. We moved around a lot, and she had a lot of men friends." Yet he vehemently rejects the notion that his home life was a tragedy. "I respect my mother; she was very concerned with taking care of us. She did what needed to be done to try to keep us together. People find my criminal days amusing, but they find her background shocking. I don't draw any line." (People) He has a brother, sister, and half-sister. Both of his parents were gamblers, his mother subsequently became one of the first female card dealers in Las Vegas during the 1950's. By the time he was 17, Anderson had lived in a dozen states, moving from city to city between his mother's various jobs.

    In 1962, Harry went to go live with his father in California, a very different atmosphere than "City life." He became interested in magic and participated in a magic club in Junior High. Apparently he was valedictorian of his 1970 of North Hollywood High School, when he was only 16. Harry told Lefthander Magazine, "Mainly because I hung out with con men. It's interesting. When I was a kid, I had a real reading problem... and so what I did to compensate for that was to learn to write. I realized that the way you impressed the English teacher was not by reading books but by writing about them. It wasn't reading Melville but the report on Melville. I did fine by watching Gregory Peck play Ahab, then writing a report. In fact, not only was I valedictorian, I got a scholarship in English... and I couldn't read. Well, I could, but certainly not like my ates could."

    Instead of going an academic route, Harry began performing in front of thousands of people on the street. "You're a magician second; you're a street performer first. You watch other street performers; you live and breathe street performing. I was so exhausted by the end of the day that I would never pick up a magic book or a trick to learn. I experimented some on the street, but it was my livelihood, and I had to make sure I was going to make money." (Passing the Hat)

    While street performing, he met his now ex-wife (back then he called her "his future ex-wife") Leslie Pollock who performed a mentalism act. According to a TV Guide article, she would be his SECOND wife. They got together, created an act, and had Eva Fay (named after Anna Eva Fay, an important woman from the spiritualism movement). It was while he was performing in one of the clubs -- Hollywood's Magic Castle -- that he was spotted by an agent. This led to a job in Las Vegas, which led to appearances on Saturday Night Live, which led to Cheers. Night Court was next and then Dave's World. (All together he did 13 seasons of both shows). Harry has done many TV specials, movies and performed all over the country!

    Harry, 51 on October 14, 2003, is remarried and lives in the French Quarter of New Orleans, as he says, "only by a fluke." It seems he was told to invest in some property after selling some in Ireland: "My business manager just, you know, said it would be smarter to buy something -- if you're selling -- if you're buying something before the year is over. I didn't know where that would be. But I came to New Orleans and I hadn't been here to New Orleans in 6 7 years and in that time, condos had broken out -- people were selling their property. It just hadn't existed, so I bought my apartment, I bought my condo, came back. While I was here buying it, I noticed there was a magic shop on Dumaine, right down the street from where I had lived back in the 70's." (L.Wilson interview) This is where Harry took the old Amazed and Amused and turned it into Spade and Archer where he has his magic collection. He and his wife Elizabeth has opened a shop devoted to SIDESHOWs simply called SIDESHOW (see harryandersonfan.com for more details).
    Harry has begun a 2003 tour with a new but familiar magic act.

    If you have ever studied, watched enough or met Harry, he speaks fast. It's part of his act, and also his of conversation. It may be a cover up for his being nervous. He has already said he is very agoraphobic -- like being afraid of answering the phone because he doesn't know who it might be. "To me, it's a little bit embarrassing to be in the public eye that much. People start asking me about what I think about the situation in the Middle East... just because I'm in the public eye... as if I have some kind of knowledge or opinion that matters. It's embarrassing. And after all those years I spent on the street, anonymous, and with intended anonymity, that was a jolt that I never quite adjusted to. That and living in Los Angeles. I don't want to offend any Los Angelinos, but it was a tough adjustment." (LH Magazine) Harry also speaks of his stage fright (Comedians usually use the term flop-sweat); "I am shy in many situations. Almost any performing situation panics me. Most of my bravura is quite false, but it's a well -rehearsed false bravura. My stage fright knows no bounds." (LH)

    Harry admires Ted Anneman (Magician), Dai Vernon (the man who "fooled" Houdini), Joseph "Yellow Kid" Weil (Card Shark) and Shari Lewis (Lambchop's mom). He is left-handed. He likes Mac computers. As well as good old Mel, he likes the Brian Setzer Orchestra. His collection of magical antiques spans from a ukelele that turns into a bouquet of feather flowers from 1902 (Chung Ling Soo) to an original copy of Ulysses.moreless
  • Richard Moll

    Bull Shannon

    8.8
  • Karen Austin

    Lana Wagner (Season 1)

    8.7
  • Paula Kelly

    Liz Williams (Season 1)

    8.6
  • Selma Diamond

    Selma Hacker (Seasons 1-2)

    8.7

    Canadian born actress, comedienne and comedy writer began her career on radio. After writing for shows like Your Show of Shows, The Buick Berle Show and Caesar's Hour, Selma began making the rounds on talk shows with her recognizable raspy voice she soon landed roles on TV shows like Too Close for Comfort and Night Court.

    moreless
  • Charles Robinson

    Mac Robinson (Seasons 2-9)

    9.0
  • Ellen Foley

    Billie Young (Season 2)

    9.0
  • Markie Post

    Christine Sullivan (Seasons 3-9)

    8.9
    Marjorie Armstrong Post was born in Palo Alto, CA. She was raised in Walnut Creek, CA. Her father, Richard Freeman Post, was a physicist and her mother, Marylee, was a poet. Markie attended Los Lamas High School. She started college at Pomona College and graduated in 1975 from Lewis and Clark College. Markie has had several memorable roles on television in The Fall Guy with Lee Majors and Hearts Afire with John Ritter. She is probably best remembered for her role in Night Court. She continues to guest star on television and appear in movies. Markie has been married twice, once to Stephen Knox. She has been married to Michael A. Ross since Feb 2, 1982. They have 2 daughters.moreless
  • Florence Halop

    Flo Kleiner (Season 3)

    8.6

    On radio from age 4, Florence found TV comedy to be her medium, drawing laughs alone with her short stature, feisty demeanor and unmistakable rasp. In 1985, she replaced Selma Diamond as the deadpan bailiff on the hit sitcom "Night Court." Diamond, who also had a crackling nasal voice that induced chuckles, had died of lung cancer. Ironically, Florence, also a heavy smoker, died less than a year later of the same disease, after only season on the show.

    moreless
  • Marsha Warfield

    Roz Russell (Season 4-9)

    9.4
  • Gail Strickland

    Sheila Gardner (Season 1; pilot only)

    0.0
  • Bumper Robinson

    Leon

    8.7
    This African American actor has and continues to make many appearances throughout his acting career. As a young child he appeared in the Jell-o commercial starring Bill Cosby, The Jeffersons, Night Court, Days of Our Lives, and the movie Enemy Mine. In most of his career his roles were minor roles but were recurring characters. He played on television shows like Amen, Family Matters, A Different World, and Living Single. Robinson also played a young O.J Simpson in the miniseries, The O.J. Simpson Story and a young Jackie Jackson in The Jacksons: An American Dream. Some other works that Robinson has done include him being a vocal artist. Those shows include Scooby Doo and the Ghoul School, Static Shock, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and Futurama.moreless
  • John Astin

    Buddy

    8.1
    John Astin was born to a father who had a knack for numbers (his father was the Director of the National Bureau of Standards). Astin thought he would follow in Allen Astin's footsteps. He majored in mathmatics at Washington and Jefferson College. When he transferred to John Hopkins, he was still a math major. Then, he appeared in a school production and he was hooked on acting. He switched his major to acting and graduated in 1952 with a B.A. in drama. After graduation, John attended the University of Minnesota. He completed some coursework towards his graduate degree before dropping out. With only $100 in his pocket, John traveled to New York. There, he worked as a janitor in several theaters until he earned an off Broadway role. He found some success in Broadway productions (Threepenny Opera, Major Barbara and Tall Story). John began working steadily (on stage and in film); although, none of the parts were huge. Eventually, he landed a part on the sit-com I'm Dickens, He's Fenster. After that role came John's stand out role as Gomez Addams on The Addams Family. Although the show only lasted 2 seasons, it has been seen around the world through re-runs. John has had numerous recurring roles on TV. He became known as perennial guest star, appearing on many popular sit-coms throughout his career. He has also been active in film--mostly playing small character roles. In 1969, he was nominated for an Oscar for a short film he wrote and directed. John has been married 3 times. He had 3 sons with his first wife, Suzanne Hahn (m. 1956, d. 1972). He had 2 sons (both arguably successful actors) with actress Patty Duke(m. Aug 5, 1972, d. 1985). In 1989, he married his 3rd wife, Valerie Ann Sandobal.moreless
  • Ray Abruzzo

    Tony Juliano

    8.0
  • Annie O'Donnell

    June Wheeler

    0.0
  • Mary Cadorette

    Margaret Turner

    9.6
    Miss Connecticut 1975 Attended University of Connecticut Performed in dinner theatre and USO. three and one half years in 42nd street
  • Yakov Smirnoff

    Yakov Korolenko

    8.0
  • Ron Ross

    Dirk

    0.0
  • Brent Spiner

    Bob Wheeler

    9.5

    Although best known for his role of Lieutenant Commander Data on the iconic television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, Brent Jay Spiner is a multi-talented performer with a varied history.

    Born in Houston, Texas on February 2, 1949, Brent Spiner was the younger of two children born to Jack and Sylvia Spiner. In post-war America, they lived a typical family life centered around the furniture store that Jack and Sylvia owned. When Brent was 10 months old, his father passed away at the age of 29 of kidney failure. Five years later, his mother remarried to a man named Sol Mintz. As a result, Sylvia, Ron and Brent adopted his family name. Although his mother and step-father divorced when Brent was 14 years old, he retained the name "Mintz" until he was 26. In 1975, he reclaimed the name "Spiner".

    He was first inspired to pursue an acting career while still at Bellaire High School by his drama teacher, Cecil Pickett. Brent was not alone. Other famous celebrities got their starts in Mr. Pickett's including Randy & Dennis Quaid, Robert Wuhl, future West Wing and Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip Executive Producer Thomas Schlamme and his own daughter, Cindy Pickett. After high school, Brent continued his studies of drama and the stage while taking his first steps into his professional career. His first acting gigs included working with The Houston Music Theater and a television film called My Sweet Charlie. He eventually migrated to New York and had parts in several Broadway and off-Broadway plays like A History of the American Film in 1978, Leave It to Beaver Is Dead in1979, Sunday in the Park with George in 1984 and Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn in 1985. After heading off to Los Angeles to play in a stage production of "Little Shop of Horrors", Brent decided to remain in California. With acting jobs paying the bills, Brent enjoyed dabbling in music as well. His preference is jazz, specifically the crooners from the 1930s and 1940s, and he occasionally performed for small groups and local clubs. However, it was in 1986 that his life took a drastic turn for the better. Gene Roddenberry had gotten the green light from Paramount studios to produce a new incarnation of the television show "Star Trek", based on the phenomenal popularity of the original show in reruns and the four feature films which had all done extremely well at the box office. A casting call went out and Brent auditioned for the role of Data, the emotionless android whose goal in life was to understand the human condition. Brent had impressed Roddenberry with his ability to appear both blank faced and inquisitive at the same time. That was the heart of the Data character and Brent was signed on.

    In October of 1987, Star Trek: The Next Generation hit the air and was an immediate success. His character of Lieutenant Commander Data was a smash hit among fans, drawing immediate comparisons with the unexpected popularity of Mr. Spock in the late 1960s. Determined not to have the show be turned into "The Data Show", Roddenberry made sure that all of the main characters were allowed to develop evenly and not to focus too much on any single character (or trio of characters as the original show did). When the show ended its seven year run, Brent was signed on to carry his character over to the first of the feature films based on the new incarnation of the series. He went on to do four "Next Generation" films and also played the ancestor of Data's creator in the latest Star Trek effort, Star Trek: Enterprise. Outside of Star Trek, Brent has kept himself busy with various other film and television projects. He has lent his voice to Disney's Gargoyles and to the feature film South Park: Bigger, Louder and Uncut in addition to appearing in box office blockbusters like Independence Day and The Aviator. His list of accomplishments include critical successes like Introducing Dorothy Dandridge and I Am Sam. As a consummate performer, he continues to practice his music. In fact, in 1991, he released an album called Ol' Yellow Eyes Is Back. The title is both a nod to both Frank Sinatra, whose songs were recorded on this CD, and to his character on Star Trek, known partly for his yellow eyes. In fact, his male Star Trek co-stars (Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, Michael Dorn and LeVar Burton) sang backup on this album.

    His personal life is something Brent keeps very guarded and therefore little is known. He has resided in Los Angeles for the past several years. He has been romantically involved with actresses Swoozie Kurtz and fellow Star Trek performer Terry Farrell in the past. He has had a long term relationship with Loree McBride and the two have a son, Jackson (born June 29 2002), but it isn't known whether or not they are married. He maintains very close ties with all of his Next Generation cast mates. He served as Patrick Stewart's best man at his wedding as well as a groomsman for Marina Sirtis' ceremony. He is even the godfather to Gates McFadden's son, James (born June 10 1991).

    moreless
  • Cathy McAuley

    Wanda Flinn

    0.0
  • Mel Torme

    Himself

    8.2
    Chicago, IL, William and Betty Torme' welcome Melvin Howard into the world on September 13, 1925. Little did they know that by the age of four he would be on his way to becoming one of the finest jazz vocalists of our time. Not to mention an author, actor, composer, and musician!

    At age four Mel made his singing debut with the Coon-Sanders Orchestra at the Blackhawk Restaurant in Chicago's Loop. His parents had taken him there to see the show. As he sang along with the songs, one of the band's co-leaders, Joe Sanders, noticed little Melvin singing along. He invited him to join them for a number. So started his career. Word spread about this talented child singer and Mel soon had engagements at the Oriental Gardens with the Louis Panco's Band and The College Inn of the Hotel Sherman with Fankie Master's Group and Buddy Rogers Orchestra.

    With a dramatic rendition of Al Jolson's Going to Heaven on a Mule, he won the Children's Division of the Radio Auditions Finals at the 1934 World's Fair in Chicago. Two of the judges were a radio producer and his radio performer wife. They needed someone to play Jimmy the Newsboy for their radio soap. Mel's reading won him the part. This started him on his way. He appeared on radio in The Story of Mary Marlin, Little Orphan Annie, Jack Armstrong, Captain Midnight, Lightning Jim Whipple, It Can Be Done, Lights Out, and In Chicago Tonite, just to name a few! During this time he attended The Jack and Jill Players, the main Chicago agency and drama school for child radio actors. Even with all this work he was still singing.

    At 14 he started writing songs. Not professionally-yet! That would come soon enough in a very unexpected way.

    About this time, Mel also became interested in drums. So much so that his maternal grandparents bought him a set. He taught himself and became very good at it. So good that, in later years, he would be called on stage to join some of his favorite bands for a song or two.

    Mel attended Hyde Park High School in Chicago. While at Hyde Park High he wrote Lament to Love, about a girl he liked but, unfortunately, she did not reciprocate.

    When he was 15 Harry James asked Mel to join his band but, due to Child Labor Laws, it was not possible. But, Mr. James did record the song, Lament to Love, giving young Mel writing credit. With the newspapers picking up this story, Mel was a local celebrity.

    Two years later, in 1942, he was asked to join the Chico Marx Band. He was to form a vocal group, write, and sing. In 1943 that engagement ended and he was offered an audition for Higher and Higher, Frank Sinatra's first film. He got the part.

    In spring of 1944, Mel was drafted and sent to Fort MacArthur Induction Center. Because of his drumming talent, he scored 100 percent on the Morse Code test and was sent to Camp Roberts for basic training. From there he was scheduled to go on to the Signal Corp. He never made it. Due to an oversight on his physical, he was given a medical discharge while at Camp Roberts.

    Just prior to being drafted, Mel was contacted by Ben Pollack. Mr. Pollack had found a group of four college kids who sang. He wanted Mel to join them as arranger and featured singer. The were eventually known as The Mel-Tones.

    In 1944, after Mel's discharge, The Mel-Tones were off and running. So was Mel's movie career. He signed a seven year contract with Warner Bros. When VE Day came, contract players came home from the front and replaced the new kids. Mel was one of the new kids. As luck would have it, not long after that, The Mel-Tones sang back-up on a Bing Crosby record. Not to mention recording a few of their own. Also around this time, he and Bob Wells were signed by Burke and Van Heusen as a contract team and to a writing/publishing contract. While signed with Burke and Van Heusen they wrote Country Fair for the Disney film, So Dear to My Heart.

    November 1946 Arthur Freed signed Mel for a featured role in Good News with an option for two pictures a year, provided his work on Good News was satisfactory. At the end of April 1947, MGM picked up the two picture a year contract.

    When Mel was 23 he met Candy Toxton, an actress also from the Chicago area, at a dinner hosted by Tommy Dorsey. They started dating casually in 1948 when he met her again on the set of Words and Music. Mel sang Blue Moon on that picture, which became his first big hit reaching number 2 on Billboard Chart. Candy and Mel married in February of 1949.

    Along with marrying Candy, in 1949 Mel released his first solo record, Careless Hands. He had his own 30 minute radio show, The Mel Torme' Show. It lasted one year.

    In 1951 Mel was offered his own tv show being the summer replacement (with Peggy Lee) for Perry Como. The show was cancelled in the spring of 1953.

    January 29, 1953 brought Steven, Candy and Mel's first born. Two years later, on July 9 1955, Steven would have a little sister, Melissa.

    In 1955 Mel and Candy split. In September of that same year Mel released his first album for a new record label. Bethlehem Records was purely a jazz label. Mel was eager to shake his Velvet Fog image given him early in his career by a New York deejay.

    July 1956 he had his first number 1 hit, but not in the US. Mountain Greenery won rave reviews in England.

    On October 31, 1956 he took Arlene Miles as his wife. The following year, he appeared on the television show, Playhouse 90 as Lester in The Comedian. Later he was called by the Academy of Television Arts and sciences and told he had received enough votes to guaruntee a Best Supporting Actor nomination. Unfortunately, they said, they were not going to have that catigory that year. So close.

    Bethlehem Records folded in the late 50's and Mel signed with Verve in 1958. After a tour of Australia, he parted company with them and received an invitation to join Atlantic Records. He accepted.

    April 1959 brought a son to Arlene and Mel. Tracy woud be their only child.

    Mel was approached in 1963 to help write The Judy Garland Show. He agreed and was involved with the show from spring of 1963 until winter of 1964. Sometime after his stint with the show, he and Arlene divorced.

    In May of 1966 he married British actress, Janette Scott. She left her career behind and joined Mel in the States. Their first Child, Daisy, was born December 13, 1969.

    Also that year, he wrote The Other Side of the Rainbow, On the Dawn Patrol With Judy Garland. That book brought him static from many devout Judy Garland fans. In the end it proved to be one of the best books written about the beloved star.

    Mel again was on tv in 1971 on the show It Was a Very Good Year. It chronicled fashion, entertainment, politics, etc., over the years.

    James Scott Torme came into the world on August 13, 1973. Janette's second child, Mel's fifth.

    1974 he starred in a film tentatively called Snowman. About the trainer of a wolf and eagle. While flying to Burbank from Denver, the plane Mel's character is piloting crashes. He and the wolf and eagle survive the crash. Now it is a story of surviving the cold and snow. It was released in theaters as Challenge to Survive.

    That same year, playing the Maisonette Room at the St. Regis in Manhattan, he recorded an album with Al Porcino (one of the top trumpet players of the day). It was bought by Atlantic Records and released as Mel Torme' Live at the Maisonette. He was nominated for the Best Arranger award for that album in 1976. For the awards show he and Ella Fitzgerald sang a duet of Lady Be Good. They received (according to the president of the National Academy of Recording Artists and Sciences) the longest standing ovation in the history of the Grammy Awards.

    Janette and Mel divorced in 1977. During the same time he started getting the recognition that had so long deserved. He also met Ali Severson.

    20/20 did a piece on Mel in August 1983. The Today Show and Sunday Morning with Charles Kuralt soon followed. The 20/20 episode won the Emmy for Best Documentary Profile!

    On April 15, 1982 Mel recorded an album with George Shearing, An Evening with George Shearing and Mel Torme' on Concord Jazz Records. It was a live album recorded at Mark Hopkins in San Francisco in Aide of Guide Dogs International. Less than a year later he won a Grammy for Best Male Jazz Vocalist for that album.

    The following year, Top Drawer, another Shearing/Torme' collaboration won a Grammy for Best Male Jazz Singer. Mel wasn't there to accept the award. He, with Peter Nero, was giving a performance at a State Dinner for President and Mrs. Reagan in the White House.

    Mel and Ali were married on October 30, 1984 in St. Thomas.

    In 1985 he was nominated for another Grammy for yet another album done with George Shearing, An Evening at Charlie's, but lost to Joe Williams. He appeared in Night of 100 Stars at Radio City Music Hall in New York City. He sang with Lena Horne, Sara Vaughan, Al Jarreau, Joe Williams, Wynton Marsalis, and Woody Herman in a ten minute jazz segment.

    In the mid-eighties he started making guest appearances on tv's Night Court, playing Judge Harry Stone's singing idol. These appearances introduced Mel to a whole new generation.

    He was inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame in 1990.

    On August 8, 1996, he suffered a stroke. It took his voice, leaving a void in the jazz music world. Before this ability was taken from him, he recorded one last song, a duet with his son, Steve, Nat King Cole's, Straighten Up and Fly Right. This duet is on Steve's debut jazz cd, Swingin' at the Blue Moon Bar and Grille.

    Mel left us on June 5, 1999. Although this star has fallen, his legend lives on in his music, movies, and books.moreless
  • Raf Mauro

    Bum

    0.0
  • Lee Arenberg

    Mr. Dijilly

    8.0
  • Rita Taggart

    Carla

    0.0
  • Gail Edwards

    Secretary

    8.7
    Gail Edwards, who concluded her last two roles portraying the engaged Vicky Larson on ABC's Full House and Sharon Lemure, the fast-talking mother of Six on NBC's Blossom, is no stranger to television. During her five-year run portraying Dot Higgins on ABC's It's a Living, Gail accumulated many movies-of-the-week, along with numerous guest-star appearances in such hits as Night Court, MASH, Taxi, Happy Days, and the premier episode of the Amazing Stories, directed by Steven Spielberg. Gail's commercial credits have been equally impressive. Whether interacting with Jack Klugman for Cannon Copiers or making pictures disappear with David Copperfield for Kodak, Gail's Clio-Award-winning Dr. Pepper commercial and forever-running Sizzler advertisements have kept her in the public eye since her first Johnson's Baby Oil spot.
    Gail, a native Floridian, was raised in Miami and caught the performing bug early in life. She had her father hang the curtain and lights while she choreographed, costumed, and starred in her own neighborhood musicals. In the sixth grade, Gail played "Little Mary" in The Women at the Coconut Grove Playhouse and then moved on to numerous industrial films and local television spots. In 1977, she wrote, produced, and starred in her first off-Broadway musical Becoming. Soon afterwards, she landed the role of "Sandy" in Broadway's national tour of Grease. After producing and starring in two additional Los Angeles productions, The Good One and Vanities, both earning her the Drama-Logue Critics' Award, Gail turned her focus toward television

    Click Here to download video clips of the appearances mentioned above...

    moreless
  • Joey Aresco

    Ronald McKenzie

    7.7
  • Jack Gilford

    Marty Ratner

    8.4
    Actor and comedian Jack Gilford, known for his "rubbery" face, began his career in the nightclubs of New York, moving on to Broadway, films and television. Some of his more memorable roles include Hysterium in the Broadway and film versions of A Funny Thing Happened On the Way to the Forum, and the lead in a series of television commercials for Cracker Jack.moreless
  • Dick Butkus

    Stanley

    5.0

    Dick is a Legendary NFL Player with the Chicago Bears. After a stellar career at Illinois, he was drafted by the Bears in 1965 (the same year Chicago signed Gale Sayers). Butkus performed superbly on relatively poor Chicago teams.

  • Michael Fairman

    Judge Casement

    8.5
    Michael is an American television actor, best known for his soap opera career, as well as numerous roles on TV shows and films. Michael's most notable work on daytime includes a 4 year stint as Harry Silver on ABC's daytime drama "General Hospital," and his most recent recurring role as Murphy on CBS's "The Young and the Restless."moreless
< 1 2 3 4 5 6 ... 32
More
Less

Categories

Comedy

Themes

80s, Legal