Blair Brown
Blair Brown | |
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Brown at Wondercon, March 2012 | |
Born | Bonnie Blair Brown (1946-04-23) April 23, 1946 Washington, D.C., U.S. |
Alma mater | National Theatre School of Canada |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1971–present |
Partner(s) | Richard Jordan (1976–1985) |
Children | 1 |
Bonnie Blair Brown (born April 23, 1946[1]) is an American theater, film and television actress. She has had a number of high-profile roles, including in the play Copenhagen on Broadway, the leading actress in the films Altered States (1980), Continental Divide (1981) and Strapless (1989), as well as a run as the title character in the comedy-drama television series The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd, which ran from 1987 to 1991.[2] Her later roles include Nina Sharp on the Fox television series Fringe and Judy King on the Netflix series Orange Is the New Black.
Contents
1 Early life
2 Career
2.1 Film
2.2 Television
2.3 Stage
2.4 Voice
3 Personal life
4 Filmography
4.1 Films
4.2 Television
5 References
6 External links
Early life
Brown was born in Washington, D.C., the daughter of Elizabeth Ann (née Blair), a teacher, and Milton Henry Brown, who worked at the Central Intelligence Agency.[3] She graduated from The Madeira School in McLean, Virginia, before going on to pursue acting at the National Theatre School of Canada, graduating in 1969.[4] She gained notice as a participating actor at the Stratford Shakespeare Festival and spent several years honing her work on the stage.[2]
Career
Film
Brown's first feature role was in the Oscar-winning 1973 film The Paper Chase; her first major starring role was in The Choirboys in 1977. Among her other film credits were Altered States (opposite William Hurt), One Trick Pony (with Paul Simon), the film Stealing Home (opposite Mark Harmon) and A Flash of Green (1984). Her arguably highest profile film role to date was the romantic lead opposite John Belushi in Continental Divide (1981) for which she received her first Golden Globe Award nomination, in the category of Best Motion Picture Actress in a Comedy/Musical.
Other film roles include: And I Alone Survived (1978), Strapless (1989),[5][6]The Astronaut's Wife (1999), Clint Eastwood's Space Cowboys (2000), Lars von Trier's Dogville, the Kevin Bacon-directed Loverboy (2005) and The Sentinel (2006).
Television
Brown appeared in several television movies and miniseries, primarily during the 1980s. A high-profile role as Jacqueline Kennedy in the 1983 TV miniseries Kennedy earned her a second Golden Globe nomination, for Best Actress in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for Television, as well as a BAFTA nomination. She also appeared in several other programs about the Kennedys, including the 1996 miniseries A Season in Purgatory, which was a thinly veiled portrait of the family, as well as an appearance as Anna Roosevelt in a telefilm about Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt.
Brown is perhaps best known for her five-year run (1987–1991) on the comedy-drama series The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd. Brown played the title role, and she, and the show, earned a small but dedicated following. Brown received five consecutive Emmy Award nominations for each season, in the category of Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series, but never won. The show spent two years on NBC, then moved to the Lifetime cable channel for the remainder of its run.[citation needed]
Brown also appeared in other prime-time series including The Rockford Files, Kojak, Frasier, Smallville, Touched by an Angel, ER, and Ed. Beginning in 2008, Brown starred as Nina Sharp in the Fox television series Fringe. Since 2015, Brown appears on the Netflix comedy-drama series Orange is the New Black as fictional television personality Judy King, an inmate loosely based on Martha Stewart.[7]
Stage
Brown has been involved with theater since the beginning of her career. She appeared in the 1975 New York Shakespeare Festival production of The Comedy of Errors.[8] Among her earlier roles was a run as Lucy Brown in the 1976 production of The Threepenny Opera, produced by Joe Papp and directed by Richard Foreman. She left the production for film work, but after being away from the production for eight months, Ellen Greene, who was playing the part of Jenny, fell ill. Brown astounded the stage manager of the production by coming in and, with one hour of rehearsal, put on a "brilliant" performance as Jenny.[9] Her first major appearance on Broadway came in 1989, in the play Secret Rapture, written by David Hare.
Once "Molly Dodd" concluded, Brown became a prolific Broadway actress, appearing in, among other productions, Tom Stoppard's 1995 Lincoln Center Theater production of Arcadia[10] and two separate runs as Frau Schneider in the revival of Cabaret (1998 and 2003).[11] She played Margrethe, the wife of physicist Niels Bohr, in the play Copenhagen,[12] a role for which she won a 2000 Tony Award in the category of Best Featured Actress in a Play.[13] Brown played the lead role in Sarah Ruhl's 2006 play The Clean House at Lincoln Center.[14]
Voice
In the 1990s, Brown expanded her career into voiceover work, narrating both audiobooks and films and documentaries. Her audiobooks projects include John Grisham's The Client, Lois Lowry's Number the Stars, Stephen King's Rose Madder, Kevin Henkes' Olive's Ocean, Sue Miller's 2005 novel Lost in the Forest, and Isabel Allende's Inés of My Soul.
Her voiceovers are heard on a number of documentaries, including PBS's American Experience series and the 2007 PBS series The Mysterious Human Heart. Other documentary narrations include the scientific series The Secret Life of the Brain, a documentary on Aimee Semple McPherson, which aired in April 2007, and a 2006 PBS documentary about Marie Antoinette. In April, 2010, she co-narrated the PBS special The Buddha with Richard Gere.
Personal life
Brown had a relationship with the late actor Richard Jordan, whom she met while filming the miniseries Captains and the Kings in 1976. The couple lived together from 1976 to 1985; their son Robert Christopher Hand Jordan was born in 1983. She dated playwright David Hare from 1985 to 1990; he referred to her as his muse.[15]She mentioned on Johnny Carson in 1989 that she is a Democrat.
Filmography
Films
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | House of Lovers | George Thacker | |
1973 | The Paper Chase | Miss Farranti | |
1977 | The Choirboys | Kimberly Lyles | |
1980 | One-Trick Pony | Marion | |
1980 | Altered States | Emily Jessup | |
1981 | Continental Divide | Nell Porter | Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy |
1984 | A Flash of Green | Kat Hubble | |
1988 | Stealing Home | Ginny Wyatt | |
1989 | Strapless | Dr. Lillian Hempel | |
1991 | The Good Policeman | Rebecca Karp | |
1992 | Passed Away | Amy Scanlan | |
1999 | The Astronaut's Wife | Shelly McLaren | |
2000 | Space Cowboys | Dr. Anne Caruthers | |
2002 | Grasp | Jean Malcheck | |
2002 | Benjamin Franklin | Jane Franklin Mecom | |
2002 | Young Dr. Freud | Narrator | |
2003 | Dogville | Mrs. Henson | |
2005 | Loverboy | Jeanette Rawley | |
2006 | The Sentinel | National Security Advisor | |
2006 | The Treatment | Miss Callucci | |
2006 | Griffin & Phoenix | Eve | |
2007 | Dark Matter | Hildy | |
2007 | First Born | Laura's Mother | |
2011 | The Speed of Thought | Bridger |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1971 | Police Surgeon | Dulcy | Episode: "Lies" |
1972–75 | The Whiteoaks of Jalna | Pheasan Vaughan | 2 episodes |
1973 | Dracula | Television film | |
1975 | Performance | N/A | Episode: "Six War Years" |
1975 | The Rockford Files | Dep. DA Kate Doyle/Kate Flanders | Episode: "The Girl in the Bay City Boys Club" |
1976 | The Oregon Trail | Jessica Thorpe | Episode: "Pilot" |
1976 | Captains and the Kings | Elizabeth Healey | 6 episodes |
1976 | Kojak | Stella | Episode: "Where Do You Go When You Have Nowhere to Go?" |
1977 | Family | Miss Jessup | Episode: "We Love You, Miss Jessup" |
1977 | Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years | Anna Roosevelt | Television film |
1977 | Charlie Cobb: Nice Night for a Hanging | Charity | Television film |
1977 | The 3,000 Mile Chase | Rachel Kane | Television film |
1977 | The Quinns | Millicent Priestley | Television film |
1978 | Wheels | Barbara Lipton | Episode: "#1.1" |
1978 | And I Alone Survived | Lauren Elder | Television film |
1979 | The Child Stealer | Jan Rodman | Television film |
1983 | Kennedy | Jacqueline Kennedy | Episode: "#1.2" Nominated—BAFTA TV Award for Best Actress Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film |
1983 | The Skin of Our Teeth | Sabina | Television film |
1985 | Space | Penny Hardesty Pope | 5 episodes |
1985 | ABC Afterschool Special | Joan Stewart | Episode: "Don't Touch" |
1985 | The Bad Seed | Christine Penmark | Television film |
1986 | Comedy Factory | Valerie Arnold | Episode: "The Faculty" |
1987 | Hands of a Stranger | Diane Benton | Television film |
1987–91 | The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd | Molly Dodd | 65 episodes Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series (1987–91) |
1990 | Extreme Close-Up | Margaret Toll | Television film |
1991 | Lethal Innocence | Sally Hatch | Television film |
1992 | Those Secrets | Neille Banesh | Television film |
1992 | Majority Rule | Gen. Katherine Taylor | Television film |
1993 | Rio Shannon | Elizabeth Cleary | Television film |
1993 | The Day My Parents Ran Away | Mrs. Judy Miller | Television film |
1994 | Moment of Truth: To Walk Again | Carol Keating | Television film |
1994 | The Gift of Love | Helen Porter | Television film |
1995 | Frasier | Jill | Episode: "Shrink Rap" |
1995 | American Experience | Evelyn Nesbit | Episode: "Murder of the Century" |
1996 | The Ultimate Lie | Joan 'Joanie' McGrath | Television film |
1996 | A Season in Purgatory | Grace Bradley | Television film |
1997 | Convictions | Zalinda Dorcheus | Television film |
1997 | Feds | Erica Stanton | Unsold TV pilot |
2000 | In His Life: The John Lennon Story | Mimi Smith | Television film |
2000 | Hamlet | Gertrude | Television film |
2001 | Follow the Stars Home | Hannah Parker | Television film |
2001 | Touched by an Angel | Victoria | Episode: "A Winter Carol" |
2002 | Smallville | Rachel Dunleavy | Episode: "Lineage" |
2002 | CSI: Miami | Margie Winters | Episode: "Camp Fear" |
2003 | Law & Order | Virginia Masters | Episode: "Seer" |
2003–04 | Ed | Mary Burton | 2 episodes |
2003–07 | American Experience | Narrator | 5 episodes |
2004 | ER | Dr. Vicki Ford | Episode: "Midnight" |
2004 | Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | Attorney Lynne Riff | 2 episodes |
2004 | Dark Shadows | Elizabeth Collins Stoddard | Television film |
2004 | Copshop | Frances Harding | Television film |
2005 | Missing | Emma Roderick | Episode: "Off the Grid" |
2008–13 | Fringe | Nina Sharp | 46 episodes Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Guest Starring Role on Television |
2011 | Falling Skies | Sonya | Episode: "What Hides Beneath" |
2012 | Political Animals | Mrs. Berg | Episode: "16 Hours" |
2014 | Forever | Fawn Mahoney Ames | Episode: "The Man in the Killer Suit" |
2014 | The Affair | Dr. Gunderson | Episode: "8" |
2015 | Person of Interest | Emma Blake | Episode: "Guilty" |
2015–17 | Orange Is the New Black | Judy King | 25 episodes |
2015–16 | Limitless | Marie Finch | 7 episodes |
2017 | Elementary | Kate Durning | 2 episodes |
2018 | Jack Ryan | CIA Director Sue Joyce | 2 episodes |
References
^ Profile, tv.com; accessed July 29, 2016.
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[dead link]
^ "Blair Brown profile". FilmReference.com.
^ "Alumni: 1963-1969". National Theatre School of Canada. Archived from the original on 2012-05-12.
^ "Review/Film; Womanhood and Politics In David Hare's 'Strapless'". The New York Times. May 20, 1990.
^ Thomas, William (January 1, 2000). "Strapless Review". empireonline.
^ Schremph, Kelly (2015). "Who Plays Judy King On 'Orange Is The New Black'? You've Definitely Seen This Actress Before". bustle.com. Retrieved June 19, 2016.
^ O'Hare, Patricia (April 19, 2000). "Red-haired Brown liable to lasso two Tony nominations". New York Daily News.
^ Gindi, Roger (February 6, 2000). "Blair Brown; To the Rescue". The New York Times.
^ "PHOTO ARCHIVE: Arcadia in 1995, With Billy Crudup, Blair Brown and Victor Garber". Retrieved July 29, 2016.
[permanent dead link]
^ Hernandez, Ernio (September 8, 2003). "Tony Roberts and Blair Brown Are Cabaret's New Schultz and Schneider, Sept. 22". Retrieved July 29, 2016.
^ Brantley, Ben (April 12, 2000). "Theater Review; A Fiery Power In the Behavior Of Particles And Humans". The New York Times. Retrieved July 29, 2016.
^ McBride, Murdoch (June 4, 2000). "2000 TONY AWARD WINNER: Best Featured Actress In A Play - Blair Brown". Playbill.com. Archived from the original on September 8, 2012.
^ Isherwood, Charles (October 31, 2006). "Theater Review: 'The Clean House'". The New York Times.
^ Blair Brown on IMDb
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Blair Brown. |
Blair Brown on IMDb
Blair Brown at the Internet Broadway Database
Blair Brown at AllMovie