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Sharon
Gless
From her starring role in "Faraday & Company" in 1973,
Sharon Gless has brought her own brand of humor, intelligence and dramatic
flair to each of her roles. She is best known for her portrayal of New
York Police Detective Christine Cagney on the hit series "Cagney
& Lacey" a role that garnered her two Emmys®, a Golden Globe™,
and six Emmy® nominations. Following "Cagney & Lacey,"
Gless re-teamed with the show's executive producer, Barney Rosenzweig, on
"The Trials of Rosie O'Neill" for which she was awarded her
second Golden Globe™ and two more Emmy® nominations. Gless married
Rosenzweig in 1991.
In 1994 and 1995, Gless and her television partner, Tyne Daly, joined
together to recreate their title roles in a quartet of critically
acclaimed and popular "Cagney & Lacey" television movies
which they fondly call "The Menopause Years". Other television
series in which she starred include "Switch," "House
Calls," and the short-lived, but critically lauded Steven Bochco
half-hour, "Turnabout." Gless has received much acclaim for
dramatic roles in such television movies as "Separated By
Murder," "Hard Hat and Legs," "Honor Thy Mother,"
"Hobson's Choice," "Letting Go," among others, as well
as the mini-series, "The Immigrants," "The Last
Convertible," "Centennial," and Garson Kanin's "Moviola:
The Scarlett O'Hara Wars, in which she played Carole Lombard.
Gless' theatrical film credits include a featured role in the suspenseful
and thought-provoking film, "The Star Chamber," which starred
Michael Douglas. She has recorded several 'Books on Tape' and starred in
numerous radio plays, one of which, "'Night, Mother," for the
BBC, garnered her the International Sony Award. She has starred twice on
stage in London's famed "West End," the first time in 1993 with
Bill Paterson, where she created the role of Annie Wilkes in Stephen
King's "Misery" at the Criterion Theater, and four years later,
opposite Tom Conti, in Neil Simon's "Chapter 2," at the Gielgud
Theater.
She recently starred at Chicago's Tony Award-winning playhouse, The
Victory Gardens Theater, in Claudia Allen's "Cahoots," as well
as several stints, including an evening at Madison Square Garden with the
National Company of Eve Ensler's "The Vagina Monologues." Gless
made her stage debut in Lillian Hellman's "Watch on the Rhine"
at Stage West in Springfield, Mass.
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