Margot Rose
Margot Rose | |
---|---|
Born | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U. S. |
July 17, 1956
Occupation | Actress, composer, lyricist |
Years active | 1978-present |
Margot Rose (born July 17, 1956) is a television and film actress, composer and lyricist.
Contents
Background
She attended Interlochen Arts Academy, the Yale School of Drama and the North Carolina School of the Arts. Margot began her career in 1980 working in theater and television commercials and was a member of the original company of I'm Getting My Act Together & Taking it on the Road at the New York Shakespeare Festival, then later at the Circle in the Square Downtown.[1]
Career
She has guest starred in over sixty television series including: Hill Street Blues, E/R, Night Court, Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, L.A. Law, The West Wing, Judging Amy, Desperate Housewives, Law and Order: Los Angeles, Murphy's Law, The Mentalist and Numb3rs, among many others. She has also had a number of roles in films that include: 48 Hrs., A Civil Action, True Believer, Brewster's Millions and Hollow Man. Rose composed the music for the 2000 film Sordid Lives and the 2008 television series Sordid Lives: The Series. She also performed in the original Del Shores stage production of Sordid Lives in 1996[2][3] in the role of Bitsy Mae Harling.[4]
Theater
- 'Still Getting My Act Together
- 'Equus
- I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the Road
- Godspell
- Sordid Lives[5]
- Largo Desolato
- Last Summer at Bluefish Cove
- Gay '90s Revue[6]
- Siblings
- Robber Bridegroom
- Working
- Taken in Marriage
- Uncommon Women & Others
- Fixations
- Goddess of Mystery
- An Awfully Big Adventure
Filmography
- Report to Murphy (6 episodes, 1982) (TV)
- Hill Street Blues (1 episode, 1982) (TV)
- Something So Right (1982) (TV)
- 48 Hrs. (1982)
- We Got It Made (1 episode, 1983) (TV)
- Simon & Simon (1 episode, 1984) (TV)
- Never Again (1984) (TV movie)
- E/R (1 episode, 1985) (TV)
- Brewster's Millions (1985)
- He's the Mayor (13 episodes, 1986) (TV)
- Foley Square (1 episode, 1986) (TV)
- Stranded (1986) (TV)
- Starman (1 episode, 1986) (TV)
- Night Court (4 episodes, 1986) (TV)
- Murder Ordained (1987) (TV movie)
- Hotel (1 episode, 1987) (TV)
- Hunter (1 episode, 1988) (TV)
- True Believer (1989)
- 21 Jump Street (1 episode, 1989) (TV)
- Chain Letter (1989) (TV movie)
- The Famous Teddy Z (1 episode, 1989) (TV)
- Freddy's Nightmares (1 episode, 1990) (TV)
- Equal Justice (2 episodes, 1990) (TV)
- Eating (1990)
- Howie and Rose (1991) (TV movie)
- Star Trek: The Next Generation (1 episode, 1992, The Inner Light) (TV)
- A House of Secrets and Lies (1992) (TV movie)
- Her Final Fury: Betty Broderick, the Last Chapter (1992) (TV movie)
- From the Files of Joseph Wambaugh: A Jury of One (1992) (TV movie)
- Jack's Place (1 episode, 1993) (TV)
- Dying to Love You (1993) (TV movie)
- Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (1 episode, 1993) (TV)
- L.A. Law (1 episode, 1994) (TV)
- Models Inc. (3 episodes, 1994-1995) (TV)
- Mr. & Mrs Smith (1 episode, 1996) (TV)
- Beverly Hills, 90210 (1 episode, 1996) (TV)
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1 episode, 1996, Hard Time) (TV)
- Melrose Place (1 episode, 1996) (TV)
- Murder One (1 episode, 1996) (TV)
- Women: Stories of Passion (1 episode, 1997) (TV)
- Chicago Hope (2 episodes, 1997-1998) (TV)
- L.A. Doctors (1 episode, 1998) (TV)
- Damon (All 11 episodes, 1998) (TV)
- A Civil Action (1998)
- Getting Away with Murder: The JonBenét Ramsey Mystery (2000) (TV movie)
- The Pretender (1 episode, 2000) (TV)
- Sordid Lives (2000) (Composer)
- Hollow Man (2000)
- Grosse Pointe (3 episodes, 2001) (TV) (Director/Composer)
- The Division (1 episode, 2001) (TV)
- The West Wing (1 episode, 2004, The Benign Prerogative) (TV)
- Judging Amy (2 episodes, 2001-2004) (TV)
- Plainsong (2004) (TV movie)
- The Nine (2 episodes, 2006-2007) (TV)
- Sordid Lives: The Series (12 episodes, 2008) (Composer)
- The Mentalist (1 episode, 2009) (TV)
- Desperate Housewives (1 episode, 2010)
- Law and Order: Los Angeles (1 episode, 2010)
Audio work
- Tell Me a Story 3: Women of Wonder(Audio CD, narrator and singer)
Recognition
Of Rose's performance in the theatrical production of The Gay '90s Musical in 1997, Variety wrote the play "features the beautifully harmonized voices of Margot Rose, [Bill] Ledesma and [Bill] Hutton as a trio of gay friends who nurture and support each other throughout their lives".[6]
Of her performance in the 1996 theatrical production Sordid Lives Variety wrote "Also lending solid support are ... and Margot Rose as the well-worn Betsy Mae, whose gentle musical offerings of such ballads as 'Will the Circle Be Unbroken,' 'The Water Is Wide' and an original title song punctuate the onstage doings."[5]
References
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External links
- Articles with dead external links from September 2010
- Articles with dead external links from October 2010
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- 1956 births
- Actresses from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- American film actresses
- American television actresses
- American female composers
- American composers
- University of North Carolina School of the Arts alumni
- Yale University alumni
- Living people