Mary McDonnell
Mary McDonnell is a two-time
Oscar(r)-nominated actress who is known for her character performances in both
contemporary and period screen roles, and the long list of screen and stage
roles. Mary Eileen McDonnell was the daughter of John McDonnell (a computer
consultant) and Eileen (Mundy) is an Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania native. Raised
in Ithaca, New York, she graduated from the State University of New York (SUNY)
in Fredonia. She went on to the drama school and was later accepted into the
Long Wharf Theatre Company (East Coast). She was 22 years old when she got her
first movie part in Dances with Wolves (1990) in which she was "Stands
with a Fist", a Sioux Indian woman who is white. McDonnell received her
first Academy Award nomination for the part. McDonnell's film credits also
include Lawrence Kasdan's Grand Canyon (1991) & Mumford (1999),
opposite veteran actors such as Robert Redford, Sidney Poitier and Ben
Kingsley; Roland Emmerich’s Independence Day (1996) (starring Will Smith); the
famous art house cult film Donnie Darko (192001); and Margin Call (2011). The
film won her the Robert Altman Awards at the 2012 Independent Spirit Awards.
McDonnell was a star in the Syfy Network's award-winning show Battlestar
Galactica (2004), where she was praised for her portrayal of the President
Laura Roslin. Her regular guest role as host on the tv show ER (1994) was
rewarded with an Emmy nomination. TNT's hit drama series Major Crimes (2012)
features McDonnell as Captain Sharon Raydor. This is the sequel to The Closer
(2005) in which McDonnell developed the role. The show was nominated for a
Primetime Emmy(r). As a paraplegic soap-opera star in John Sayles’s critically
acclaimed film Passion Fish (1992), she won a Best Actress Academy Award(r)
nomination, nomination, and Golden Globe nomination.
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