The gilded age cast season 3
Christine Baranski
American actress (born )
Christine Jane Baranski (born May 2, )[1] is an American actress. She received the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for her role as Maryann Thorpe in the sitcom Cybill (–). Baranski is also known for her roles as Diane Lockhart in the legal drama series The Good Wife (–) and its spin-off series The Good Fight (–), and as Agnes van Rhijn in the period drama series The Gilded Age (–present), both roles which earned her Primetime Emmy Award nominations.
Baranski is also known for her film roles in Reversal of Fortune (), The Birdcage (), Cruel Intentions (), How the Grinch Stole Christmas (), Chicago (), Mamma Mia! (), Into the Woods (), and Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again (). For her recurring role as Dr. Beverly Hofstadter in the sitcom The Big Bang Theory (–), she received four Primetime Emmy Award nominations.
Baranski won two Tony Awards for Best Featured Actress in a Play for her role as Charlotte in Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing () and as Chris Gorman in Neil Simon's Rumors (). Her other major Broadway credits include Hurlyburly (), The House of Blue Leaves (), and Boeing Boeing ().
She also portrayed Mrs. Lovett in the Kennedy Center's production of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street ().
Early life and education
Baranski was born in Buffalo, New York, the daughter of Virginia (née Mazurowska) and Lucien Baranski, who edited a Polish-language newspaper.[2] She had an older brother, Michael J.
Baranski (–), an advertising executive who died at age [3] She is of Polish descent, and her grandparents were stage actors in Poland before emigrating to US.[4][5] Baranski was raised in a heavily Polish and Catholic neighborhood in the Buffalo suburb of Cheektowaga. She attended high school at the Villa Maria Academy where she was class president and salutatorian.[6][7][8] She studied at New York City's Juilliard School[9] (Drama Division Group 3: –),[10] where she graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.[11]
Career
Stage
Baranski made her off-Broadway debut in Coming Attractions at Playwrights Horizons in , and has appeared in several off-Broadway productions at the Manhattan Theatre Club, starting with Sally and Marsha in Baranski made her Broadway debut in Hide & Seek in For her next Broadway performance, in Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing, she won the Tony Award Best Featured Actress in a Play.
Other Broadway credits include Hurlyburly, The House of Blue Leaves, Rumors (for which she won her second Tony), Regrets Only, Nick & Nora, and the Encores! concert staging of Follies.
At the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., Baranski starred as Mrs. Lovett in Sweeney Todd in (for which she won the Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Actress in a Musical) and as the title character in Mame in [12][8] In her first Broadway production since , Baranski was featured as the maid Berthe in the revival of Boeing Boeing.[13] The show garnered two Tony Awards, one for Best Revival of a Play and the other for Best Actor (Mark Rylance).
The original cast was Bradley Whitford (Bernard), Kathryn Hahn (Gloria), Christine Baranski (Berthe), Gina Gershon (Gabriella), and Mary McCormack (Gretchen). The show closed on January 4,
Baranski also appeared in a one-night-only concert benefit performance of Stephen Sondheim's A Little Night Music for Roundabout Theatre Company as Countess Charlotte Malcolm on January 12, [14] The cast included Vanessa Redgrave, Natasha Richardson, Victor Garber and Marc Kudisch.
Imdb biography search Archibald's Next Big Thing. The Mary Sue. Archived from the original on February 9, Aaron Tveit, Christine Baranski Date:.Baranski has won both the Tony Award and Drama Desk Awards twice. In , she was inducted into the American Theater Hall of Fame.[15]
Film
Baranski has appeared in various film roles. Some of her better-known roles are as Katherine Archer in The Birdcage (), Martha May Whovier in How the Grinch Stole Christmas (), Mary Sunshine in Chicago () and Connie Chasseur in The Ref ().
Baranski received further recognition for her role as Tanya Chesham-Leigh in the hit musical film Mamma Mia! (), and its sequel Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again (). Baranski played Cinderella's stepmother in the film adaptation of the musical Into the Woods.[16] Baranski has also appeared in the films 9½ Weeks (), Legal Eagles (), Reversal of Fortune (), Addams Family Values (), Jeffrey (), The Odd Couple II () Bulworth (), Cruel Intentions (), Bowfinger (), Welcome to Mooseport (), Trolls () and A Bad Moms Christmas ().
Television
Baranski appeared in short-term roles on various daytime soap operas, including All My Children and Another World. Baranski was featured as Cybill Shepherd's sarcastic, hard-drinking friend Maryann Thorpe in the CBSsitcomCybill, which ran from until , during which time she hosted Saturday Night Live and won an Emmy Award as Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series along with three other nominations.
During this, Baranski portrayed a librarian named Sonja Umdahl in the "Dick and the Single Girl" episode of 3rd Rock from the Sun.[17] A few years later, Baranski received an Emmy nomination for a guest starring role in the NBC seriesFrasier as a controversial tough love radio psychiatrist named Dr. Nora. The episode, which was named for the character, parodied Dr.
Laura Schlessinger.[18][19] The episode was pulled from syndication by Paramount.[19] Baranski had an uncredited role in the series Now and Again as the voice of Roger's overbearing wife Ruth, who was never seen by viewers.
Baranski later appeared in the – sitcom Welcome to New York and, with John Laroquette, in the – NBC sitcom Happy Family.
She co-starred with Bernadette Peters in a pilot for an ABC sitcom, Adopted, in , which was not picked up. She also played Faith Clancy, the mother of Jim Clancy in Ghost Whisperer. In , Baranski began guest-starring in The Big Bang Theory as Dr. Beverly Hofstadter, a dispassionate psychiatrist and neuroscientist and mother of one of the protagonists, Leonard Hofstadter.
She first appeared in the second-season episode "The Maternal Capacitance", for which she received an Emmy nomination. Due to the popularity of her first appearance, Baranski returned in the third season for the Christmas episode "The Maternal Congruence", receiving another Emmy nomination. She appeared in a total of 16 episodes during the show's run, earning four Emmy nominations for her recurring role.[20][21]
From to , Baranski played the role of Diane Lockhart, a top litigator and senior partner of a Chicago law firm on the CBS series The Good Wife.
She was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series for six seasons of the series, in the years to Besides her work on The Good Wife and the aforementioned guest appearances on The Big Bang Theory, her other recent appearances include Ugly Betty in as Victoria Hartley, the haughty mother of Betty's new boyfriend.[22][23]
From to , Baranski starred in the CBS spinoff of The Good Wife, titled The Good Fight.
Her character, Diane Lockhart, joins another law firm after being forced to return to work.[24] In the 79th Golden Globe Awards, she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Drama for her work in the fifth season of the show. Since she has portrayed Agnes van Rhijn in the Julian Fellowes-created HBO period drama The Gilded Age starring opposite Carrie Coon, Louisa Jacobson, and Cynthia Nixon.
The cast received a nomination for the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series.
Acting style and screen persona
Although recognized for her versatility across genres and performing media, Baranski is particularly known for playing sophisticated and highly educated upper-class women.[25] Consequently, the media began alluding to the resemblance between this repeated on-screen persona and Baranski's real personality.[26][27][28] Caroline Hallemann of Town & Country notes that, "For years, the award-winning actress has been the definition of on-screen sophistication."[29] In , the actress told Zac Posen for Interview Magazine, "What I'm getting at is if your career is not predicated on just your physical beauty, you're able to project a sophistication.
You can take sophisticated to your grave. You can be that worldly woman, that woman who looks beautiful dressed up."[30] On the other hand, Baranski humorously addressed these claims during her appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, "Everybody thinks this is, you know, this sophisticated lady, this New York type, these characters that I play, they think that's me.
They should be in a room alone with me when I watch the Buffalo Bills. It is loud."[31]
Personal life
Baranski was married to actor Matthew Cowles from October until his death on May 22, [32] Together, they had two daughters, Isabel (b. ), a lawyer, and Lily (b.
), an actress.[33][34] She lives in Connecticut. A devout Catholic, Baranski often attends Mass with Robert King, co-creator of The Good Fight.[35]
Filmography
Film
Television
Theatre
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Hamlet | Lady | Delacorte Theater | |
'Tis Pity She's A Whore | Annabella | McCarter Theatre | |
Romeo and Juliet | Lady Capulet | American Shakespeare Festival | |
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof | Margaret | American Shakespeare Festival, double-cast | |
Twelfth Night | Lady-in-Waiting | American Shakespeare Festival | |
The Cherry Orchard | Danyasha | Center Stage Theatre | |
Tartuffe | Dorina | ||
Misalliance | Lina Szczepanowska | ||
She Stoops To Conquer | Constance | ||
Private Lives | Amanda or Sibyl (?) | Cohoes Music Hall | |
Angel City | Miss Scoons | McCarter Theatre | |
Otherwise Engaged | Davina Saunders | U.S.
cities tour | |
Born Yesterday | Billie Dawn | Center Stage Theatre | |
One Crack Out | Wanda | Marymount Manhattan Theatre | |
Much Ado About Nothing | Beatrice | Annenberg Center, American Shakespeare Festival | |
Says I, Says He | Maeve Macpherson | Marymount Manhattan Theatre | |
The Shadow of a Gunman | Minnie Powell | Symphony Space | |
Company | April | Playwrights Horizons[40] | |
Lady of The Diamond | Connie Weaver | Studio Arena | |
The Trouble with Europe | Amanda Gracie, Madame Igrec, and second underworld figure | Marymount Manhattan Theatre | |
Hide & Seek | Elly Bart | Broadway | |
Coming Attractions | Miss America | Playwrights Horizons | |
Talley's Folly | Sally Talley | Studio Arena | |
Operation Midnight Climax | Angela | Off-Center Theatre | |
A Midsummer Night's Dream | Helena | American Shakespeare Festival, Delacorte Theatre | |
Sally and Marsha | Marsha | Manhattan Theatre Club | |
Blithe Spirit | Elvira | McCarter Theatre | |
The Undefeated Rumba Champ | Miss Harris | Ensemble Studio Theater | |
Sunday in the Park with George | Clarisse (later named Yvonne), Blair Daniels | Playwrights Horizons | |
The Real Thing | Charlotte | Plymouth Theatre | |
Hurlyburly | Bonnie | Ethel Barrymore Theatre | |
The House of Blue Leaves | Bunny Flingus | Vivian Beaumont Theatre, Plymouth Theatre | |
It's Only a Play | Julia Budder | Manhattan Theatre Club | |
Hedda Gabler | Hedda Gabler | Studio Arena | |
Rumors | Chris Gorman | Broadhurst Theatre | |
Assassins | Performer (reading) | Playwrights Horizons | |
Elliot Loves | Joanna | Goodman Theatre | |
Lips Together, Teeth Apart | Chloe Haddock | New York City Center Stage I, Lucille Lortel Theatre | |
Nick & Nora | Tracy Gardner | Marriott Marquis Theatre | |
The Loman Family Picnic | Doris | Manhattan Theatre Club Stage I | |
The Petrified Prince | Queen Katarina (?) (reading) | Joseph Papp Public Theater | |
Promises, Promises | Marge MacDougall | Encores!, City Center Theatre | |
Mizlansky/Zilinsky or "Schmucks" | Sylvia Zilinsky (voice) | Manhattan Theatre Club Stage I | |
Sweeney Todd | Mrs.
Lovett | Ahmanson Theatre | |
Kennedy Center | |||
Sondheim Concert Spectacular | Herself | David Geffen Hall | |
The Threepenny Opera | Mrs. Peachum (reading) | Roundabout Theatre Company | |
Dinner | Paige (reading) | Royal National Theatre/Loft | |
Mame | Mame Dennis | Kennedy Center | |
Follies | Carlotta Campion | Encores!,[41]New York City Center | |
The Sisters Rosensweig | Gorgeous Teitelbaum (reading) | Vivian Beaumont Theater | |
Regrets Only | Tibby McCullough | New York City Center Stage I | |
Boeing-Boeing | Berthe | Longacre Theatre | |
A Little Night Music | Countess Charlotte Malcolm | Roundabout Theatre Company | |
Love, Loss, and What I Wore | Performer (reading) | DR2 Theatre | |
On Your Toes | Peggy Porterfield | Encores!,[42]New York City Center | |
Follies | Phyllis Rogers Stone | Royal Albert Hall | |
White Rabbit Red Rabbit | Performer (replacement) | Westside Theatre |
Video games
Audio
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
A Christmas Memory | Female cousin (Sook in later adaptations) | Short autobiographical story | |
Unsung Musicals | Performer | Song: Sherry!
from: Sherry! | |
Short Talks on the Universe | Maria | Story: "3 A.M." | |
–20 | The Two Princes | Queen Lavinia | Audio drama, 3 seasons |
Awards and nominations
Main article: List of awards and nominations received by Christine Baranski
Baranski has received numerous accolades over her career including a Primetime Emmy Award, three Screen Actors Guild Awards, and two Tony Awards.
Baranski is also the most nominated performer at the Critics' Choice Television Awards, with 10 nominations.
References
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