Deidre Hall - Roles

Roles

  • San Francisco International Airport (1970)
  • Night Gallery (Blonde - 1971)
  • Adventures of Nick Carter (Ivy Duncan - 1972)
  • Adam-12 (Nurse - 1972)
  • The Streets of San Francisco (Bank Teller - 1972)
  • Emergency! (Nurse Sally Lewis - 1972-1973)
  • The Young and the Restless (Barbara - 1973)
  • Columbo (Receptionist - 1974)
  • Kung Fu (Luise - 1975)
  • Karen (Janet Bartel - 1975)
  • S.W.A.T. (Diane - 1975)
  • Joe Forrester (1976)
  • Special Delivery (1976)
  • Electra Woman and Dyna Girl (Electra Woman - 1976)
  • Days of our Lives (Dr.Marlena Evans - 1976-1987; 1991–2009; 2011-present)
  • Pray TV (Sarah of Nazareth - 1980)
  • The Million Dollar Face (Barbara Sanderson - 1981)
  • Hot Pursuit (1984)
  • Hotel (Maggie Dawson - 1984)
  • A Reason to Live (Delores Stewart - 1985)
  • Our House (Jessica 'Jessie' Witherspoon - 1986-1988)
  • Take My Daughters, Please (Nell - 1988)
  • Wiseguy (Claudia Newquay, 1989)
  • Perry Mason: The Case of the All-Star Assassin (Linda Horton - 1989)
  • Columbo (Dian Hunter - 1990)
  • Murder, She Wrote (Claudia Carboni - 1990)
  • And the Sea Will Tell (Muff Graham - 1991)
  • For the Very First Time (Mrs. O'Neil - 1991)
  • Woman on the Ledge (Quinn - 1993)
  • OP Center (Kate Michaels - 1995)
  • Never Say Never: The Deidre Hall Story (Herself - 1995)
  • Drop Dead Diva (Herself - 2011)

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Famous quotes containing the word roles:

    A concern with parenting...must direct attention beyond behavior. This is because parenting is not simply a set of behaviors, but participation in an interpersonal, diffuse, affective relationship. Parenting is an eminently psychological role in a way that many other roles and activities are not.
    Nancy Chodorow (20th century)

    Productive collaborations between family and school, therefore, will demand that parents and teachers recognize the critical importance of each other’s participation in the life of the child. This mutuality of knowledge, understanding, and empathy comes not only with a recognition of the child as the central purpose for the collaboration but also with a recognition of the need to maintain roles and relationships with children that are comprehensive, dynamic, and differentiated.
    Sara Lawrence Lightfoot (20th century)

    There is a striking dichotomy between the behavior of many women in their lives at work and in their lives as mothers. Many of the same women who are battling stereotypes on the job, who are up against unspoken assumptions about the roles of men and women, seem to accept—and in their acceptance seem to reinforce—these roles at home with both their sons and their daughters.
    Ellen Lewis (20th century)