Olivia D'Abo - Television Roles

Television Roles

  • Growing Pains (1985-86)
  • One Big Family (1987)
  • Simon & Simon (1988)
  • Tour of Duty (1988)
  • The Bronx Zoo (1988)
  • The Wonder Years (1988–93)
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation (1992)
  • The Single Guy (1995)
  • Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm as Sonya Blade (voice only) (1996)
  • Adventures from the Book of Virtues (1998)
  • The Wild Thornberries (1998)
  • Fantasy Island (1998)
  • Batman Beyond (1999)
  • Party of Five (1999)
  • The Single Guy (1996–97)
  • 3rd Rock from the Sun (2000)
  • Spin City (2001)
  • Invader Zim (2001–02)- Tak
  • The Legend of Tarzan (2001–03)
  • Law & Order: Criminal Intent as Nicole Wallace (5 episodes, 2001–2008)
  • Justice League/Justice League Unlimited (voice only) (2002–05)
  • The Twilight Zone (2002)
  • Alias as Emma Wallace (Double Agent, Season 2 Episode 14, 2003)
  • Eureka (2007)
  • Star Wars: The Clone Wars as Luminara Unduli (2008–present)
  • Green Lantern: First Flight as Carol Ferris (voice only) (2009)
  • Generator Rex as Five (2011)

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Famous quotes containing the words television and/or roles:

    The television screen, so unlike the movie screen, sharply reduced human beings, revealed them as small, trivial, flat, in two banal dimensions, drained of color. Wasn’t there something reassuring about it!—that human beings were in fact merely images of a kind registered in one another’s eyes and brains, phenomena composed of microscopic flickering dots like atoms. They were atoms—nothing more. A quick switch of the dial and they disappeared and who could lament the loss?
    Joyce Carol Oates (b. 1938)

    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)