At long last, the Kepner family tree is complete. Or at least it will be this fall when Grey’s Anatomy formally introduces April’s mother.
TVLine has learned exclusively that Connie Ray (The Big C, The Torkelsons) has been cast as the Kepner clan’s matriarch, Karen. This is technically a recast, since the character appeared briefly (sans dialogue) at April’s wedding to Jackson last season played by a different actress (the first person to ID said mystery actress in the comments wins a 20% off coupon to Bed Bath & Beyond).
Related Fall TV Spoilerpalooza: Exclusive Scoop and Photos From 42 Returning Favorites,...
TVLine has learned exclusively that Connie Ray (The Big C, The Torkelsons) has been cast as the Kepner clan’s matriarch, Karen. This is technically a recast, since the character appeared briefly (sans dialogue) at April’s wedding to Jackson last season played by a different actress (the first person to ID said mystery actress in the comments wins a 20% off coupon to Bed Bath & Beyond).
Related Fall TV Spoilerpalooza: Exclusive Scoop and Photos From 42 Returning Favorites,...
- 9/19/2014
- TVLine.com
Marco Zappia, award-winning TV editor of Hee-Haw, All In The Family, Home Improvement and dozens of additional TV series and specials, died December 22 in Ventura, CA. He was 76. Los Angeles-born Zappia went from owning a TV repair shop to an award-winning career in editing that spanned four decades when he joined CBS in 1968 as an engineer in the videotape department, where he helped install the network’s first electronic editing system. His first editing gig on CBS’s variety show Hee Haw nabbed him his first Emmy and also marked the network’s first-ever win for editing. Zappia went on to edit numerous TV specials and series including Maude, The Jeffersons, The Sonny & Cher Show, All in The Family, Archie Bunker’s Place, Roseanne, and Faerie Tale Theatre. His prolific ’90s sitcom credits include My Two Dads, Dinosaurs, Who’s The Boss?, The Torkelsons and spin-off Almost Home, Where I Live,...
- 12/29/2013
- by THE DEADLINE TEAM
- Deadline TV
If you watched "Dallas" back in the day, Omri Katz may already have been on your radar by the time he scored lead roles in two mildly-received 1993 flicks, Matinee and Hocus Pocus. But as an "Eerie, Indiana" devotee, I'd been riding the Omri Katz train since 1991, when the inspired but short-lived NBC series -- a sort of "X-Files meets Encyclopedia Brown" serial starring a then-15-year-old Katz as Marshall Teller, paranormal investigator -- debuted in its first and only season.
That meant that even after "Eerie, Indiana" met its premature end, I remained on the hunt for as much Omri Katz as I could find: reruns of "Eerie, Indiana," that one episode of "The Torkelsons" in which he took Dorothy Jane out on her first nighttime date... even the terrible, godawful-even-with-nostalgia-goggles-on, made-for-tv movie Adventures in Dinosaur City. That movie, a live-action adventure about three kids stuck in an alternate universe with wisecracking dinosaurs and cavemen,...
That meant that even after "Eerie, Indiana" met its premature end, I remained on the hunt for as much Omri Katz as I could find: reruns of "Eerie, Indiana," that one episode of "The Torkelsons" in which he took Dorothy Jane out on her first nighttime date... even the terrible, godawful-even-with-nostalgia-goggles-on, made-for-tv movie Adventures in Dinosaur City. That movie, a live-action adventure about three kids stuck in an alternate universe with wisecracking dinosaurs and cavemen,...
- 6/17/2010
- by Jen Yamato
- Cinematical
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.