Teri Hatcher
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| Teri Hatcher | ||||||||||
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Teri Hatcher (1995) |
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| Birth name | Teri Lynn Hatcher | |||||||||
| Born | December 8, 1964 Palo Alto, California, USA |
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| Other name(s) | Hatch | |||||||||
| Occupation | Presenter, Actress, Writer | |||||||||
| Spouse(s) | Jon Tenney (27 May 1994-March 2003) (Divorced) Marcus Leithold (4 June 1988-1989) {Divorced) |
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| Children | 1 | |||||||||
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Teri Lynn Hatcher (born 8 December 1964, Palo Alto) is an award-winning American actress best known for her roles as Lois Lane in the American television series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman and Susan Mayer in the American television series Desperate Housewives. She is also a "Bond Girl", having played Paris Carver in Tomorrow Never Dies in 1997.
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Hatcher was born in Palo Alto, California, the daughter of Esther (née Beshur), a computer programmer who worked for Lockheed Martin, and Owen W. Hatcher, a nuclear physicist and electrical engineer.[1][2] Hatcher's father was of Welsh and distant Choctaw Native American descent, and her mother had French, German, and Syrian ancestry.[2] Hatcher grew up in Sunnyvale, California.[2] An only child, she attended Mango Junior High (now Sunnyvale Middle School), Fremont High School in Sunnyvale and De Anza College in Cupertino.
In March 2006, Hatcher revealed to Vanity Fair that she was sexually abused from the age of five by Richard Hayes Stone, an uncle by marriage who was later divorced by Hatcher's aunt. Her parents, she said, were unaware of the abuse at the time. In 2002, she assisted Santa Clara County prosecutors in indicting Stone for a more recent molestation that led his female victim to commit suicide at the age of fourteen.[2] Stone pleaded guilty to four counts of child molestation and was sentenced to 14 years in prison.[3] In an interview appearing in Vanity Fair, Hatcher said she told the prosecutors about her own abuse because she was haunted by thoughts of the 14-year-old girl who shot herself, and feared Stone might escape conviction.
Hatcher began her performing career as a young girl taking ballet lessons at the San Juan Girls' Ballet Studio in downtown Los Altos, California.[2] She later studied acting at the American Conservatory Theater. One of her early jobs (in 1984) was as a cheerleader with the San Francisco 49ers. During this time, she also appeared as one of the mermaids on the show The Love Boat in its final season.[2]
Hatcher landed a co-starring role in 1993, opposite Dean Cain in Lois and Clark.[2] Her role proved to be the best move to gain the attention of audiences, and the one role she had most fallen in love with. While probably most noted for playing what is widely regarded as the best Lois Lane portrayal to date[citation needed] in the TV series Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (1993-1997), Hatcher has also appeared in such feature films as Spy Kids (2001), the 1997 James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies, Dead in the Water (1991), 2 Days in the Valley (1996), The Cool Surface (1994) and Heaven's Prisoners (1996). The last two films featured Hatcher's only on-screen nude scenes, but neither did well at the box office. ABC had cancelled Lois & Clark in 1997, and Hatcher was very disappointed about the show's demise. She was also desperate in looking for work.[citation needed] She has made a guest appearance in Star Trek: The Next Generation and had a recurring role on MacGyver as Penny Parker, a naïve, high-strung, young woman who always seemed to get into trouble.
She also had a guest appearance in an episode of Seinfeld, in which her character, Sidra, broke up with Jerry because she found out Jerry was trying to have Elaine surreptitiously determine whether Sidra had breast implants. In one of the more memorable lines in the show, she declared, "Oh, and by the way: they're real, and they're spectacular." Hatcher has also appeared in a series of popular Radio Shack television commercials alongside NFL Hall of Famer Howie Long. The pair remain close friends, and together have bought farm land on the outside of Los Angeles, with the intent of eventually raising endangered species. Hatcher said her plan to do so came about after reading an article featuring the world's top 25 endangered species.[citation needed]
She hosted Saturday Night Live in 1996. Hatcher beat out four other actresses for the lead role on ABC's Desperate Housewives, on which she stars as single mother Susan Mayer, a role for which she won the Best Actress in a Musical or Comedy Golden Globe Award in January 2005.[2] In 2005, Hatcher also won the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) award in the same category. In July 2005, she was nominated for an Emmy Award as Best Actress in a Comedy Series for the same role, along with co-stars Marcia Cross and Felicity Huffman, who won the award.
As of April 2006, Hatcher is one of the highest paid television actresses in the United States. She reportedly earns $285,000 per episode of Desperate Housewives. In May 2006, she released her first book, Burnt Toast: And Other Philosophies of Life.[2] In conjunction with the book, she has also launched a line of apparel and merchandise. Furthermore she is prominently featured in an international campaign for Repeat Cashmere.
Between 1985 and 1988, she had a relationship with her MacGyver costar Richard Dean Anderson. Hatcher married Marcus Leithold on June 4, 1988; they divorced the following year. On May 27, 1994, she married actor Jon Tenney; they had a daughter, Emerson Rose, in November 10, 1997, and divorced in March 2003. It has also been reported that Hatcher had a brief relationship with 7'0" former NBA player John Salley in 2005.[citation needed] Hatcher has also been dating Stephen Kay, who played Reginald, the Quartermaines' butler, on General Hospital.[4]Since then she and Stephen have broken up.
In June 2007, Hatcher appeared on the Paul O'Grady show where she revealed that she writes a column in FHM.
| Year | Film/program/series | Role | Other notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1985 | The Love Boat | Amy, Loveboat Mermaid | television series; cast member from 1985 to 1986 |
| 1986 | MacGyver | Penny Parker | TV series; guest starring in seven episodes between 1986 and 1991 |
| Capitol | Angelica Stimac Clegg | television series; cast member from 1986 to 1987 | |
| 1987 | Karen's Song | Laura Matthews | television series |
| Night Court | Kitty | TV series; guest starring in the episode "Who Was That Mashed Man?" | |
| Missing You Now | Girlfriend | Michael Bolton music video | |
| 1988 | CBS Summer Playhouse | Lauri Stevens | TV series; guest starring in the episode "Baby on Board" |
| Star Trek: The Next Generation | Lt. Bronwyn Gail Robinson | TV series; guest starring in the episode "The Outrageous Okona" | |
| 1989 | The Big Picture | Gretchen | |
| L.A. Law | Tracy Shoe | TV series; guest starring in the episode "I'm in the Nude for Love" | |
| Quantum Leap | Donna Eleese | TV series; guest starring in the episode "Star-Crossed" | |
| Tango & Cash | Katherine 'Kiki' Tango | ||
| 1990 | Murphy Brown | Madeline Stillwell | TV series; guest starring in the episode "Fax or Fiction" |
| Tales from the Crypt | Stacy | TV series; guest starring in the episode "The Thing from the Grave" | |
| 1991 | The Brotherhood | Teresa Gennaro | made-for-TV movie |
| Soapdish | Ariel Maloney | ||
| Sunday Dinner | TT Fagori | television series | |
| Dead in the Water | Laura Stewart | made-for-TV movie | |
| The Exile | Marissa | TV series; guest starring in the episode "Eclipse" | |
| 1992 | Straight Talk | Janice | |
| 1993 | All Tied Up | Linda Alissio | straight-to-video |
| Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman | Lois Lane | television series (1993 – 1997) | |
| Brain Smasher... A Love Story | Samantha Crain | straight-to-video | |
| Seinfeld | Sidra | TV series; guest starring in three episodes between 1993 and 1998 | |
| 1994 | The Cool Surface | Dani Payson | |
| 1996 | Dead Girl | Passer-by | |
| Heaven's Prisoners | Claudette Rocque | ||
| 2 Days in the Valley | Becky Foxx | ||
| 1997 | Tomorrow Never Dies | Paris Carver | |
| 1998 | Since You've Been Gone | Maria Goldstein | made-for-TV movie |
| Frasier | Marie | TV series; guest starring in the episode "First Do No Harm" | |
| 1999 | Fever | Charlotte Parker | |
| 2000 | Running Mates | Shawna Morgan | made-for-TV movie |
| 2001 | Say Uncle | made-for-TV movie | |
| Spy Kids | Ms. Gradenko | ||
| Jane Doe | Jane Doe | made-for-TV movie | |
| 2003 | A Touch of Fate | Megan Marguilas | |
| Momentum | Jordan Ripps | Sci-Fi Channel made-for-TV movie | |
| 2004 | Desperate Housewives | Susan Mayer | television series (2004 – present) |
| Two and a Half Men | Liz | TV series; guest starring in the episode "I Remember the Coatroom, I Just Don't Remember You." | |
| 2007 | Resurrecting the Champ | Andrea Flak | |
| 2007 | American Idol | Stayin' Alive Lip Syncher | Idol Gives Back |
| 2008 | Coraline | Mother/The Other Mother |
- Teri Hatcher Online
- Teri Hatcher at AOL Coaches Relationship advice
- Teri Hatcher at the Internet Movie Database
- Teri Hatcher at Yahoo! Movies
- Teri Hatcher at TV.com
- Teri Hatcher at Rotten Tomatoes
- Teri Hatcher at People.com
- Teri Hatcher article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki
- Teri Hatcher in Repeat cashmere campaign
- Teri Hatcher Page
- Teri Hatcher's Desperate Housewives profile at What's on TV
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