- Alan Rosenberg
Infobox actor
name = Alan Rosenberg
imagesize =
caption = Alan Rosenberg, January 2007
birthdate = birth date and age|1951|10|4 [http://tv.yahoo.com/contributor/885911/news/urn:newsml:tv.ap.org:20080105:hollywood_labor__ER:46710]
birthplace =Passaic, New Jersey , USAAlan Rosenberg (born
October 4 1951 ) is an American actor of both stage and screen, and current president of theScreen Actors Guild , the principal motion picture industry on-screen performers' union.Biography
Early life
Rosenberg was born and raised in
Passaic, New Jersey . [ [http://www.jewishjournal.com/home/print.php?id=8685 JewishJournal.com ] ] Alan's late brother, Mark, was a political activist in the 1960's, later a film producer; while his first cousin is musicianDonald Fagen .Alan's
German Jewish parents gave him enough money to apply to graduate school, [http://www.jewishjournal.com/home/print.php?id=8685] but while studying atCase Western Reserve University he becameNew York state'sbackgammon champion in 1982. [ [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0742165/bio Alan Rosenberg (I) - Biography ] ] Rosenberg said on graduating in 1972, that he found another passion, poker, and had gambled away most of the money his parents sent him, and could only afford one application toYale School of Drama . Rosenberg dropped out halfway through his second year, after his heart was broken by classmateMeryl Streep .Career
Rosenberg is perhaps best known for his character Eli Levinson which appeared in both the series "Civil Wars" and the popular "
L.A. Law ". He is also well known for his character Ira Woodbine in the sitcom, "Cybill ". More recently he was seen in the legal drama "The Guardian" as "Alvin Masterson".Rosenberg supplied the voice of the bounty hunter
Boba Fett onNPR 's adaptation of "The Empire Strikes Back ". Rosenberg is also known for his appearance as the crazed "Mad Bomber" in the 1986 cult-classicStewardess School .In 1995, he received an
Emmy Award nomination for a guest-starring role in the hit drama "ER".In 1999 he began a recurring role on as the hospital legal council, Stuart Brickman, on
Chicago Hope . Halfway through their final season he was added to the opening titles as a series regular.He was elected the 24th president of
Screen Actors Guild (SAG) on September 23 2005. Rosenberg succeedsMelissa Gilbert , who served as president since 2001 and chose not to run for a third two-year term. Rosenberg received 39.99 percent (10,748 total votes) of the nationwide vote of the Guild’s general membership, defeatingMorgan Fairchild andRobert Conrad . Fairchild received 34.72 percent (9,332 total votes) and Conrad received 25.29% percent (6,797 total votes). Rosenberg formally assumed the office of Guild president on September 25, and will serve a two-year term.In 2005 he appeared as shady defense attorney "Adam Novak" in an episode of co-starring alongside his real life wife
Marg Helgenberger . Novak was portrayed as a womanizer who encountered Catherine (Helgenberger) in a bar and later became the prime suspect in two homicides. He appeared once again in the 2007 episode Leaving Las Vegas as a lawyer defending a client who turned out to be guilty of two separate crimes, and yet the evidence failed to pin him down, resulting in a not guilty verdict which annoyed Catherine so much that she began to undergo further investigation.In 2006, he appeared in a very small part as Bruce Steinerman, the divorce attorney of James Wilson in the TV-series
House, M.D. , adding yet another legal character to his CV.In 2007 he started hosting a Public Television program, "Life: Part 2", [http://www.pbs.org/lifepart2] produced in St. Paul, Minnesota. He moderates panel discussions about issues that baby boomers face as they age.
Personal life
Originally married to actress
Robin Bartlett , Rosenberg metMarg Helgenberger inNew York while guest-starring on her soap "Ryan's Hope ". The two conversed for hours between shots on the motel-room set.Four years later, the newly divorced Rosenberg walked into a
West Hollywood bank and spotted Helgenberger in line - they exchanged telephone numbers. Within two months the actors were living together, and eloped in 1989 to avoid upsetting a Jewish relative. Their son, Hugh, was born the following year.References
External links
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