Shirley MacLaine
American actress
Christine Lahti is an acclaimed American actress and filmmaker. She has been nominated for numerous awards, including an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, and has won a Golden Globe and an Emmy for her work in television. Lahti has had a diverse career, appearing in films, on Broadway, and in several TV series over the years.
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Christine Ann Lahtiis an American actress and filmmaker. She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for the 1984 film Swing Shift. Her other film roles include …And Justice for Alland The Heidi Chronicles (1989). An eight-time Golden Globe nominee and six-time Emmy Award nominee, she won a Golden Globe for the 1989 TV movie No Place Like Home, and won a Golden Globe and an Emmy in 1998 for her role as Kate Austin in the CBS series Chicago Hope (1995-99). She returned to Broadway in 2009 to star in God of Carnage. She has had a number of recurring roles: as Sonya Paxton in the NBC series Law and Order: Special Victims Unit (2009-11), as Doris McGarrett in the CBS series Hawaii Five-0 (2012-19), and as Laurel Hitchin in NBC’s The Blacklist (2015-17). She currently appears as Sheryl Luria in the CBS/Paramount+ series Evil.
Christine Lahti has appeared in several notable films, including Swing Shift (1984), …And Justice for All (1979), Housekeeping (1987), Running on Empty (1988), and A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (2019).
Christine Lahti has won a Golden Globe and an Emmy Award for her role as Kate Austin in the CBS series Chicago Hope (1995–99). She has also been nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress and several other Golden Globe and Emmy Awards over the course of her career.
Christine Lahti made her Broadway debut in 1980 as a replacement in Loose Ends, and went on to star in the Broadway productions of Present Laughter (1982) and The Heidi Chronicles (1989). She later returned to Broadway in 2009 to star in God of Carnage.
Christine Lahti has had a number of recurring television roles, including as Sonya Paxton in the NBC series Law and Order: Special Victims Unit (2009–11), as Doris McGarrett in the CBS series Hawaii Five-0 (2012–19), and as Laurel Hitchin in NBC’s The Blacklist (2015–17). She currently appears as Sheryl Luria in the CBS/Paramount+ series Evil.
For her directorial debut with the 1995 short film Lieberman in Love, Christine Lahti won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film.
I don’t want to fight aging; I want to take good care of myself, but plastic surgery and all that? I’m not interested.
American actress and director (born 1950)
I most often land up taking up the roles that I most detest.
American actress and director (born 1950)
Competition is very good… as long as its healthy. It’s what makes one strive to be better.
American actress and director (born 1950)
I would take up any small job on the sets, just so that I could hang around with the hope of getting noticed.
American actress and director (born 1950)
When I’m not working, my time is really about my children.
American actress and director (born 1950)
After doing so many different roles, if you don’t stretch yourself, there’s no excitement left.
American actress and director (born 1950)
It was not really a career choice that I had to make. It was something I knew right from the beginning. I had to be an actress… period.
American actress and director (born 1950)
Sure I faced the troubles and challenges that most actors and actresses face until they get noticed, but I was always confident of myself and my capabilities.
American actress and director (born 1950)
I like to take up something that is challenging. I like to stretch myself.
American actress and director (born 1950)
Its only when you are a great actor and are recognised for your good work that you become famous. Unless you are in the news for the wrong reasons!
American actress and director (born 1950)
I demanded two weeks of rehearsal because to me as an actor, that’s the most important time.
American actress and director (born 1950)
I wanted to be an actress. In college I was a serious feminist and very political. I was determined to get one thing out of my career and that was respect. I didn’t want money. I didn’t care about fame.
American actress and director (born 1950)
A friend of mine described it this way: When they were born it was like a meteor landed in our house and blew everything apart. We had to just put all the pieces back.
American actress and director (born 1950)
When I was first starting out, if you were acting on television, it was a real stigma.
American actress and director (born 1950)
Theatre is more exciting in the sense that you can actually see the audience in the eye. You know there are no takes and retakes. You have one chance to do your job… and you better do it well!
American actress and director (born 1950)
I am an actress and acting is my passion… period!
American actress and director (born 1950)
I loved the stage and then grew to love the camera.
American actress and director (born 1950)
My heart’s in really great shape thanks to spinning classes.
American actress and director (born 1950)
And that’s why I chose on purpose not to have a death scene. We’ve seen them in a million movies and it’s too much like cranking the tears out. I didn’t want that scene.
American actress and director (born 1950)
I was a fighter and very determined. There was no way I was going to back out without winning.
American actress and director (born 1950)
I’m more proud of quitting smoking than of anything else I’ve done in my life, including winning an Oscar.
American actress and director (born 1950)
Television really does offer still great parts for women, cable in particular.
American actress and director (born 1950)
The crossover wasn’t happening. TV actors were TV actors, and film and stage actors were a whole different thing. And now there’s just a lot of crossover.
American actress and director (born 1950)
I think all industries are sexist in nature and I don’t think the film industry is any different.
American actress and director (born 1950)