
Michael Moriarty
Acting
Biography
Michael Moriarty (born April 5, 1941) is an American-Canadian actor of stage and screen, and a jazz musician. He played Benjamin Stone for four seasons on the TV series Law & Order.
Born: April 5, 1941
Place of Birth: Detroit, Michigan, USA
Known For

Cagney & Lacey: True Convictions
Detectives Cagney and Lacey come face-to-face with their true feelings about capital punishment when they're assigned to the city's first capital murder case in 10 years.

Major Crime
Undercover police work to bring a pedophile to justice.

Emily of New Moon
Emily of New Moon is a Canadian television series, which aired on CBC Television from 1998 to 2000. The series originally aired in the United States on the Cookie Jar Toons block on This TV and it is currently seen in Canada on the Viva, Bravo! and Vision TV cable channels. The series, produced by Salter Street Films, was based on the Emily of New Moon series of novels by Lucy Maud Montgomery. The series consisted of three seasons of thirteen episodes and one season of seven episodes, for a total of forty-six. The executive producers were Micheline Charest, Michael Donovan, and Ronald Weinberg. The series starred Martha MacIsaac as the titular orphan Emily Starr. Susan Clark and Sheila McCarthy played Emily's aunts Elizabeth and Laura, who had taken on the responsibility of raising Emily following her father's death, and Stephen McHattie played her cousin Jimmy. Susan Clark left the series after the first season when her character, Elizabeth, was killed off. Recurring cast included Chip Ciupka as Mr. Carpenter, Peter Donaldson as Ian Bowles, Richard Donat as Dr. Burnley, Kris Lemche as Perry Miller, John Neville as Uncle Malcolm, Jessica Pellerin as Ilse Burnley, Shawn Roberts as Teddy Kent, and Linda Thorson as Cousin Isabel.

Hallmark Hall of Fame
Hallmark Hall of Fame is an anthology program on American television, sponsored by Hallmark Cards, a Kansas City based greeting card company. The longest-running primetime series in the history of television, it has a historically long run, beginning during 1951 and continuing into 2013. From 1954 onward, all of its productions have been shown in color, although color television video productions were extremely rare in 1954. Many television movies have been shown on the program since its debut, though the program began with live telecasts of dramas and then changed to videotaped productions before finally changing to filmed ones. The series has received eighty Emmy Awards, twenty-four Christopher Awards, eleven Peabody Awards, nine Golden Globes, and four Humanitas Prizes. Once a common practice in American television, it is the last remaining television program such that the title includes the name of the sponsor. Unlike other long-running TV series still on the air, it differs in that it broadcasts only occasionally and not on a weekly broadcast programming schedule.

Broken Silence
A Carthusian monk, dedicated to silence and meditation for the last 25 years, must travel from France to Jakarta to get a signature that will renew the property lease for his monastery. Terrified of his experience on the airplane, he gets off at its first stop, New Delhi, plunging into the strange world outside his monastery walls.

Galileo: On the Shoulders of Giants
Galileo is thwarted in his pursuit to uncover the universe's mysteries by a lack of money, a lazy brother and a jealous rival. Luckily, he finds support from his student, Prince Cosimo, son of the Medici family.

The Twilight Zone
This 1980s revival of the classic sci-fi series features a similar style to the original anthology series. Each episode tells a tale (sometimes two or three) rooted in horror or suspense, often with a surprising twist at the end. Episodes usually feature elements of drama and comedy.

The Outer Limits
Anthology series of composed of distinct story episodes, sometimes with a plot twist at the end, with occasional recurring story elements that were often tied together during season-finale clip shows.

The Glass Menagerie
Amanda Wingfield dominates her children with her faded gentility and exaggerated tales of her Southern belle past. Her son plans escape; her daughter withdraws into a dream world. When a gentleman caller appears, things move to crisis point.

The Arrow
The story of the people building the AVRO Arrow, an advanced jet fighter-interceptor designed to defend Canada's vast territory during the Cold War. Though the jet was an engineering marvel, cost over-runs, U.S. government pressure from the military industrial complex, and the election of the Progressive Conservative Diefenbaker government, stopped the jet just as it was getting off the ground.
Filmography
as Michael Dietrich
as John 'Boone' Hawkins
as Mr. Isaac Hendricks
as T.J. Hamilton
as General Dutton
as Donald Saunders
as Jim Wheeler
as Jim Wheeler
as Dick
as Callohan
as Orson Bailey
as Adrian, Psychic
as Morris Bird II
as Larry Frank
as Winton Dean
as Senator Hank Rose
as Schmidt
as Mr. Kidd
as Sheriff Bast
as Mark Solomon
as Director / Mirkin
as Cole Sheridan
as Richard
as Ray Preston
as Captain Paul Stenning
as Douglas Starr
as Gordon Tallas
as Dwight D. Eisenhower
as President Dwight D. Eisenhower
as Galileo Galilei
as Russell Pfeiffer
as Ray Preston
as Governor Harold Hoffman
as Brigadier General Hershberg
as Matthew Wylie
as Father Mulligan
as Solicitor-General Wallace Gannon
as John Maxwell
as Dr. Chester Crayton
as Various (voice)
as (voice)
as Fox Butterfield
as Ben Stone
as Garvin
as Hank Daniels
as Manny Wise
as Hugh Kelly
as Ellison
as Dennis Randall
as Joe Weber
as Brother T.S. Murphy
as Stephen Jarvis
as Williamson
as Harry Potter Sr.
as Dr. Peter Kapik
as Wayne 'Seti' Virgil
as Hull Barret
as David 'Mo' Rutherford
as Charles Norberry
as Keith Mannings / Craig Mannings
as Jimmy Quinn
as Mark
as Richard Maple
as Wilbur Wright
as John Converse
as Erik Dorf
as Gerry Miller
as Bo Lockley
as Herbert G. Rucker
as Jim O'Connor
as Marine O. D.
as Abe Battle
as Henry Wiggen
as Ballard
as Trubee Pell
as Russell Pfeiffer