Dark-haired
and fair-complected with fine features and expressive brown eyes, actress Sela
Ward began her career as a model before beginning work in features and
television and eventually hitting the big time with memorably evocative
regular roles on the series "Sisters" (NBC) and "Once and Again" (ABC). This
Southern belle moved to New York City following her graduation from the
University of Alabama, expecting to pursue work in advertising. She instead
began modeling and went on to appear in dozens of national television
commercials. Ward soon moved to Los Angeles, where she studied acting and
launched a career in that capacity. In 1983 the actress made her feature debut
in Blake Edwards' remake "The Man Who Loved Woman" and bowed on the small
screen that same year with a regular role as privileged ice princess Hilary
Adams on the CBS primetime soap "Emerald Point, N.A.S." (1983-84). Ward could
next be seen as a controlled businesswoman dating Tom Hanks in Garry
Marshall's comedy-drama "Nothing in Common" (1986), before making her feature
co-starring debut in the actioner "Steele Justice" (1987).
Long and lean, with a
stately air of cool composure, Ward racked up numerous television credits,
both as a series guest star and in TV-movies, most often cast as refined,
upper-crust characters. While guest spots on "Night Court" (NBC) and "Hotel"
(ABC) kept her in the public eye and starring roles in the movies "Cameo by
Night" (NBC, 1987), "Bridesmaids" (CBS, 1989) and USA Network's "The Haunting
of Sarah Hardy" (1989) fortified her resume and offered her valuable
experience, she wouldn't really arrive until she broke down her reserve
entirely to play the highly emotional recovering alcoholic Teddy Reed on the
NBC drama series "Sisters". Portraying a black sheep, the most down-to-earth,
stubborn and tormented of the four siblings, Ward turned in a bare-bones and
sometimes painfully candid performance, a risky and ambitious undertaking for
the actress that proved most successful and earned her an Emmy Award in 1994.
While not always likable, Teddy Reed and her character rang truest, due in no
small part to Ward's skillful performance.
While starring on "Sisters",
the actress kept busy with consistent television movie work, generally playing
self-possessed women working their way out of traumatic situations. Among the
more notable entries was the 1992 Showtime drama "Double Jeopardy", in which
she starred as a lawyer defending her husband's former lover of murder and a
woman who captures the hearts of brothers on either side of the law in "Killer
Rules" (NBC, 1993). Ward shone with a small but effective role as the
beautiful slain wife of Harrison Ford's Richard Kimble in the blockbuster
feature adaptation of "The Fugitive" (1993) and impressed audiences with her
unflinching award-winning portrayal of the troubled TV anchorwoman in the 1995
Lifetime biopic "Almost Golden: The Jessica Savitch Story".
Following the departure
of "Sisters" from the NBC lineup, Ward did some feature work, including cameos
in "54" (1998, as an older woman who seduces an impressionable bartender) and
in "Runaway Bride" (1999, as a woman in a bar) but found that as a woman in
her 40s without an already established film career, roles were few and far
between. Having sworn off of hour-long series drama after the "Sisters"
workload interfered too much with her family life, Ward reconsidered in order
to join the cast of ABC's "Once and Again" (1999-2002), playing Lily Manning,
a divorced mother of two who falls in love with a divorced father and must
deal with both the highs and lows of the new relationship and its
repercussions on the secure family life she has worked hard to create for her
daughters. The series was a critical and popular hit, and the actress brought
graceful determination to her flawed character, making Lily both admirable and
identifiable. Ward earned her second career Emmy Award for her role in 2000.
She next starred in and was executive producer of the CBS TV-movie "Catch a
Falling Star" (2000), playing a popular actress who moves to a small town,
finding love while dodging the spotlight, and took a supporting role in the
crime drama "The Badge" (2002) before appearing in "Dirty Dancing 2: Havana
Nights" (2004) as a ballroom dancer and the mother of Romola Garai's character,
an American girl who moves with her family to the revolution-era capital and
falls hard for a local dancer. The actress' next big-screen outing was as
Dennis Quaid's wife in director Roland Emmerich's big-budget disaster film
about the sudden onlsaught of a new ice age, "The Day After Tomorrow" (2004)
In 2003 Ward also turned
author with her book Homesick: A Memoir, a well-reviewed chronicle of
her life growing up in the Southern culture of Meridian, Mississippi, "worshipping Bear Bryant
on Saturday night and Jesus Christ on Sunday morning."
© Various Sources.
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