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Search resuls for: "Melissa Leo"


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When her son, Jack, was born 36 years ago, Ms. Leo, now 63, thought about putting down real roots. At the time, she was renting a place on 83rd Street, on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. I rent places for temporary housing when I do television work,” Ms. Leo said. Earlier this year, she decided to try again, focusing on Yorkville, a historic swath of the Upper East Side. Ms. McCormack showed Ms. Leo a handful of studios and one-bedroom apartments in the area.
Persons: Melissa Leo, Leo, Alice Eklund, Ward, homeownership, Jack, Carl Schurz, Oscar, , Louie ”, “ I’ve, ” Ms, Janina McCormack, Ms, McCormack, Organizations: Upper East Locations: Upper, , Manhattan, Stone Ridge, N.Y, New Yorker, Washington Heights, , Yorkville, New York
When ‘Homicide’ Hit Its Stride
  + stars: | 2023-05-11 | by ( Saul Austerlitz | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
The Dallas Cowboys demolished the Buffalo Bills, 52-17, and the broadcast was followed by the premiere of a new NBC drama, set in Baltimore, studying the work of the city’s homicide detectives. The series was called “Homicide: Life on the Street,” and it was based on a book by David Simon, then a Baltimore Sun reporter who had spent a year tagging along with the police department’s homicide squad. Post-Super Bowl premiere notwithstanding, “Homicide” was never a ratings success, but it stayed on the air for seven seasons, winning four Emmys and three Peabody Awards. The show’s fifth episode, “Three Men and Adena,” which first aired in March, was a stark, dramatic example of what made “Homicide” different from other cop shows. Pembleton and Bayliss prod, provoke and rage, but “Homicide” refuses to grant the audience the resolution they crave.
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