Willowy,
with an airy frame, but capable of projecting toughness as
well as tightly-wound characters, Barbara Babcock was a "working
actress" for two decades before a recurring guest role
on "Hill Street Blues" in the early 1980s turned
her into a TV star. On "Hill Street", Babcock was
tough Grace Gardner, hounding Sgt. Esterhaus (Michael Conrad)
until she had him. "Tough" seems to be a word threaded
through Babcock's personal life as well. The daughter of
the US Army General, she was raised in Tokyo and spoke Japanese
before English. On screen, Babcock seems very much the "lady".
Her early career included guest spots on "The Many Loves
of Dobie Gillis" (CBS) as a cousin to the rich boy nemesis
of the title character. Babcock's deep, cultured voice earned
both an appearance on "Star Trek" in the mid-60s
as well as several voice-overs for that series. Babcock began
working in TV-movies and, less often, in feature films, in
the 70s. Perhaps her best known role was the team owner who
slyly suggested a homosexual liaison between Michael Moriarty
and Robert De Niro in "Bang the Drum Slowly" (1973).
She also appeared in "The Black Marble" (1980), "The
Lords of Discipline' (1983), Emilio Estevez's "That
Was Then ... This Is Now" (1985) and Ron Howard's "Far
and Away" as Nicole Kidman's mother.
With her regular role as Liz Craig
on "Dallas" (CBS, 1978-82),
Babcock became steadily employed. But
it was as Grace Gardner--originally
a one-shot guest appearance--on "Hill
Street Blues" that Babcock earned
a berth on top casting lists in Hollywood.
Armed with an Emmy, she attempted to
find a more permanent series slot,
but both "The Four Seasons" (CBS,
1984) and "Mr. Sunshine" (ABC,
1986) were short-lived. A later effort
as Jerry Orbach's charmingly unpleasant
nemesis on "The Law and Harry
McGraw" (CBS, 1987-88) lasted
only half a season. Babcock portrayed
sympathetic mothers in TV-movies such
as "Salem's Lot" (CBS, 1979)
and "Quarterback Princess" (CBS,
1983) and she made occasional guest
appearances on series such as "Alfred
Hitchcock Presents" and "The
Golden Girls". With her air of
refinement tempered by a steel spine,
Babcock was well cast as the pioneer
newswoman opposite Jane Seymour's "Dr.
Quinn, Medicine Woman" (CBS, 1993-98).
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