Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio

Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio

  • Born: 1958-11-17
  • Birthplace: Oak Park, Illinois, U.S.
  • Height: 5' 5½" (1.66 m)
  • Profession: actor
  • Nationality: America
  • Representative Works: The Color of Money
  • Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio), born on November 17, 1958 in Oak Park, Illinois, USA, is an American actor. In 1983, Mary made her way to the big screen with " Scarface ". In 1987, for starring in the movie " The Color of Money " won the 59th Academy Awards for Best Supporting Actress (nominated).

    Personal Life

    In 1990, he married Pat O'Connor and had two children.
    Extended Reading
    • Glenna 2022-03-19 08:01:02

      S03E01 Evaluation

      He used one word to describe Americans every time he went to the United States to study: self-righteous
      This first episode made me stunned, and at the same time
      , he also admitted that his statement was completely correct

      . The bloody plot seems to be enough to prove that the screenwriter is clever...

    • Martina 2022-03-19 08:01:02

      Lonely, sensitive, wise, and a little sense of justice, so people will love this drama

      In Wallace's "debut" scene, the devil asked: What made Ahab obsessed in Moby Dick? Goren answers The dogged, unrelenting pursuit of evil in the back row. That scene is classic. It will almost certainly be included in a paper like The Role of British Accents in American Film and Television.

      This...

    • Evelyn 2022-03-24 09:03:51

      I like this one from the LO series the most. It is a traditional criminal investigation drama with detailed reasoning, but the character design is still not as good as my steamed bread. Except for Chubby, everyone else is soy sauce. . It's good to focus on CASE, but after all, there are N seasons, if the group portraits can be more distinct, it will be very advantageous.

    • Alberto 2022-03-25 09:01:23

      Why is there chris north in the poster?

    Law & Order: Criminal Intent quotes

    • Detective Alexandra Eames: You two have a play date?

    • Detective Robert Goren: One thing this line of work teaches us is that guys will do anything for love.