Marcia Gay Harden
Marcia Gay Harden, born August 14, 1959 in La Jolla (California), was the third daughter of five. Beverly Bushfield was the mother of her child, and Thad Harden, who was in military service, was her father. Family members moved frequentlyHarden first got interested in acting when her family was living in Greece and had seen plays in Athens. Harden began college in Europe at American colleges and eventually moved to the US in order to finish her master's degree at University of Texas. In 1983, Harden earned her MFA from NYU. The actress had acted in an upcoming film, The Imagemaker, but her first role as a principal was in Miller's Crossing, the Coen Brothers' offbeat, clever tribute to gangster films. Harden's sultry portrayal of Verna, an enigmatic, seductive moll, received positive reviews. Harden continued to work steadily as a supporting character, such as playing Ava Gardner in Sinatra (1992) the biopic for television about Frank Sinatra.



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