An attractive, energetic, hazel-eyed performer, Sharon Lawrence studied journalism in college, intending to follow in the footsteps of her anchorman father, but the former Raleigh, North Carolina Junior Miss opted for the bright lights instead (with her teachers' blessings). By her own admission not the best dancer or actress, she propelled herself by sheer determination, eventually acting opposite Anthony Quinn (a national tour of "Zorba'), Joel Grey (her Broadway debut in "Cabaret") and Topol (tour and subsequent Broadway run of "Fiddler on the Roof"), not to mention working with Dezi Arnaz Jr. and Georgia Engel in regional theater. While playing Tzeitel in "Fiddler", Lawrence, feeling all her detailed emotional work was lost to most of the house, decided to head to Hollywood and revel in the intimacy a camera could capture. Her TV debut came as a guest on Steven Bochco's ABC divorce court series "Civil Wars", and the producer recalled her when he was casting his controversial 1993 police drama series "NYPD Blue" (ABC).Lawrence was not a regular that first season but did deliver a few lines as a day player in the premiere, and the producers liking what they saw brought her back (for 17 of the first 22 episodes). Her role as Sylvia (she didn't actually get a surname until the eighth episode), the earnest, no-nonsense assistant district attorney, actually evolved from a part originally written for a man, and though short on glamour, heated up romantically with her affair and eventual marriage to older tough cop Andy Sipowicz (Dennis Franz). Offers poured in allowing her to stretch as an actress in five TV-movies and one miniseries from 1995-96, but it was a guest spot on "Caroline in the City" in 1996 that convinced NBC she could headline her own sitcom. "Fired Up" (1997-98), starring Lawrence as a flamboyant executive forced by downsizing to go into business with her former secretary, debuted in the spring and won a spot in the network's fall line-up. While enjoying the change-of-pace, over-the-top comedy, she remained on "NYPD" in a reduced capacity due to Sylvia's motherhood.
Lawrence's feature output has been slight. She appeared in "The Only Thrill" (1997), starring Diane Keaton and Sam Shepard, and finished her second film "Gossip" (2000), in which she plays a detective investigating a rape and the ensuing suicide of the victim. She is first and foremost a creature of TV, and when "Fired Up" fizzled, "NYPD Blue" was happy to up Sylvia's profile again, this time as a working mother and supportive spouse to Andy confronting his health problems, but when the actress was ready to broaden her horizons again, her character was dramatically killed off in 1999. She also returned to the New York stage for the first time since arriving in Hollywood, acting in "Tongue of a Bird" (1999), reprising a role she had first played at Los Angeles' Mark Taper Forum.
If she had failed in her attempt to carry a series, the networks had not given up on her yet in comedy. CBS cast her in "Ladies Man" (1999-2000) as the pregnant wife of powerhouse stage actor Alfred Molina, a long-suffering male in the midst of his extended family of five women who hopes against hope that his new baby will be a boy. Another series, the horror drama "Wolf Lake," also fizzed in 2001. Meanwhile, on the stage, she made a rwelcome eturn to Broadway, starring as Velma Kelly in the revival of "Chicago in the summer of 2001, and in September 2002 she played Michelle in "Under the Blue Sky" by David Eldridge at the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles, then, along with a string of suporting roles in features, Lawrence scored big with a recurring stint as the suburban housewife-turned-call girl Maisy Gibbons in the first season of the hit primetime drama "Desperate Housewives" (ABC, 2004 - ).
Profession(s):
Actor, singer, dancer, producer, waitress
Sometimes Credited As:
The Actor Outstanding Ensemble Performance in a Drama Series "NYPD Blue" 1994
2004 Cast in the romantic comedy "Little Black Book" starring Brittany Murphy
2001 Joined cast of the fall CBS mystery "Wolf Lake"; episodes later aired on UPN in 2002
2000 Returned to Broadway to play Velma in the hit revival of "Chicago"
2000 Played Detective Kelly in second feature film, "Gossip"
1999 Returned to the New York stage as Cherry Jones' dead mother Evie in "Tongue of a Bird", having played the part earlier in the year at LA's Mark Taper Forum
1999 Starred as Cass Medieros in CBS-movie "Blue Moon", based on the novel by Luanne Rice
1997 Feature debut in "The Only Thrill"
1997 Starred as suburban houswife taken hostage in NBC-movie "Five Desperate Hours"; also first producing credit (co-producer)
1996 Brought down the house with her comic abilities as guest star of an episode of "Caroline in the City"
1996 Signed deal with NBC to develop series; announced she would continue to appear on "NYPD Blue" as well
1995 Acted in TNT's adaptation of Wendy Wasserstein's Pulitzer Prize-winning play "The Heidi Chronicles"
1995 Gave powerful performance as accused murderess Mary Carelli in NBC miniseries "Degree of Guilt"
1995 Guest-starred as Amelia Earhart in second season premiere of "Star Trek: Voyager" (UPN)
1994 First TV-movie, "In the Line of Duty: The Price of Vengeance" (NBC)
1994 First romantic lead in a TV-movie, "The Shaggy Dog" (ABC), a remake of the 1959 Disney feature
1993 Made guest appearances on "Beverly Hills, 90210" (Fox) and "Cheers" (NBC)
1992 First appeared on primetime TV in "Drone of Arc" episode of the Steven Bocho-produced drama series "Civil Wars" (ABC)
1989 - 1992 Played Tzeitel in "Fiddler on the Roof", starring Topol, on tour and later in Broadway run which capped the tour
1987 Broadway debutas one of the Kit Kat girls in the Harold Prince-directed revival of "Cabaret", featuring Joel Grey reprising his role as the Emcee
1985 Cast in the national tour of "Zorba", starring Anthony Quinn
1984 Acted off-Broadway in "Panache"
1984 Worked as a singer on a cruise ship after graduating college (date approximate)
1978 Won the title of Junior Miss Raleigh and was runner-up in the state pageant at age 17 (date approximate)
Appeared opposite Alfred Molina in the CBS fall sitcom "Ladies Man"
Sang at a nightclub to help finance her college education
Acted opposite Dezi Arnaz Jr in Florida production of "Is There Life After High School?" and with Georgia Engel in Michigan production of "Sweet Charity"
Portrayed Sylvia Costas on the Bochco-produced ABC police drama series, "NYPD Blue", earning three Emmy nominations as Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series
Headlined own sitcom, "Fired Up" (NBC); curtailed appearances on "NYPD Blue"