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Jodi
Applegate | Greg
Germann | Scott
Hamilton
Jodi
Applegate
Charity: Sisters of St. Joseph
Jodi
Applegate joined NBC News in June 1996 as a co-anchor of
Weekend Today. She is also an anchor for MSNBC Cable,
the 24-hour news and information cable network from NBC and Microsoft.
Most
recently, since February 1993, Applegate had been the anchor of
KTVK-TV's Good Morning Arizona, the top-rated three-hour
morning news program in Phoenix. Previously, beginning in October
1992, she had been a weekend anchor and general-assignment reporter
for KTVN in Reno, where she also produced and wrote the 6:30 p.m.
and 11p.m. weekend broadcasts.
Earlier
in 1992, Applegate was a field correspondent for the NBC series
Dr. Dean, reporting daily on lifestyle and health issues.
In 1991, she was an on-camera traffic reporter in San Francisco
for KRON-TV's live, six-times-a-day Metro Traffic Control reports.
From
1989 to 1991, Applegate was the host and producer of C-Span's current
event's program Close-UP America, for which she also oversaw
topic selection, guest booking and field production. She began her
career in 1987 as a producer of The Morning Show with Ed Walker
and Bruce Alan on WWRC-AM radio in Washington D.C.
Applegate,
a native of Wheeling, West Virginia, graduated from New York University.
Greg
Germann
Charity: Ocean Park Community Center
While
the eponymous Ally McBeal of the new, one-hour Fox legal
series has earned the loyalty of audiences with her vulnerability,
high moral code and puppy-dogged approach, it is the opposite qualities
~ a cold heart, low moral values and shark-like demeanor ~ that
have endeared the very same viewers to her law firm boss. As Richard
Fish, actor Greg Germann may portray a scaly bottom-feeder dubbed
"likably dishonorable" by the L.A. Times, but let a Fish
not be confused with a chameleon, the species that best describes
Germann, whose New York theatrical career is the primordial soup
from which his success has evolved.
The
role of Fish on the Golden Globe (1998) winning series Ally McBeal
is an opportunity that Germann characterizes, like much of his career,
as fortuitous. "Fish is so guileless, so much fun to do. He's
a guy audiences would love to hate, but he has a few redeeming qualities.
He's romantic in his own minimalist way," says Germann, noting
his character's relationship with Judge Whipper Cone (Dyan Cannon).
The actor credits the show's success to a stellar cast and the superior
writing of creator David E. Kelley.
In
addition to acting, Germann also devotes himself to writhing. His
short film, Pete's Garden for which he also served as director
and star, premiered in competition at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival.
Pete's Garden tells the story of an estranged father and
daughter who bond one weekend over the shooting, burning and burying
of their sick pony. Germann also recently penned The Observatory,
a play performed at New York's Ensemble Studio Theater which The
New York Times described as "Full of fireworks."
A
native of Houston raised on Lookout Mountain outside of Golden,
Colorado, Germann was exposed to the performing arts at an early
age, particularly through his father, an award-winning children's
playwright and theater professor. As a Theater major at the University
of Northern Colorado, a constant stream of plays led him to the
gradual realization that acting would be his professional future.
Buckling down at UNC, he graduated in two years with the intention
to "get to New York fast."
Germann
became a member of Circle Repertory Company and Ensemble Studio
Theater, accumulating credits in such off-Broadway and Broadway
plays as A Narrow Bed at New York Theater Workshop, Remedial
English and the Steven Sondheim Musical Assassins at
Playwrights Horizons, Apocalyptic Butterflies and The
Person I Once Was opposite Holly Hunter, Biloxi Blues
on Broadway, David Mamet's War Games and New York Actor
at Ensemble Studio Theater, Only You at Circle Rep, and Found
A Peanut at the New York Shakespeare Festival.
Germann
has distinguished himself in films as well as on the theatrical
stage. His foothold in motion pictures came with a role as a pimp's
sidekick, "a struggle with a heart of gold," in the independent
film Street Walkin'. Subsequent films include Whoopee
Boys, Child's Play II as a greedy toy company owner,
Miss Firecracker as a vengeful ex-boyfriend opposite Holly
Hunter, Once Around as Laura San Giacomo's lovesick neighbor,
and So I Married An Axe Murderer as a poetry reciting hotel
clerk. Among Germann's most recent films were Taking The Heat,
Imaginary Crimes, Clear and Present Danger with Harrison
Ford, and as a reporter in Fred Schepist's IQ. He also starred
in a short film, Culture, which won the Short Competition
at the Chicago Film festival.
On
television, Germann worked with Kevin Spacey on the American Playhouse
presentation of Darrow, and as a bigoted newspaper reporter
opposite Samuel L. Jackson in Showtime's Conduct Unbecoming.
Scott
Hamilton
Charity: Make-A-Wish Foundation
Clearly
one of the most popular figure skating stars in the world today,
Scott Hamilton is also a role model, a humanitarian, and a cancer
survivor. As a figure skater, he is forever bridging the gap between
sport and entertainment. As a role model, he contradicts the saying
that "good guys finish last". As a humanitarian, he avails
himself to any plight that will improve mankind. But, more important,
as a cancer survivor - he is a constant reminder that with fortitude
and determination, anything is possible. Scott's much publicized
bout with testicular cancer in 1997, however, was not the first
time he had faced such adversity.
Six
weeks after his birth on August 28, 1958, Scott was adopted by Earnest
and Dorothy Hamilton, both professors at Bowling Green University.
When Scott was about two, he contracted a mysterious illness that
caused him to stop growing. For the next six years, doctor's prescribed
a variety of unsuccessful treatments. After his illness was mistakenly
diagnosed as cystic fibrosis and he was given six months to live,
the Hamilton's took their son to Boston's Children's Hospital where
his ailment began to correct itself by special diet and moderate
exercise.
From
the beginning, Scott skated with great confidence and uncommon speed.
He began taking formal lessons, joined a hockey team and within
a year, his illness disappeared and he began growing again - although
he would always be considerably smaller than his peers. His miraculous
recovery was attributed to the effects of intense physical activity
in the cold atmosphere of the rink.
At
thirteen he began training with Pierre Brunet, a former Olympic
gold medal winner and, despite steady progress, abruptly quit competitive
skating in 1976 to enroll at Bowling Green.
Finances
to fund his training had become an issue. But before he began classes,
an anonymous couple who had supported other Olympic hopeful volunteered
to sponsor Scott. He immediately resumed training.
Over
the next several years, his continued dedication paid off. By 1980
he was good enough to capture third place in National Competition
and win a berth on the U.S. Olympic squad. In addition, he earned
a solid fifth-place finish at the Olympics in Lake Placid. Then
in March of 1981, Scott's dazzling free-skate program at the World
Championships enabled him to overtake fellow countrymen David Santee
and Igor Bobrin of the Soviet Union to win the title, only the second
American to do so since 1970. Later that same year, he took and
individual Gold medal at the first Skate America tournament and
was voted Male Athlete of the Year by the United States Olympic
Committee.
Scott
held onto his national and world titles in 1992 and 1993. As the
winner of sixteen consecutive championships after the 1980 Winter
Olympics, he was heavily favored to take the Gold medal at the 1984
Olympic Games in Sarajevo and that is precisely what he did, despite
an uncharacteristically tentative free-skating routine. A month
later, he went on to score a stunning victory at the World Championships
in Ottawa, Canada. Shortly thereafter, in April of 1984, Scott turned
professional after being inundated with lucrative contracts from
the major ice shows. The Ice Capades secured his superstar
talents for two years.
In
September of 1987, the United States Olympic Committee nominated
him for the first Olympic Spirit Award given for the 1984 Winter
Games. The award, which has since become a tradition, was voted
on by Olympic Committee members and over 1900 members of the American
press with Scott winning the prestigious honor by a landslide.
Since
1986, audiences have seen him perform in his own Scott Hamilton's
America Tour, with numerous U.S. symphony orchestras; and now
13 national touring seasons of Stars On Ice which he also
co-created and for which he serves as co-producer. He has toured
the country in the proscenium theater production of Festival
On Ice highlighted by a two week engagement at the Opera House
of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington,
D.C; and dazzled audiences with multiple headlining appearances
in the Southshore Room of Harrah's Hotel and Casino in Lake Tahoe,
Nevada. Additionally, he is one of television's most sought after
guest-stars on a variety of yearly network and cable skating specials
and is currently a spokesperson for Discover Card and Target Stores.
His October, 1997 comeback to skating preceded by a People Magazine
cover story profiling his courageous battle against cancer, and
Maria Shriver's highly rated profile of Scott for NBC's Dateline,
was capped by the CBS Television Special Scott Hamilton: Back
On The Ice. By all counts, the event was one of the most emotional
and riveting evenings of the year.
In
March of 1998, Scott Hamilton received perhaps the second most important
award in his career form the International Skating Union. This institutional
governing body of all world amateur competitions presented him with
their highest recognition of merit, the Jacques Favart Award. A
most prestigious honor, it is only sporadically given and, at the
same time of its presentation to Scott, he became the award's first
solo male recipient.
As
an independent producer, Scott has twice presented major theatrical
proscenium ice shows for Sea World of San Diego, California. The
initial production - Celebrations on Ice (1988) became a
first for the twenty-five year old landmark. The second - Time
Traveler: An Odyssey On Ice (1989) - surpassed all of Sea World's
expectations and became the most stellar attraction ever presented
at the famous marine life park's 7,000 seat outdoor amphitheater.
A "book" show, the production played to nearly a million
people over a three month engagement. Scott made his "musical
and acting" debut in 1989 as star of Broadway On Ice,
a specially written vehicle for his diverse talents. First presented
at Harrah's Lake Tahoe, the show then toured the Scott Hamilton
U.S. with Scott receiving great critical acclaim for his versatility
beyond skating. Setting a precedent as the first star in ice skating
history to combine skating, acting, singing and dancing in one stage
production, this new dimension only further complimented his already
illustrious career. He has successfully segued into producing for
television and has co-produced not only his own television specials
such as Disney's Scott Hamilton - Upside Down, the 1997 holiday
hit Snowden On Ice and its 1998 sequel The Snowden, Raggedy
Ann & Andy Holiday Special, but most recently, 1998 Olympic
Champion Tara Lipinski's first network special for CBS.
In
July of 1990, to add to a remarkable list of achievements which
now includes over 60 titles, awards and honors, Scott was inducted
into the United States Olympic Hall of Fame. He was distinguished
in this induction by being the only Olympic athlete from any Winter
Olympic games played since 1924 to become a 1990 Olympic Hall of
Fame class member and one of under 100 Olympic athletes ever to
be honored as of that date. In that same year, he also became a
privileged member of the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame and his
career was selected to be permanently published in Marquis' Who's
Who In America. In 1992, Marquis began publishing his biography
in Who's Who In Entertainment and in 1994 he was added to their
Who's Who In The West edition.
In
1997, Scott was the recipient of yet one more distinguished honor
when on March 14th in front of a sold-out crowd of 17,000 at New
York's Madison Square Garden, he became the first figure skater
ever to be inducted into the Madison Square Garden Walk of Fame.
Until that night, the Garden had not added a member to their illustrious
"club" of 46 legends in five an a half years. Humbly accepting
the accolade, which professionally represented over fifty appearances
by Hamilton at Madison Square Garden during the last 21 years, Scott
is now in the permanent company of of such luminaries as Mohammed
Ail, Michael Jordan, the Rolling Stones, and Frank Sinatra.
Scott
had just completed a thirteen year tenure with the CBS Television
Network as one of their most articulate sports analysts. His coverage
of figure skating competition at the 1998 Winter Olympic Games in
Nagano, the 1994 Olympic Games in Lillehammer, Norway and the 1992
Games in Albertville, France, were heralded as an incisive, exuberant
and refreshing.
When
he is not performing or participating in a wide variety of fundraisers
such as the Scott Hamilton Circle of Friends Invitational Golf
Tournament in benefit of Target House at St. Jude's Hospital
in Memphis, The March on Washington conducted by the National Coalition
of Cancer Survivors, pediatric AIDS, the Make-A-Wish Foundation,
and animal rights, Scott enjoys his time at home in Denver, Colorado
and on the golf course.
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