Judith Ellen Light (born February 9, 1949) in Trenton, New Jersey. She made her professional debut on stage in Richard III at the California Shakespeare Festival in 1970.

Career

Early work and breakthrough

Light made her Broadway debut in A Doll's House in 1975. She also starred in the 1976 Broadway play Herzl. Light also acted for such theatre companies as the Milwaukee Repertory Theater and the Seattle Repertory Theatre. In the late 1970s, Light went through a real crisis after a period of not landing any parts. Light's dramatic, confessional courtroom performance of a housewife-turned-prostitute on the witness stand is regarded as one of the most memorable moments in television by TV Guide. In 1980, this won Light her first Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series; the scene in which she confessed her guilt in court is held in such high esteem that it is still used in acting classes. Light recalled: "I was scared before those courtroom scenes. I was afraid to put myself out that much. With the agony of pulling it out piece by piece and having the prosecutor stick the knife in her gut, I couldn't help but let everything spew out of her." Light won another Daytime Emmy Award in the role in 1981.

She appeared in an episode of St. Elsewhere in its first season, called "Dog Day Hospital", in which she played a housewife who became pregnant for the ninth time even though her husband claimed he had had a vasectomy. In an effort to punish the doctor who botched the job she took an operating room hostage though it was later revealed that her husband had not had the procedure.

Continued success and film expansion

After her success on daytime television, Light landed the leading role of assertive advertising executive Angela Bower on the ABC sitcom Who's the Boss?. Light shaved her head for the role in the play.

Light returned to television with the recurring role of Judge Elizabeth Donnelly in the NBC legal crime drama Law & Order: Special Victims Unit in 2002. She appeared in 25 episodes of the series from 2002 to 2010. In 2004 she starred in another short-lived CBS sitcom, The Stones. In 2006, Light joined the cast of the ABC comedy-drama series Ugly Betty as Claire Meade, the mother of Alexis and Daniel. She was a recurring guest-star during the first season and was promoted to series regular as of the second. Light appeared in the show until the series finale in 2010. She was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series in 2007, and for the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series in 2008, for her performance in show. Light's character, Gayle, runs a Christian ministry known as Genesis House, which works to help gay men recover from their 'affliction.' She is challenged by the arrival of Mark, an ill gay man who reminds Gayle of her dead, homosexual son, and the movie chronicles the challenges of the two as they learn to accept each other as they are.

Acclaim in theater and return to television

The New York Times said in 1999 of Light's lead performance in the Broadway play Wit, "It is the sort of transformational work that would hint at other future successes, with Shakespeare, maybe, if a full-time career in the theater were truly an option these days. In any event, it gives rise to a wish. Ms. Light, don't touch that dial again, at least not for a while." Nevertheless, it would be another decade before Light returned to a major theatrical role on Broadway. From 2010 to 2011, Light appeared on Broadway as witty alcoholic Marie Lombardi in the play Lombardi, for which she received a nomination for the Tony Award, for Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play. Another role on Broadway followed, as Silda Grauman in Other Desert Cities from 2011 to 2012, which garnered Light her first Tony Award for Featured Actress in a Play and the 2012 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play. Light also starred in two television pilots, ABC's sitcom Other People's Kids and USA Network's drama Eden, both in 2011 and neither of which were green-lit to continue.

left|thumb|upright|Judith Light accepting her 2012 Drama Desk Award at [[The Town Hall (New York City)|The Town Hall in New York City]]Light appeared on Broadway as Faye in the 2013 play, The Assembled Parties, and won her second Tony Award for Featured Actress in a Play for her performance. In the same year, she joined the cast of TNT's continuation of the television series Dallas, in the role of Judith Brown Ryland, villainous mother of Harris Ryland (despite being only three years older than Mitch Pileggi who plays her TV son). She received positive reviews for her recurring role in Dallas, with Entertainment Weekly naming her the "scene-stealer" of the series.

In 2014, she was cast opposite Jeffrey Tambor in the critically acclaimed Amazon Studios dark comedy-drama series, Transparent created by Jill Soloway. She plays Shelly Pfefferman, ex-wife of the transgender character played by Tambor. The pilot episode debuted on February 6, 2014, and later episodes premiered on September 26, 2014. Light received Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series and Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film nominations for her performance.

Light appeared opposite Patricia Clarkson in the 2014 rom-com, Last Weekend, and as the mother of Melanie Lynskey's character in a comedy-drama film, We'll Never Have Paris, the same year. She returned to Broadway in 2015 as Madame Raquin in Helen Edmundson's adaptation of Thérèse Raquin, starring opposite Keira Knightley and Matt Ryan. In 2017, Light was featured in the American Theatre Wing's Working in the Theatre series on solo performance.

Light received critical acclaim for her portrayal of Marilyn Miglin in 2018's The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, a mini-series on FX, culminating in a Primetime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Movie. In 2019, Light guest-starred in the Netflix series, The Politician. Together with Bette Midler, she joined the main cast of the series for the second season, which premiered in June 2020. She received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on September 12, 2019.

In 2021, Light played Rosa Stevens in the biographical musical drama film Tick, Tick... Boom! directed by Lin-Manuel Miranda. She later starred in the comedy-thriller The Menu. She also was cast in the comedy-drama Down Low, and comedy-drama The Young Wife starring Kiersey Clemons. On television, Light played Courteney Cox's mother in the Starz horror comedy series Shining Vale, and Blanche Knopf in the HBO Max series Julia, both having premiered in 2022.

In 2026, she appeared as the character of Ma Gnucci in the Disney+/Marvel special The Punisher:One Last Kill.

Personal life

Light has been married to television actor Robert Desiderio since 1985. In 2010, the couple became bicoastal: she lives primarily in New York City, and he resides primarily in Southern California. She has a home in Beverly Hills, California and a home in Aspen, Colorado. She is Jewish and considers herself religious, without being attached to institutional religion. She has practiced Kundalini yoga for 20 years.

Activism

After being inspired by the community, Light began advocating for people diagnosed with HIV/AIDS in the early 1980s. She was one of the first celebrities to advocate against the social stigma encountered by those with AIDS. She has served on the boards of the Matthew Shepard Foundation and the Point Foundation, a support organization for students discriminated against based on sexual orientation or gender.

Through her role in Transparent as the ex-wife of a transgender person, Light raises these issues to a broad audience. She reported "It's something that we really haven't talked about before in pop culture, we haven't talked about transgender issues, we haven't talked about mature people's sexuality."

In an interview with the magazine Out, Light stated:<blockquote>“It was the LGBTQ community that inspired me to be the kind of person I wanted to be. I wanted to be authentic and courageous, and for so long I wasn't. When I began doing a lot of advocacy work in the early '80s for HIV and AIDS, I saw the community and the way the community was operating against all odds, against a world and a culture and country that gave them nothing and denigrated them. ... I looked at this community and said, 'This is breathtaking. This is the kind of world and people I want to be around. These are the kind of people I want to be working with."</blockquote>In 2018, Light discussed the similarities between the beginnings of the LGBT rights movement and the Me Too movement.

In addition to LGBTQ and AIDS activism, she has spoken publicly to encourage vaccination against the flu as a way to protect vulnerable populations.

Filmography

Film

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Title

! Role

! class="unsortable"| Notes

|-

| 1978

| Rush It

| Catherine's Friend

|

|-

| rowspan="2" | 1996

| Paul Monette: The Brink of Summer's End

| Herself

|

|-

| A Step Toward Tomorrow

| Anna Lerner

|

|-

| 2000

| Joseph: King of Dreams

| Zuleika

| Voice

|-

| 2005

| Ira & Abby

| Arlene Black

|

|-

| 2006

| A Broken Sole

| Hilary

|

|-

| 2007

| Save Me

| Gayle

| Also producer

|-

| rowspan="2" | 2012

| Rhymes with Banana

| Herself

|

|-

| Scrooge & Marley

| The Narrator

|

|-

| 2014

| Last Weekend

| Veronika Goss

|

|-

| rowspan="2" | 2015

| We'll Never Have Paris

| Jean

|

|-

| Digging for Fire

| Grandma

|

|-

| rowspan="2" | 2018

| Ms. White Light

| Val

|

|-

| Hot Air

| Judith Montefiore-Salters

|

|-

| 2019

| Before You Know It

| Sherrell Ghearhardt

|

|-

| rowspan="2" | 2021

| The Same Storm

| Shirlee Salt

|

|-

| Tick, Tick... Boom!

| Rosa Stevens

|

|-

| 2022

| The Menu

| Anne Liebrandt

|

|-

| rowspan="2" | 2023

| Down Low

| Sandy

|

|-

| The Young Wife

| Cookie

|

|-

| 2024

| Out of My Mind

| Mrs. V.

|

|-

| TBA

| Untitled Stephen Merchant film

|

| Filming

|}

Television films

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Title

! Role

! class="unsortable"| Notes

|-

| 1983

| Intimate Agony

| Marsha

|

|-

| 1987

| Stamp of a Killer

| Cathy Proctor

|

|-

| rowspan="2" | 1989

| The Ryan White Story

| Jeanne White

|

|-

| My Boyfriend's Back

| Vickie Vine

|

|-

| 1990

| In Defense of a Married Man

| Laura Simmons

|

|-

| 1991

| Wife, Mother, Murderer

| Marie Hilley/Robbi/Teri

|

|-

| 1993

| Men Don't Tell

| Laura MacAffrey

|

|-

| rowspan="2" | 1994

| Betrayal of Trust

| Barbara Noël

|

|-

| Against Their Will: Women in Prison

| Alice Needham

|

|-

| 1995

| Lady Killer

| Janice Mitchell

|

|-

| rowspan="2" | 1996

| A Strange Affair

| Lisa McKeever

| Also co-executive producer

|-

| Murder at My Door

| Irene McNair

|

|-

| 1997

| Too Close to Home

| Diana Donahue

|

|-

| 2019

| Escaping the Madhouse: The Nellie Bly Story

| Matron Grady

|

|-

| 2026

| The Punisher: One Last Kill

| Ma Gnucci

| Disney+ special

|}

Television series

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Title

! Role

! class="unsortable"| Notes

|-

| 1977

| Kojak

| Laetitia Pomerantz

| Episode: "Monkey on a String"

|-

| 1977–83

| One Life to Live

| Karen Wolek

| Lead role on daily soap opera

|-

| rowspan="2" | 1983

| St. Elsewhere

| Barbara Lonnicker

| Episode: "Dog Day Hospital"

|-

| Family Ties

| Stacey Hughes

| Episode: "Not an Affair to Remember"

|-

| rowspan="3" | 1984

| The Mississippi

|

| Episode: "Home Again"

|-

| Remington Steele

| Clarissa Custer

| Episode: "Dreams of Steele"

|-

| You Are the Jury

| Elizabeth Harding

| Episode: "The Case of the People of Florida vs. Joseph Landrum"

|-

| 1984–92

| Who's the Boss?

| Angela Bower

| 196 episodes

|-

| 1986

| Charmed Lives

| Angela Bower

| Episode: "Pilot"

|-

| 1993–94

| Phenom

| Dianne Doolan

| 22 episodes

|-

| 1996–97

| Duckman

| Ursula Bacon "Honey" Chicken

| 3 episodes

|-

| 1997

| Cow and Chicken

| Nurse

| Voice, episode: "Space Cow/The Legend of Sailcat"

|-

| Before

| Lynn

| Miniseries

|-

| rowspan="2"| 2025

| Star Wars: Visions

| Gleenu

| Voice; episode: "The Smuggler"

|-

| All's Fair

| Sheila Baskin

| 2 episodes

|-

|}

Theatre

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Title

! Role

! Notes

|-

| 1975

| A Doll's House

| Helene

| Vivian Beaumont Theater

|-

| rowspan="2" | 1976

| Measure for Measure

| Francisca

|Delacorte Theater

|-

| Herzl

| Julie Herzl

|Palace Theatre

|-

| 1999–2000

| Wit

| Vivian Bearing

|Union Square Theatre

|-

| 2001

| Hedda Gabler

| Hedda Gabler

|Shakespeare Theatre Company

|-

| 2002

| Sorrows and Rejoicings

|Allison Olivier

|Second Stage Theatre

|-

| 2005

| Colder Than Here

| Myra

|Lucille Lortel Theatre

|-

| 2010–11

| Lombardi

| Marie Lombardi

|Circle in the Square Theatre

|-

| 2011–12

| Other Desert Cities

| Silda Grauman

|Booth Theatre

|-

| 2013

| The Assembled Parties

| Faye

|Samuel J. Friedman Theatre

|-

| 2015

| Thérèse Raquin

|Madame Raquin

|Roundabout Theater at Studio 54

|-

| 2016

| All The Ways To Say I Love You

|Faye

|MCC Theater

|-

| 2017

| God Looked Away

|Estelle

|Pasadena Playhouse

|}

Awards and nominations

Film and television

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Award

! Category

! Work

! Result

|-

| align="center"| 1979

| Soapy Award

|Outstanding Actress

| rowspan="4" | One Life to Live

|

|-

| rowspan="2" align="center"| 1980

| Daytime Emmy Award

| Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series

|

|-

| Soapy Award

| Outstanding Actress

|

|-

| align="center"| 1981

| Daytime Emmy Award

| Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series

|

|-

| align="center"| 1998

| GLAAD Media Award

| colspan="2" | Vision Award

|

|-

| rowspan="5" align="center"| 2007

| Primetime Emmy Award

| Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series

| rowspan="4" | Ugly Betty

|

|-

| Prism Award

| Best Performance in a Comedy Series

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| Gold Derby Awards

| Comedy Guest Actress

|

|-

|Ensemble of the Year

|

|-

| TV Land Award

| Favorite Working Mom

|Who's the Boss?

|

|-

| rowspan="2" align="center"| 2008

| Screen Actors Guild Award

| Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series

| Ugly Betty

|

|-

| TV Land Award

| Mad Ad Man (or Woman) of the Year

| Who's the Boss?

|

|-

| align="center"| 2015

| Critics' Choice Television Award

| Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

| rowspan="6" |Transparent

|

|-

| rowspan="6" align="center"| 2016

| Golden Globe Award

| Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film

|

|-

| Primetime Emmy Award

| Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

|

|-

| Screen Actors Guild Award

| Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series

|

|-

| Critics' Choice Television Award

| Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

|

|-

|Gold Derby Awards

|Comedy Supporting Actress

|

|-

|Gotham Award

| colspan="2" |Made in New York Award

|

|-

| rowspan="2" align="center"| 2017

| Primetime Emmy Award

| Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

| rowspan="2" |Transparent

|

|-

|Gold Derby Awards

|Comedy Supporting Actress

|

|-

| rowspan="3" align="center"| 2018

| Primetime Emmy Award

| Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Movie

| rowspan="4" | The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story

|

|-

| rowspan="2" |Gold Derby Awards

|Movie/Limited Series Supporting Actress

|

|-

|Ensemble of the Year

|

|-

| rowspan="2" align="center" | 2019

| Critics' Choice Television Award

| Best Supporting Actress in a Movie/Miniseries

|

|-

| Provincetown International Film Festival

| colspan="2" | Excellence in Acting Award

|

|-

| rowspan="2" align="center" | 2020

|Women's Image Network Awards

|Outstanding Actress Made for Television Movie / Mini-Series

|Escaping the Madhouse: The Nellie Bly Story

|

|-

|GLAAD Media Award

| colspan="2" |Excellence in Media Award

|

|-

| align="center" | 2023

| Primetime Emmy Award

| Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series

|Poker Face

|

|-

|}

Theatre

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|-

! Year

! Award

! Category

! Work

! Result

|-

| rowspan="3" align="center"| 2011

| Tony Award

| Best Featured Actress in a Play

| rowspan="3" | Lombardi

|

|-

| Drama Desk Award

| Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play

|

|-

|Outer Critics Circle Award

|Outstanding Actress in a Play

|

|-

| rowspan="3" align="center"| 2012

| Tony Award

| Best Featured Actress in a Play

| rowspan="3" | Other Desert Cities

|

|-

| Drama Desk Award

| Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play

|

|-

|Outer Critics Circle Award

|Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play

|

|-

| rowspan="3" align="center"| 2013

| Tony Award

| Best Featured Actress in a Play

| rowspan="3" | The Assembled Parties

|

|-

| Drama Desk Award

| Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play

|

|-

|Outer Critics Circle Award

|Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play

|

|-

| rowspan="2" align="center"| 2016

| Drama League Award

| Distinguished Performance

| rowspan="2" | Thérèse Raquin

|

|-

| Outer Critics Circle Award

| Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play

|

|-

| rowspan="2" align="center"| 2017

|Drama League Award

|Distinguished Performance

| rowspan="2" |All The Ways To Say I Love You

|

|-

|Outer Critics Circle Award

|Outstanding Solo Performance

|

|-

| align="center"| 2019

| Tony Award

| Isabelle Stevenson Award

| "Advocacy for LGBTQ+ rights and the fight against HIV/AIDS."

|

|}

References