It was a sultry summer afternoon on the wooded campus of
Sarah Lawrence College, where Julianna Margulies got her
start on stage as an undergraduate in the late 1980s, and the
actress was reminiscing about what she used to hear from
casting directors.
"They would always say, `Well, you'll never do TV'," she
recalled.
"I was either too Jewish-looking, too European-looking, too
Greek-looking.
"Ethnic.
"But yet I wasn't ethnic, so no-one knew what to do with me .
. .
"I just thought, `OK, so I won't do that'."
So much for that plan.
Within five years of graduating, Margulies had broken into
television with parts on Philly Heat and Homicide:
Life on the Street, then landed the star-making role of
Carol Hathaway on ER.
Now, after spending nearly a decade doing an eclectic mix of
projects including Broadway plays, The Sopranos, and the
movie thriller Snakes on a Plane, Margulies is returning in a
new series that is poised to be her most prominent television
platform since the blockbuster hospital drama.
She was back at Sarah Lawrence to shoot a scene for The
Good Wife, in which Margulies plays the spouse of a
disgraced Chicago state's attorney brought down by a
prostitution and corruption scandal.
The drama explores the crosscurrents of betrayal and panic
felt by the wives of adulterous politicians and what happens
behind the brittle public facade.
The husband-and-wife writing team of Robert and Michelle King
hit on the idea after the string of sex scandals involving
former US senator Larry Craig, former New Jersey governor
James McGreevey and former New York governor Eliot Spitzer.
As they watched the men address the allegations in awkward
news conferences, they were struck by the role played by
their wives.
"All had this interesting component of the wife standing by
her man, being pulled through the mud, and also being used as
a prop," Robert King said.
"We found that image poignant and kind of fascinating and
thought there was no more interesting character in modern
politics."
"What was so interesting to us was that so very many of the
women did choose to stay in the marriage, and how many of
them were extremely accomplished women," Michelle King added.
Alicia Florrick, the character at the centre of The Good
Wife, is a defence attorney who put aside her career for
13 years for her husband, an ambitious politician played by
Chris Noth.
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