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・ Jeremiah Masoli
・ Jeremiah Mason
・ Jeremiah Massey
・ Jeremiah Matibiri
・ Jeremiah McCall
・ Jeremiah McDade
・ Jeremiah McGuire
・ Jeremiah McLain Rusk
・ Jeremiah McLene
・ Jeremiah McVeagh
・ Jeremiah Metcalf
・ Jeremiah Meyer
・ Jeremiah Milbank
・ Jeremiah Milles
・ Jeremiah Morehouse House
Jeremiah Morris
・ Jeremiah Morrow
・ Jeremiah Morrow Bridge
・ Jeremiah Morton
・ Jeremiah Moulton
・ Jeremiah Murphy
・ Jeremiah Murphy (piper)
・ Jeremiah N. Reynolds
・ Jeremiah Nelson
・ Jeremiah Neterer
・ Jeremiah Ngayu Kioni
・ Jeremiah Nichols School
・ Jeremiah Norman Williams
・ Jeremiah Northup
・ Jeremiah Northup (Nova Scotia politician)


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Jeremiah Morris : ウィキペディア英語版
Jeremiah Morris

Jeremiah Morris (''Jerome Maurice Gomberg'': April 4, 1929 in Bronx, New York – March 5, 2006 in Culver City, California) was an American actor and television and theater director. Morris, influential in Los Angeles theater, appeared in Broadway plays and on popular television series for close to 40 years and directed television and theater productions.
==Career==
A New York native, Morris began working in the theater in the 1950s, appearing as an actor in a number of Broadway plays including a 1961 production of ''Daughter of Silence'' by Morris West and based on West's novel. He also appeared in Jennie, a 1963 musical starring Mary Martin. During that period, he worked as a television actor, making guest appearances on ''Naked City'', ''The Honeymooners'', ''Car 54, Where Are You?'', ''WKRP in Cincinnati''. He continued his television acting career through the 1990s, with guest roles on ''Cheers'', ''Mad About You'', ''NewsRadio'' and ''Frasier''. He also directed episodes of ''Barney Miller'', ''Fish'', ''Diff'rent Strokes'', ''Too Close for Comfort'', ''Quincy, M.E.'' and ''Tony Orlando and Dawn'', among other series.
In his theater work, Morris focused on directing from the early 1970s. One of his first major assignments was directing the touring production of Neil Simon's ''The Gingerbread Lady'' in 1972. All in all, he helmed hundreds of productions, on and off Broadway, on national tours and in regional theaters, directing legends such as Al Pacino, Jose Ferrer and Mickey Rooney.
In 1989, Morris accepted a job as artistic director of the Actors Alley theater in the San Fernando Valley. During his more than 10 years with the company, the eclectic program list featured works by George Bernard Shaw and Charles Dickens as well as modern plays, including Susan Sandler's ''Crossing Delancey'', produced in partnership with the University of Judaism (now the American Jewish University). The Actors Alley moved into the historic El Portal Theatre in North Hollywood in 1995 and performed in a small space for several years until the main stage was renovated. Morris left the artistic director post in 2000.

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