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Critics praised the level of storytelling, but put emphasis on the aggressiveness that both Daly and Foster expressed with their characters. I got on my knees and said, 'Listen, I'm not a method actress. I could hear them throughout the audience. So CBS agreed to make it into a mid-season replacement in 1982. You know, what's fascinating is you're drunk just like Charlie. On TV, Lumbly played a local clergyman in the biopic of a Gary Rowe Jr who went "Undercover With the KKK" (NBC, 1979) before appearing as Petrie in the TV-movie "Cagney & Lacey" (CBS, 1981) which spawned the series. He then passed the hearing and met the other actor, Danny Glover, still unknown. (1994), in which Lumbly played an independently wealthy paraplegic scientist/crimefighter, which marked the first black superhero on series television. Cagney and Lacey, about two female detectives working as partners in the New York Police Department, began life as a film screenplay by writing team Barbara Avedon and Barbara Corday, produced by Corday's then-boyfriend (and later husband - they divorced in 1990), Barney Rosenzweig. The pilot movie had Loretta Swit in the role of Cagney, while the first six episodes had Meg Foster in the role. Who in their right mind would? Torres said. Also in 2000, Lumbly guest starred in the season one The West Wing episode "Six Meetings Before Lunch" as Jeff Breckenridge, a nominee for U.S. Assistant Attorney General who supports reparations for slavery. Lumbly handily steals the entire series by communicating a whole life of pain in a few mighty scenes. Lumbly appeared as Daniel "Bulldog" Novacek in the 2004 television series Battlestar Galactica. The show's ratings leveled out to where it hovered around 30th place in the Nielsens during seasons four to six, a period where many state the show to have been in its creative peak. 51.83.98.190 Lumbly portrays CIA agent Marcus Dixon, former field partner and supervisor to agent Sydney Bristow (Jennifer Garner), on ABC's fast-paced drama series "Alias" (2001). Reviews of the series, however, with Meg Foster in place of Loretta Swit, were mixed. I just kind of laughed and said, Who would do that? Garner said, to which Lumbly responded, I do. Law., Green or a tawny nutmeg, Lumbly recalled of his appearance on screen at the start of his career. I would be told, Its certainly close to you, but not as dark as you are, so that will help us, as a way to help me understand that this was a good thing., Back in those days, he was made acutely aware of what it meant to be a Black man being broadcast into peoples homes. Lumbly obtained a scholarship to study at the Dramatic Art Conservatory at the University of Minnesota, and then made his debut in the theater before embarking on an acting career on television and cinema. Carl Winston Lumbly portrayed Isaiah Bradley in the The Falcon and The Winter Soldier episodes The Star-Spangled Man, Truth and One World, One People and Captain America: New World Order.