Dr. Mary Albright

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Mary Albright

Jane Curtin as Dr. Mary Albright
First appearance "Brains and Eggs"
Last appearance "The Thing That Wouldn't Die: Part 2"
Cause/reason End of the series
Created by Bonnie and Terry Turner
Portrayed by Jane Curtin
Jodi Johnson (as a child in "Dick-In-Law")
Episode count 112
Information
Aliases Kiki[1]
Species Earthling
Gender Female
Age 44 as of "Dick the Vote"
Date of birth c. 1952
Occupation Anthropology professor
Title "Doctor of Philosophy"
Family George Albright (father - not biologically)
Martha Albright (mother)
Roy Albright (brother)
Renata Albright (sister)
Tiffany (niece)
IMDb profile

Dr. Mary Margaret Albright is a fictional character who was played by Jane Curtin in the American situation comedy 3rd Rock from the Sun. She serves as a straight foil and love interest for the eccentric Dick Solomon.[2]

Contents

[edit] Casting

Curtin was recruited to play Mary by friend Bonnie Turner after another actress was deemed too sweet for the part.[2] Co-star John Lithgow said, "We really needed a very strong human comic presence. . . . Someone who could give it out and dish it out."[3] Curtin had earlier worked with Bonnie and Terry Turner on Saturday Night Live and in the 1993 film Coneheads.[4] She originally signed for just seven episodes, but soon agreed to extend her commitment. "I loved the character, but I also loved the sense of humor on the show," she later explained. "I had known John in New York, and I'm very comfortable with him. It made me laugh when John and I were working together -- there just would be puddles on the floor."[2]

Reflecting on the show in 2005, Lithgow remarked "Jane was just perfect for it. She's a great comedy partner. She understands the role of a straight man; however, she also has a terrific streak of wildness herself so she creates this wonderful repressed character who occasionally spins out just as much as the aliens do."[5]

[edit] Occupation

Mary works as a professor of Anthropology at the fictional Pendelton State University in Rutherford, Ohio. For approximately six months during the sitcom's 4th season, Mary served as dean of Pendleton's School of Arts and Sciences. However, she lost this job and returned to her role as professor after she was caught breaking in to friend and colleague Judith's office after Dick convinced her that Judith was after her job.

[edit] Relationship with Dick

Mary and the 'father' of the alien group, who works at Pendelton as a physics professor, were forced to share an office. While Dick was attracted to her almost instantly, Mary took a long time to warm to Dick. After their initial success, Dick and Mary enjoyed an on-off relationship; Dick would often annoy Mary, causing her to grow angry and seemingly break up with him. However, in the next episode, they are nearly always back together (notable exception: when Dick was engaged to Mary, then discovered another alien had been sent to masquerade as his wife, leading Mary to believe he is committing polygamy. Even then, she forgave him.)

When Dick and his 'family' are called back to the home planet, Mary discovers Dick's alien identity; she is initially persuaded to return with them. However, she realises how much she would miss Earth, so she and Dick bid farewell. In an alternative ending, Dick returns and abducts her.

[edit] History

From hints in the show, Mary formerly drank a lot and often used her feminity to get what she wanted from men. From references and one episode about her parents, it appears that her father had affairs and her mother drank a lot. Mary comes from a seemingly average but trashy family, but she and sister Renata have become successful - Renata is rich, while Mary is a professor and doctor. In one episode, Dick marries her, in order to divorce her and get her to promise she will not build a library at Pendelton that will cast a shadow in Mary's office. Renata was played by guest star Megan Mullally (best known for playing Karen Walker on Will & Grace). Mary also has a younger brother, Roy Albright, who claims to have been abducted by aliens. This completely freaks out the family, to this end Sally and Harry take out the cornfield to "killroy" as the plan is called. In the end he is found out to be lying.

As seen in "The Dicks They Are A'Changin'", Mary was a part of the 1960s counterculture in her youth (flashbacks showed her dressed in hippie garb), though she mentions she "never made it to Woodstock". Mary attended UC Berkeley in the late '60s and was apparently involved in the Free Speech Movement there.

[edit] Alternate Universe

In an episode when the characters enter an alternate universe Mary has a completely different personality and life. She is a shallow, airheaded and slutty lounge singer at a dive bar in Manhattan. She uses her feminine wiles to get money and gifts from men. She attempts to do so with Dick Solomon but finds herself falling in love[1].

[edit] Pets

Mary used to own fish, before Dick was left to look after them as Mary was on a conference - he introduced an angel fish, which ate all the others. Mary was angry with Dick for killing her fish, so Dick bought her a dog to compensate. After breaking off their engagement, Mary tries to get rid of the dog, but realizes she loves him. She and Dick later get back together, making Mary relieved she didn't get rid of her dog.

[edit] Trivia

  • Mary's passport says "Mary Albright, Ph.D." [6]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b "Dick'll Take Manhattan (Pt. 1)". 3rd Rock from the Sun. NBC. 2000-11-21. No. 4, season 6.
  2. ^ a b c Peter Marks. "Curtin closes another hit season on '3rd Rock'". Boston Herald. 18 May 1997.
  3. ^ Susan King. "'3rd Rock from Sun' a series out of this world". The Press of Atlantic City. 17 January 1996.
  4. ^ John Crook. "Lithgow and Curtin star in quirky NBC sitcom". The Stuart News. 7 January 1996.
  5. ^ Tim Arsenault. "Dim aliens land on DVD; John Lithgow relives some of those zany moments on 3rd Rock from the Sun". The Chronicle Herald. 6 August 2005.
  6. ^ "Gwen, Larry, Dick and Mary". 3rd Rock from the Sun. NBC. 2000-01-25. No. 10, season 5.

[edit] External links