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Phil Morris

Phil Morris

Morris caught a break in 1984 when he signed to play a law student on the CBS daytime drama "The Young and the Restless." During his two year stint on the soap, his character was involved in one of the strangest plotlines in the history of the genre: Tyrone was to infiltrate the mob--as a white man. Morris endured the nearly three-hour daily makeup sessions but the psychological toll proved too much, despite the mostly positive notices he earned. In 1988, he was cast as the son of his father's character in the short-lived ABC remake of "Mission: Impossible." Other roles followed like the ruthlessly ambitious TV reporter in "WIOU" (CBS, 1990), the title character, the first black American bicycle racer in The Disney Channel biopic "Tracks of Glory: The Major Taylor Story" (1992), Steven Dimes in both "Jackie Collins' 'Lucky/Chances'" (NBC, 1990) and its sequel "Jackie Collins' 'Lady Boss'" (NBC, 1992) and the ship's purser in "The Love Boat: The Next Wave" (UPN, 1998-99) as well as numerous guest shots in sitcoms and dramas. Morris also began to make inroads in features, appearing as a trainee in "Star Trek III: The Search for Spock" (1984), a pilot in "Wag the Dog" (1997) and a deadpan FBI agent in "Clay Pigeons" (1998). But it was a 1995 guest role on the NBC sitcom "Seinfeld" as unctuous attorney Jackie Chiles (who bore more than a passing resemblance to celebrity lawyer Johnnie Cochran) that put Morris on the map. Over the next three years, the actor made occasional appearances as the bombastic legal beagle, including one in the series' much-touted finale. Morris was allowed to reprise the character in TV commercials for Honda in 1999 and eventually won Jerry Seinfeld's approval for a spin-off sitcom, "The Jackie Chiles Show."
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