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"Sunday in the Park with Jorge" is the 11th episode of the eleventh season of the American legal drama television series Law & Order, and the 240th episode overall. The title of the episode is a play on words on the Stephen Sondheim musical Sunday in the Park with George.
The episode was praised on the anti-abortion blogosphere, which had condemned the murder of George Tiller [2] but appreciated the episode's handling of the abortion issue as a whole. Dave Andrusko of the National Right to Life Committee wrote about the realistic, human portrayal of those involved.
Law & Order is an American police procedural and legal drama television series created by Dick Wolf that premiered on NBC on September 13, 1990. Set in New York City, where episodes were also filmed, the series ran for twenty seasons before it was cancelled on May 14, 2010, and aired its final episode ten days later, on May 24. [1]
Law & Order Season 19, Episode 19: "The Drowned and the Saved" This 2009 season finale is a prime example of a ripped-from-the-headlines narrative about political scandal—in this case, amid a ...
On the eve of Sam Waterston’s final episode as Jack McCoy, the successor to the Law & Order legend’s DA throne is breaking his silence. Scandal vet Tony Goldwyn, who joins Dick Wolf’s ...
The episode was written by Jorge Zamacona and Michael S. Chernuchin and directed by Ed Sherin. Aside from a brief cameo by Mike Logan in an earlier episode, "For God and Country" is the first episode to firmly establish a narrative link between Homicide and its sister show, Law & Order. The episode follows the events of Law & Order episode ...
This spring, Sam Waterston returned to TV in a big way. He’s not only reprising his role as District Attorney Jack McCoy on season 21 of Law & Order, but he’s also portraying former U.S ...
Aired in Brazil on September 3, 2009 by AXN, this episode caused uproar at the headquarters of Rio de Janeiro bid for the 2016 Summer Olympics. Mayor Eduardo Paes expressed disgust for the show, claiming it was "ridiculous and pathetic". State governor Sérgio Cabral Filho said jokingly that "now even [Law & Order's] screenwriters are desperate."