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Connie McDowell is a fictional character in the television series NYPD Blue. [1] She was played by Charlotte Ross from Season 8 to 11. [ 1 ] Ross had previously guest starred on the show as another character in two episodes of Season 5.
Charlotte Ross (born January 21, 1968) is an American actress. She is best known for her roles as Eve Donovan on the NBC soap opera Days of Our Lives from 1987 to 1991, and as Detective Connie McDowell on the ABC police procedural drama series NYPD Blue from 2001 to 2004.
Stan Hatcher — Hatcher's uncle was the Deputy Chief of Personnel, and Hatcher was assigned to the 15th Precinct as a replacement for Connie McDowell in Season 11 when she went on maternity leave. Hatcher had killed his wife years previously, but the case had gone unsolved because it was attributed to the perpetrator in one of his cases trying ...
Clark and McDowell investigate the death of a 17-year-old female auxiliary cop, who turns out to have been having sex with a number of the uniform cops, including the auxiliary captain. McDowell and Ortiz respond to the firebombing of a car. Haywood asks Jones to investigate when her grandmother appears to be the victim of a phone scam.
In 2003, Sipowicz marries for the third time, this time to a fellow detective named Connie McDowell, who had recently joined the squad. The year before, Connie's pregnant sister is killed by her abusive husband. The baby survives, so Connie and Sipowicz take custody of the child and name her Michelle, after her mother.
Ronald Dean McDowell Sr. (born March 25, 1950) [2] is an American country music artist. McDowell charted more than thirty Top 40 hits on the Billboard country music charts. Two of his singles – " Older Women " and " You're Gonna Ruin My Bad Reputation " — reached Number One on the country charts, while eleven more reached Top Ten.
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Converse's life and music have served as the inspiration for numerous contemporary artworks, including a play by Howard Fishman, who also produced the album Connie's Piano Songs featuring music written but never recorded by Converse. [30] Fishman also published a biography of Converse in 2023 titled To Anyone Who Ever Asks. [31]