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The Babylon 5 makeup department involved in this episode – consisting of Everett Burrell, Greg Funk, Mary Kay Morse, Ron Pipes and John Vulich – won the 1994 Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Makeup for a Series for episode 5 of the season, 'The Parliament of Dreams' [5]
Mary Kay Adams (born September 12, 1962) [1] [2] is an American actress. She is best knowing for playing the roles of India von Halkein on the CBS soap opera Guiding Light (1984 to 1987, return appearances from 1990 to 2005) and Na'Toth on the science fiction television series Babylon 5 (1994 to 1995).
The New York Black Yankees were a professional Negro league baseball team based in New York City; Paterson, New Jersey; and Rochester, New York.Beginning as the independent Harlem Stars, the team was renamed the New York Black Yankees in 1932 and joined the Negro National League in 1936, and remained in the league through 1948.
They married soon afterwards, and he left Babylon 5 to help her run Edgars Industries on Mars, one of the largest corporations on the planet. During the fifth and final season of Babylon 5 he was the Director of Covert Intelligence for the new Interstellar Alliance, a post parallel to the real-life present-day CIA Director.
The MLB player made his professional debut as a starting pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals but has since transitioned to the bullpen in a closing role with the New York Yankees.
The fate of Babylon 4 is discovered when Sinclair returns to the station to request Sheridan's help: Sinclair had been destined to use time travel to take Babylon 4 back in time to the previous Shadow war, where he is transformed into the revered Minbari leader, Valen, using the same device Delenn used for her transformation.
Ice Cube and Fat Joe will continue to show their love for the L.A. Dodgers and New York Yankees, ... "It's time for Dodger baseball." World Series champions Orel Hershiser (1988) and Steve Yeager ...
The presence of men like White, her great-great-grandfather, “overturns the commonly held notion that New York’s Black intellectual and cultural life began in Harlem” in the 1920s, Peterson ...