Allison agrees to let this unlikely friend into her life. "Angel From Hell": Jane Lynch stars as Amy, a brassy woman with bad habits, who tells tightly wound dermatologist Allison ( Maggie Lawson) that she's taking over her life as her guardian angel. The cast includes Calista Flockhart as her tough media-mogul boss. After 12 years of keeping her powers to herself, she decides to use her superhuman abilities for her adopted planet. "Supergirl": An action-adventure drama based on the DC Comics character Kara Zor-El ( Melissa Benoist), cousin to Superman. Clarence Thomas wants Supreme Court to revisit Texas sodomy law.Rockets' NBA draft picks: How the experts think Houston did.Astros send Jose Siri to Class AAA Sugar Land, activate Jake Meyers.Texas man catches massive alligator snapping turtle, then releases it back into the wild.Houston’s first medical marijuana dispensary is now open in the Heights.Generations of Houstonians grew up eating at the city's oldest Tex-Mex restaurant.Former Marine steps down as July 4 parade grand marshal of Texas town after threats of violence.
Bradley Cooper, who starred in the film, is an executive producer and will have a recurring role as a U.S. "Limitless": Based on the 2011 feature film, the drama finds Brian Finch ( Jake McDorman) pressed into working with the FBI after a mysterious drug gives him the enhanced brain power needed to solve complex cases. "Code Black": A hospital ER drama in which a staggering number of patients routinely tests the limited resources available, creating a condition known as "code black." Marcia Gay Harden heads a cast that includes Bonnie Somerville and Benjamin Hollingsworth as first-year residents.
#MARCIA GAY HARDEN BRAIN HEALTH SERIES#
The network's season will include the 50th anniversary edition of the NFL Super Bowl and the debut of Stephen Colbert as David Letterman's successor on "Late Show," and with "that kind of opportunity you have to make sure the series you're launching are big," CBS Entertainment Chairman Nina Tassler said. While comfortably successful CBS is bringing back 22 series for the 2015-16 season, it's found room for three new dramas and two comedies in the fall. The network is the most watched for the seventh year in a row.