George Dzundza

About George Dzundza

Dzundza enjoyed fleeting fame as the fatherly cop, Detective Sergeant Max Greevey, paired with the youthful Chris Noth during the initial season of NBC's critically acclaimed "Law & Order". He departed the series (in a pine box), however, before it became one of the network's dramatic staples.

Dzundza has worked in some interesting and/or popular films over the course of his career including Michael Cimino's "The Deer Hunter" (1978), Robert Altman's "Streamers" (1983), "No Way Out" (1987), Clint Eastwood's "White Hunter, Black Heart" (1990), and "Basic Instinct" (1992). A TV-movie veteran, Dzundza has also done many TV guest spots. His stage credits include "The Ritz" and "Legend" on Broadway and a starring role in the national touring production of "That Championship Season."

Continuing to work steadily on the big screen and in television movies, Dzundza also got some breaks on series television. He landed a regular spot on the series "Jesse" playing Christina Appelgate's father and in 2002 headed up the cast of the CBS drama "Robbery Homicide Division."

Education

St John's University, Jamaica , New York

St John's University, Jamaica , New York

Career Milestones

2002

Landed role on CBS series "Robbery Homicide Division"

2002

Appeared in Robert Dinero film "City by the Sea"

1999

Appeared in crime thriller "Instinct" with Anthony Hopkins

1998

Returned to series TV as co-star of the fall NBC sitcom "Jesse"; role reduced from regular to recurring

1994

Starred in title role of "Babymaker: The Dr. Cecil Jacobson Story", a fact-based CBS TV-movie about the fertility doctor indicted for inseminating his patients with his own sperm

1990

Co-starred during the first season of successful police/legal series, "Law and Order"

1982

Starred in the short-lived ABC sitcom, "Open All Night"

1981

Moved to L.A.

1978

Had supporting role in "The Deer Hunter"

1978

TV-movie debut, "The Defection of Simas Kudirka", a CBS biopic

TV debut, guest shot on "Starsky and Hutch"

1975

Feature debut, "The Happy Hooker"

Toured in "That Championship Season"

1973

Stage debut in a New York Shakespeare Festival production of "King Lear"

Raised on NYC's Lower East Side

1956

Immigrated to US; settled in NYC

1949

Moved to Amsterdam

Spent part of childhood in displaced persons camps

Born in Germany