Mary McDonnell – How tall is she? – Height, Weight and Body Measurements

How Tall is Mary McDonnell Height Weight Body Measurements

Biography - A Short Wiki

Mary McDonnell is quite interesting when it comes to her height. Check out her body measurements including her shoe size!

Short Bio
Mary was born April 28, 1952 in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. She is known for her role as President Laura Roslin, in Battlestar Galactica and as the First Lady in Independence Day. In 1990, she also starred in Dances with Wolves, where she played with actor Kevin Costner and Graham Greene. In the Independence Day, Mary co-starred with Will Smith, Bill Pullman, and Vivica A. Fox. Her latest movie appearances are in 2011, Scream 4 and Margin Call. After closing TV series The Closer in 2012, she returned with same character – Captain Sharon Raydor, in the spin-off Major Crimes that will air it’s fourth season on June 8, 2015.

Body Measurements Table

Check out all the body measurements of Mary McDonnell. The table below includes bra size, dress size, shoe size, height, hips, and weight.

Body shape:Hourglass
Dress size:8
Breasts-Waist-Hips: 37-28-38 inches (94-71-97 cm)
Shoe size:8
Bra size: 34C
Cup size:C
Height: 5’ 6″ (169 cm)
Weight: 143 lbs (65 kg)
Natural breasts or implants: Natural

Quotes

That moment was very important because it was political. That’s what has to be done, so they struck a deal. She figures his is a well-thought-out motivation that she felt was worthy trade-off. The motivation here is survival, and she has to think like a leader.

Mary McDonnell

I love to work. I love to have complexity.

Mary McDonnell

Ron allowed us to see right away the private piece of a person about to become very public. I suspect we’re going to see more of her very private world – Laura’s private experience. I’m not sure yet how public she’s going to be about the actions she’s going to have to take.

Mary McDonnell

It’s really important for actors to feel that they’re more than something for hire.

Mary McDonnell

I love the idea of a woman being able to discover the idea of power this way, on such a scale. And I don’t know about that, what it means – well, I guess I’d better, or my part’s in trouble.

Mary McDonnell