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  • Sandy Sprung
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  • Sandy Sprung (born November 23, 1937, in New York City) is a writer and producer who got her start on The Jeffersons, and worked on Cagney and Lacey before joining MWC in its first season. Sandy and her frequent collaborator Marcy Vosburgh were producers of the show from early in the second season to the end of the fourth. They moved on to continue working together on Unhappily Ever After. Marcy produced a total of 64 episodes of the MWC; she also wrote or co-wrote fourteen episodes, as well.
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Job
  • Producer , 64 episodes
  • Writer/Story editor, 14 episodes
Series
  • Married... with Children
Name
  • Sandy Sprung
Caption
  • Sandy Sprung in role as mother in the film "The Last American Virgin" in 1982.
Birth Place
  • New York City, New York, U.S.
yearsactive
  • 1969
Character
  • Dottie in episode Poppy's by the Tree:Part I"
Occupation
  • TV screenwriter, producer, director, actor and author
Gender
  • Female
Born
  • 1937-11-23
abstract
  • Sandy Sprung (born November 23, 1937, in New York City) is a writer and producer who got her start on The Jeffersons, and worked on Cagney and Lacey before joining MWC in its first season. Sandy and her frequent collaborator Marcy Vosburgh were producers of the show from early in the second season to the end of the fourth. They moved on to continue working together on Unhappily Ever After. Marcy produced a total of 64 episodes of the MWC; she also wrote or co-wrote fourteen episodes, as well. As an actress, Sandy appeared in a bit roles in numerous TV series, such as Barney Miller, Mork and Mindy, Archie Bunker's Place. Too Close for Comfort, and Unhappily Ever After. Marcy made an appearance on MWC as Dottie in the Season 2 episode "Poppy's by the Tree, Part I". She also appeared in the 1981 made-for-TV movie Please Don't Hit Me, Mom and as a mother in 1982's The Last American Virgin. A published author, Sandy's latest book is a funny account of her 100-pound flight down the scale entitled "Candy, Chocolate, Ice Cream and How to Lick 'Em." Sprung, a native New Yorker, now lives in Los Angeles where she also continues to write for television.