SUSAN BIDDLE ROSS
(Redirected from Susan Ross)

'Susan Biddle Ross' is a fictional character on the situation comedy ''Seinfeld'' played by Heidi Swedberg.
Susan, an executive at NBC, first appeared in the season 4 episode "The Pitch", in which Jerome "Jerry" Seinfeld and George Louis Costanza pitched the idea for their sitcom to Susan and her fellow executives. Over the course of the fourth season, as the development of the sitcom continued, Susan began dating George - an endeavor that was not helped by Cosmo Kramer, who first vomited on Susan, and then burned down her father's cabin (both by accident). After George absent-mindedly kissed her during a meeting with NBC, the network fired her, leading her to break up with him.
In "The Cheever Letters", it is revealed that Susan's father Henry Ross had an affair with John Cheever.
They briefly got back together in "The Pick", but George decided he did not want to be in a relationship with her after all, and deliberately picked his nose so she would dump him. The next time he saw her, she was in a lesbian relationship, and George presumed he had driven her to it. Susan's lover was then seduced by Kramer. After an airing of George and Jerry's pilot received negative reviews and a power change at NBC that left Susan out of work, she left George's life.
They were reunited in the season 7 premiere, "The Engagement" and—on a whim—George proposed to her. (Her lesbianism, as George put it, "didn't take.") The engagement lasted the whole of the seventh season, with George eventually realizing that he was trapped — particularly when a potential relationship with Marisa Tomei was ruined because of it—and trying every method to get out of the relationship. Ultimately, in the season finale, "The Invitations", George's choice of low quality wedding invitations (to save money) proved to be his saving grace: the low-quality glue on the invitations proved overpowering to Susan as she used her tongue to moisten and seal them all, ultimately giving her an overdose and killing her. George wasted no time in calling Marisa Tomei; however, she was no longer interested.
In the aftermath of her death, Susan's parents organized a foundation in her honor and appointed George to be on the board, a position he did not relish. The Rosses continued to be a part of his life through to "The Finale" when—at a court case against George, Kramer, Jerry and Elaine Benes—they learned that he was the one who chose the invitations, and of his relief at her death.
Before her death, Susan is identified as bisexual.
Susan reappeared in a flashback in the season nine episode "The Betrayal", an episode which went backwards, in a brief appearance at the end (set during the engagement).
George appears at Susan's gravesite in the first episode of the eighth season, called "The Foundation". Her tombstone says that she was born on June 8, 1964 and died on May 16, 1996, meaning she died a few weeks shy of her 32nd birthday. The latter is the date that the episode in which she died was originally aired.
Susan's parents were played by former ''Twin Peaks'' cast members Warren Frost and Grace Zabriskie. Timothy Omundson played Susan's brother Ricky Ross in the episode The Cheever Letters. In that same episode Patricia Lee Wilson played Susan and Ricky's aunt Sara Ross. James Noah played Susan's uncle Ned Ross in the episode The Maestro in which Ned owned the Ross Department Store chain (a fact made up for the show). Shannon Holt played Susan's first cousin Carrie in the episode The Seven, Ken Hudson Campbell played her husband Ken. Carrie and Ken steal George's idea for a baby name and name their newborn child Seven.
In both cameo and major parts, Susan appears in 27 episodes.
★ Minor characters in Seinfeld
Susan licking the envelopes which featured in the finale of Season 7 ("The Invitations".)
'Susan Biddle Ross' is a fictional character on the situation comedy ''Seinfeld'' played by Heidi Swedberg.
| Contents |
| Character |
| Family |
| See also |
Character
Susan, an executive at NBC, first appeared in the season 4 episode "The Pitch", in which Jerome "Jerry" Seinfeld and George Louis Costanza pitched the idea for their sitcom to Susan and her fellow executives. Over the course of the fourth season, as the development of the sitcom continued, Susan began dating George - an endeavor that was not helped by Cosmo Kramer, who first vomited on Susan, and then burned down her father's cabin (both by accident). After George absent-mindedly kissed her during a meeting with NBC, the network fired her, leading her to break up with him.
In "The Cheever Letters", it is revealed that Susan's father Henry Ross had an affair with John Cheever.
They briefly got back together in "The Pick", but George decided he did not want to be in a relationship with her after all, and deliberately picked his nose so she would dump him. The next time he saw her, she was in a lesbian relationship, and George presumed he had driven her to it. Susan's lover was then seduced by Kramer. After an airing of George and Jerry's pilot received negative reviews and a power change at NBC that left Susan out of work, she left George's life.
They were reunited in the season 7 premiere, "The Engagement" and—on a whim—George proposed to her. (Her lesbianism, as George put it, "didn't take.") The engagement lasted the whole of the seventh season, with George eventually realizing that he was trapped — particularly when a potential relationship with Marisa Tomei was ruined because of it—and trying every method to get out of the relationship. Ultimately, in the season finale, "The Invitations", George's choice of low quality wedding invitations (to save money) proved to be his saving grace: the low-quality glue on the invitations proved overpowering to Susan as she used her tongue to moisten and seal them all, ultimately giving her an overdose and killing her. George wasted no time in calling Marisa Tomei; however, she was no longer interested.
In the aftermath of her death, Susan's parents organized a foundation in her honor and appointed George to be on the board, a position he did not relish. The Rosses continued to be a part of his life through to "The Finale" when—at a court case against George, Kramer, Jerry and Elaine Benes—they learned that he was the one who chose the invitations, and of his relief at her death.
Before her death, Susan is identified as bisexual.
Susan reappeared in a flashback in the season nine episode "The Betrayal", an episode which went backwards, in a brief appearance at the end (set during the engagement).
George appears at Susan's gravesite in the first episode of the eighth season, called "The Foundation". Her tombstone says that she was born on June 8, 1964 and died on May 16, 1996, meaning she died a few weeks shy of her 32nd birthday. The latter is the date that the episode in which she died was originally aired.
Family
Susan's parents were played by former ''Twin Peaks'' cast members Warren Frost and Grace Zabriskie. Timothy Omundson played Susan's brother Ricky Ross in the episode The Cheever Letters. In that same episode Patricia Lee Wilson played Susan and Ricky's aunt Sara Ross. James Noah played Susan's uncle Ned Ross in the episode The Maestro in which Ned owned the Ross Department Store chain (a fact made up for the show). Shannon Holt played Susan's first cousin Carrie in the episode The Seven, Ken Hudson Campbell played her husband Ken. Carrie and Ken steal George's idea for a baby name and name their newborn child Seven.
In both cameo and major parts, Susan appears in 27 episodes.
See also
★ Minor characters in Seinfeld
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español