Van Owen prosecutes three attorneys for the sexual molestation of a teenage stripper; after agonizing over the possibility that Vasek may have exposed him to AIDS, Brackman vows to go on the straight and narrow after he receives a clean bill of health, and is floored by Vasek's reaction; when gossip he overhears at a restaurant leaves him unnerved, Becker reappraises his image; Sifuentes and Sevilla take their relationship to another level; Perkins is astonished when Rohner vs. Gradinger turns out to be a winner in more ways than one; Becker learns a lesson about self-acceptance when he tries to lift Stulwicz's spirits with a fashion makeover.
Name | Type | Role | |
---|---|---|---|
David E. Kelley | Writer | ||
William M. Finkelstein | Writer | ||
James Manis | Guest Star | ||
Tanya George | Guest Star | ||
Jan Devereux | Guest Star | ||
Paul Elman | Guest Star | ||
Jay Gerber | Guest Star | ||
Hildy Brooks | Guest Star | ||
Alexander Folk | Guest Star | ||
Caitlin O'Heaney | Guest Star | ||
Mark Vance | Guest Star | ||
Joel Colodner | Guest Star | ||
Irena Ferris | Guest Star | ||
Finola Hughes | Guest Star | ||
Roderick Spencer | Guest Star | ||
Leonard Donato | Guest Star | ||
Tim Perot | Guest Star | ||
Tony Carreiro | Guest Star | ||
Twink Caplan | Guest Star | ||
Annie Oringer | Guest Star | ||
Brett Porter | Guest Star | ||
Terry Louise Fisher | Director | ||
Rick Wallace | Director | ||
Steven Bochco | Director |