Marcia Clark

[5][8] She worked as a deputy district attorney for Los Angeles County, California and was mentored by prosecutor Harvey Giss.

[14] She subsequently changed her hairstyle into a perm, and the Los Angeles Times described her as resembling "Sigourney Weaver, only more professional.

She and Teresa Carpenter wrote a book about the Simpson case, Without a Doubt, in a deal reported to be worth $4.2 million.

[8][16] Since the Simpson trial, Clark has made numerous appearances on television, including as a special correspondent for Entertainment Tonight.

[citation needed] Clark wrote a pilot script for a television series called Borderland, centering on "a very dark version of the DA's office."

[18][24] Clark did not expect to become an author, saying, "As a lawyer, I came to understand early that storytelling plays a very important part when you address a jury.

"[25] She read Nancy Drew and The Hardy Boys mystery fiction as a child and said "I have been addicted to crime since I was born.

[28][29] Fey was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for the role.

[33] Katey Rich wrote in Vanity Fair that the series positions Clark as a "feminist hero.

Simpson trial due to the presence of Clark and reporter Zoey Tur, who famously captured helicopter footage of the slow-speed Bronco chase.

[8] In 1976, Clark married Gabriel Horowitz, an Israeli professional backgammon player[36] whom she had met as a student at UCLA.

Horowitz was briefly in the news after he sold topless photos of Clark to the National Enquirer during the Simpson trial.