HILL STREET BLUES - MICHAEL WARREN As OFFICER BOBBY HILL HAND SIGNED 4X6 PHOTO   .%100 Authentic Autograph.   Autograph is  BOLD & Looks Amazing  . in Great condition & is a High Quaity photo . Will be shipped SUPER FAST to you & will be Well packaged . I will ship to you .The SAME DAY you pay :) YES.... I even ship on Saturday . Payment MUST be made in 4 days or less after this listing ends ! In the 4 day Period . combined s&h is $ 1 Extra each . Check out my other autos. Thanks Amanda





Michael Warren Warren with the UCLA Bruins in 1967 Born Lloyd Michael Warren March 5, 1946 (age 76) South Bend, Indiana, U.S. Years active1970–2015 Notable workOfficer Bobby Hill in Hill Street Blues Ron Harris in City of Angels (TV series) Baron Marks in Soul Food (TV series) Spouse(s)Jenny Palacios (divorced) Sue Narramore Children4 Basketball career Personal information Listed height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)[1] Listed weight155 lb (70 kg) Career information High schoolSouth Bend Central (South Bend, Indiana) CollegeUCLA (1965–1968) NBA draft1968 / Round: 14 / Pick: 173rd overall Selected by the Seattle SuperSonics PositionGuard Career highlights and awards 2× NCAA champion (1967, 1968)First-team All-AAWU (1968)2× Second-team All-AAWU (1966, 1967) (born March 5, 1946) is a retired American television actor and former college basketball player, best known for playing Officer Bobby Hill on the NBC television series Hill Street Blues. College basketball career Warren shoots the ball in the Game of the Century in 1968 Warren played college basketball at UCLA, where he was a three-year varsity letterman and starting guard from 1966-68. Led by Lew Alcindor, the Bruins posted records of 30–0 in 1967 and 29–1 in 1968. Both teams, coached by legendary coach John Wooden, captured the NCAA national championship. Warren, the smallest Bruins starter at 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m), averaged 12.4 points as a junior in 1967. He was named to the NCAA All-Tournament team and was an All-American in 1968, one of three on that UCLA team along with Alcindor and guard Lucius Allen. The team is considered one of the best in college basketball history. Warren also earned the award as the Bruins' best defender in 1966, and he won the award as the Bruins' best "team player" in 1967 and 1968. Alcindor and Warren later crossed paths when Warren was an extra in the hospital flashback scene in the 1980 feature film Airplane!. Warren was inducted into the UCLA Athletics Hall of Fame. Acting career Warren would go on to work as an actor in television. In addition to his starring role on Hill Street Blues,[7] he had an earlier role on The White Shadow, a co-starring role on the CBS series City of Angels, a recurring role on the Showtime series Soul Food, and as a guest star as Jason on Marcus Welby, M.D. He appeared as basketball player Easly in Drive, He Said (1971), directed by Jack Nicholson. In 1974, he played the role of park ranger P. J. Lewis on the NBC adventure series Sierra, and went on to play a rookie officer for a possible backdoor pilot during the final 1975 season of Adam-12. His film work includes Norman... Is That You? (1976) with Redd Foxx and Pearl Bailey. In 1979, he starred as police officer Willie Miller on the CBS crime drama Paris, the first effort by Hill Street Blues executive producer Steven Bochco.[ He guest starred in In the House opposite LL Cool J as Debbie Allen's ex-husband. He also guest starred on the Fox sitcom Living Single as Khadijah's father, and later portrayed Joan's father on the UPN/CW sitcom Girlfriends. Warren played Darrin Dewitt Henson's boss on the Showtime show Soul Food, in which he played hustler-turned-entrepreneur Baron Marks. He had a recurring role on the ABC Family series Lincoln Heights as Spencer Sutton, Eddie's father. He played Pete Bancroft in the Tales from the Darkside episode, "Satanic Piano" (1985). Warren appeared as Virgil Tibbs' former longtime police partner, Matthew Pogue on the episode of In the Heat of the Night "The Hammer and the Glove" in 1988. In 1996, he was on the Early Edition episode Hoops. He played Wells in the Sliders episode (5/8) "Java Jive" (1999). In 2001, he played Officer William Henderson in an episode of TV series The District, entitled "The Project". In 2002, he appeared in "Normal Again", an episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, as a psychiatrist trying to convince Buffy Summers she is delusional In 2010, Warren appeared in the independent film Anderson's Cross playing the father of the lead character Nick Anderson. HonorsUSBWA All-America (1968)First-team All-AAWU (1968)Second-team All-AAWU (1966, 1967)2009 Pac-10 Hall of Honor inducteeUCLA Athletic Hall of Fame (1990)14th round pick in the 1968 NBA draft