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Reddington demands the release of fellow Blacklister Marvin Gerard (Fisher Stevens) a former top defense lawyer, who Red wants to help decode the Fulcrum and expose the Cabal. The hostage situation is later revealed to be a jailbreak for Gerard, as the diner turns out to be a smuggling location, which allows them to flee the scene.
Marvin Sr. instead charged upstairs to the bedroom to verbally attack Alberta over the document, causing Gaye to jump out of his bed and once again order his father out of the room. [21] When ordering did not work, Gaye, enraged, reportedly shoved his father out of the room into the hallway, [21] then began kicking and punching him.
Red infiltrates a court house for a final talk with Marvin. He has to die for killing Elizabeth but will be allowed to choose his own death. Before committing suicide, Marvin tells Wujing that Reddington is an FBI informant responsible for the arrest of Wujing and many other criminals. He provides a list of people who might want to remove Red.
In "Marvin Gerard", Red informs Ressler that the cabal had set a trap up for Liz at the airport and he rushes in to prevent the departure. Though he succeeds, Liz is shaken up by his reckless actions, believing he wanted to capture her, and flees the scene before Ressler could explain himself.
Fisher Stevens as Marvin Gerard, Reddington’s personal attorney. Leon Rippy as the Hunter, a loner who saves Mr. Kaplan. Lotte Verbeek as Katarina Rostova, a spy and the mother of Agent Keen. Matt Servitto as Sebastian Reifler, a doctor treating Alexander Kirk. Raoul Trujillo as Mato, a hitman employed by Alexander Kirk.
The Powell family grew up in Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and Marvin Sr. was a military man who fought in three wars, starting with the invasion of Normandy in World War II. "I did what he said ...
Marvin Pentz Gay Sr. (October 1, 1914 – October 10, 1998) was an American Pentecostal minister. He was the father of recording artists Marvin Gaye and Frankie Gaye ...
You might never have heard of Marvin Traub, but the former CEO of Bloomingdale's (M), who died this week at 87, forever changed retailing. Revered by his industry peers as a merchant king, Traub ...