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Marlee Matlin, who won an Academy Award...

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Marlee Matlin, who won an Academy Award for her performance in “Children of a Lesser God,” will play a hearing-impaired woman who gets involved with the Theatre of the Deaf in “Bridge to Silence,” a TV movie for CBS. Lee Remick will co-star as Matlin’s mother and Michael O’Keefe will play a family friend with whom Matlin becomes romantically involved.

Dame Wendy Hiller will be seen on PBS’ “Masterpiece Theatre” next season, starring in “All Passion Spent.” It’s a three-part drama about an 85-year-old woman who severs ties with her children to take up residence in a home of her own.

Michele Greene of “L.A. Law” and Scott Valentine of “Family Ties” play a couple about to be married in “Wedding Bell Blues,” a TV movie that NBC will broadcast next season. It’s a comedy in which Mark Linn-Baker of “Perfect Strangers” portrays the best man and discovers that the families of the would-be bride and groom are feuding. Also in the cast are Eileen Brennan, Cloris Leachman, Dick Van Patten, Max Wright, Barbara Billingsley and John Ratzenberger.

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In case you missed them the first time around: ABC is encoring “Hollywood Wives,” with Candice Bergen, Suzanne Somers, Mary Crosby, Joanna Cassidy and Angie Dickinson, on Aug. 7-8. . . . NBC is repeating “Dress Gray,” which stars Hal Holbrook, Alec Baldwin, Lloyd Bridges and Eddie Albert, on Aug. 21-22. . . . “Blood & Orchids” returns for a second broadcast on Aug. 28 and Aug. 30, with Kris Kristofferson and Jane Alexander starring.

Peter Strauss and David Morse will play orphans raised as brothers by a CIA officer who has trained them to be assassins in “Brotherhood of the Rose,” a four-hour movie that is filming in New Zealand for broadcast on NBC. Robert Mitchum will star as the father, and Connie Sellecca is on hand as a member of Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency.

Opera star Beverly Sills is going to try her hand at a TV talk show. She’s agreed to host a weekly show for daytime television that Grant Tinker’s GTG Entertainment will try to syndicate for the 1989-90 season. The aim, says Tinker, is to “bring back the upbeat feeling and sense of fun that Dinah Shore, Merv Griffin and Mike Douglas brought to daytime television.”

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“Superior Court” will have a new “judge” when the syndicated series begins its third season this fall. He’ll be played by Raymond St. Jacques, a veteran actor whose credits include “Mr. Moses,” “Black Like Me,” “The Pawnbroker,” “Roots” and guest appearances on “Cagney & Lacey,” “The Love Boat” and “Hunter.”

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