Margaret Colin always looked like someone who knew where she was going, even when the script said she didn’t. She carried herself with the confidence of a woman who’d survived chaos quietly and come out smarter for it. Not louder. Not shinier. Smarter.
She was born in Brooklyn in 1958, into a big Irish Catholic family where noise was normal and privacy was earned by closing a door fast. Later, she grew up on Long Island, which is where Brooklyn kids go when their parents want grass and space and a sense of order. Order, of course, is an illusion. Margaret learned that early. You grow up in a large family, you learn to talk over people or wait your turn. She learned to wait—and watch.
She went to Hofstra University, which has always been good at turning out actors who look like they belong in real life. Not movie stars, not cartoons—people. That’s what Colin has always played: people with responsibilities, people with histories, people who’ve already made mistakes before the camera starts rolling.
She began in daytime television, which is where American acting careers go to get punched in the mouth. On The Edge of Night, she played an heiress and former terrorist. Seven months. Seven attempted murders. Soap operas don’t ease you into anything. They throw you off the dock and see if you swim. She swam. Then she did better—she landed on As the World Turns and originated the role of Margo Hughes, later Montgomery. That character would live on for decades after she left, which is the closest thing daytime television has to immortality.
Soap operas teach you stamina. You memorize pages of dialogue that would make a playwright cry. You cry on cue. You kiss people you don’t like. You marry people who used to be your enemies. You learn to be honest fast or you drown. Margaret Colin learned all of it, and when she left soaps, she carried that toughness with her.
By the mid-1980s, she started showing up in films, usually as the woman who grounded the madness. Something Wild in 1986 put her in the orbit of Jonathan Demme’s jittery, unpredictable world. Then came Three Men and a Baby, where she existed in a glossy studio comedy that looked light but worked hard underneath. Hollywood noticed she could slide into a scene, do her job, and leave without wrecking the furniture.
She didn’t chase stardom. That’s important. She worked. She appeared in The Butcher’s Wife, The Devil’s Own, Unfaithful, First Daughter. Films where the men usually got the headlines and the women carried the emotional cost. Margaret Colin specialized in women who had already paid that cost and were still standing.
Then there’s Independence Day. That movie was loud. Explosions, speeches, chaos in the sky. Colin played Constance Spano, the White House Communications Director, which meant she had to look like the adult in the room while the planet was falling apart. She did it with calm authority. She didn’t overplay it. She didn’t flinch. That’s harder than screaming.
Television followed her like a second home. She showed up on Chicago Hope, Law & Order: SVU, Now and Again. Then came Gossip Girl. By then, she was playing Eleanor Waldorf, a fashion mogul and mother to one of the show’s central characters. In a series obsessed with youth, wealth, and cruelty disguised as wit, Margaret Colin brought gravity. Eleanor wasn’t just a parent; she was a woman who’d built something and wasn’t going to apologize for it. She wore power well. That role made a new generation realize she’d always been there.
Onstage, she was just as dangerous. Broadway doesn’t care how good you look on camera. It cares whether you can survive eight shows a week without lying. In A Day in the Death of Joe Egg, she famously smoked through the second half of the play in open defiance of New York’s smoking ban, dedicating the performance to Mayor Michael Bloomberg. That wasn’t a publicity stunt. That was a working actress making a point with her body. After the show closed, she quit smoking. Statement made. Lesson learned.
She played Jacqueline Kennedy onstage, which is one of those roles that eats actresses alive. Too much mythology. Too many expectations. Colin approached it like everything else—quietly, directly, without worship. Jackie wasn’t a symbol; she was a woman surviving grief in public. That’s territory Margaret Colin understands.
Later, she showed up on Veep as Jane McCabe, a news anchor with perfect hair and dead eyes—the kind of person who smiles while the world burns and still makes the segment end on time. Comedy like that doesn’t work unless the actors play it straight. Colin did. She won a Screen Actors Guild Award with the ensemble, which is fitting. She has always been an ensemble actress in the best sense—someone who makes everyone else sharper.
In her personal life, she married actor Justin Deas, whom she met on As the World Turns. Soap operas don’t just produce drama; they produce marriages. They raised two sons, moved to New Jersey, and built a life that didn’t revolve around premieres or gossip columns. That kind of stability doesn’t make headlines, but it keeps people sane.
She’s outspoken about her beliefs, including her anti-abortion activism, which has made her controversial in certain circles. She doesn’t soften it. She doesn’t apologize for it. Whether you agree or not, it fits the pattern. Margaret Colin has never been interested in being liked by everyone. She’s interested in being consistent with herself.
That’s the throughline of her career. Consistency. Intelligence. A refusal to turn herself into a caricature for attention. She never begged the camera. She met it halfway and expected it to do its job.
There are actresses who burn bright and vanish. There are actresses who get famous for being famous. And then there are actresses like Margaret Colin—who just keep showing up, decade after decade, playing women who know the cost of things.
She’s not a legend in the loud sense. She’s something better.
She’s reliable truth in an unreliable business.
