Jump to content

COP11

Members
  • Joined

Everything posted by COP11

  1. 1-2 Michea Crawford 3-4 Alessandra Ambrosio 5-6 Barbara Palvin 7-8 Alejandra Alonso 9-10 Marloes Horst 11-12 Josie Maran 13-14 Christy Turlington 15-16 Milla Jovovich
  2. Marloes Song Gisele Andressa Vogue Italia
  3. Lips: 3 Smile: 3 Hair: 2 Eyes: 3 Nose: 3 Body: 3
  4. COP11 replied to COP11's topic in Actresses
    Jacqueline Yvonne "Jackée" Harry (born August 14, 1956), better known by her professional name Jackée, is an American actress and television personality, primarily known for her roles on sitcoms and other types of television shows. She is best known for her roles as Sandra Clark, the sexy neighbor and nemesis of Mary Jenkins (played by Marla Gibbs), on the TV series 227 (a role she played from 1985 to 1989), and as Tia's mother, Lisa Landry, in the long-running comedy, Sister, Sister. Career Television Born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and raised in Harlem, New York, Harry began studying acting at the Henry Street Settlement on the Lower East Side in New York City and began a career on the New York stage. She appeared in A Broadway Musical, playing a chorine. In 1983, she made her television debut by on Another World as Lily Mason, a role she continued until 1986. In 2003, she was a surprise guest on the Another World Reunion that SOAPnet coordinated and aired. In 1985, Harry began a co-starring role opposite Marla Gibbs as the apartment building vamp, "Sandra Clark", on the NBC sitcom 227, the role with which she is most associated. Her mother, Flossie, celebrated her getting the part but died before the show aired. Harry became the first African American to win an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series. Her performance on 227 inspired NBC producers to create a television pilot for her entitled Jackée. The pilot episode failed with audiences and is now shown as an episode of 227. After leaving 227 in 1989, Harry starred opposite Oprah Winfrey in the adaptation of Gloria Naylor's novel, The Women of Brewster Place. In 1991, Harry joined the cast of The Royal Family, whose run ended after one season when star Redd Foxx died unexpectedly that autumn. From 1994-99, Harry played Tia Mowry's character's adoptive mother on the sitcom, Sister, Sister. She won NAACP Image Awards for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for two consecutive years in 1999 and 2000. First on ABC, the series moved to the WB network until it ended. She had a recurring role as Vanessa on The CW series Everybody Hates Chris. She currently has a recurring role on the BET Series Let's Stay Together. Theatre In 1994, Harry made her return to the theater by starring as Billie Holiday in the play Lady Day at Emersons Bar and Grill. Following that stage production, she fulfilled the role of "madam who runs a bordello" in the Broadway musical The Boys From Syracuse, a play based on William Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors. In 1992, she starred as the assistant coach in Ladybugs. Harry served as a guest panelist on the 2000 revival of To Tell the Truth. Harry appeared on the second season of VH1's Celebrity Fit Club 2 in 2005. In the mid-2000s, she appeared in stage productions of The Sunshine Boys, Damn Yankees, and A Christmas Carol. She most recently toured nationally in JD Lawrence's The Clean Up Woman. Actress 2011: Nurse Jackée (short) Nurse Jackée 2011: Let's Stay Together (TV series) Delores 2011: The Ideal Husband (TV movie) Vivian Peterson 2010: Christmas Cupid (TV movie) Vivian 2010: Friends & Lovers (TV series) Omar's Mother 2010: The Clean Up Woman Jasmine 2010: Knight to D7 (short) Nurse Hamilton 2006: Everybody Hates Chris (TV series) Vanessa See all 25 episodes (2006-2009) 2009: G.E.D. Mama 2009: Man of Her Dreams Louise Smith 2008: The Mighty B! (TV series) … Nurse (voice) 2007: The Last Day of Summer (TV movie) Lola The Lobster (as Jackee Harry) 2006: All You've Got Butt Short Salesman 2005: One on One (TV series) Sherri St. Croix 2005: That's So Raven (TV series) Dava 2004: You Got Served Mama 2003: The Nick at Nite Holiday Special (TV movie) Jackée, The Baker 2003: 7th Heaven (TV series) Ms. Beane 2000: Twice in a Lifetime (TV series) Darcy Green / Louise Lutrelle 1994: Sister, Sister (TV series) Lisa Landry See all 119 episodes (1994-1999) 1996: Unhappily Ever After (TV series) Ms. Blake, guidance counselor 1995: Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child (TV series) … Giant's Wife (voice) 1994: Dave's World (TV series) Estelle 1993: Living and Working in Space: The Countdown Has Begun (video) Charmayne (as Jackee) 1991: The Royal Family (TV series) Ruth 'CoCo' Royal See all 8 episodes (1991-1992) 1992: Designing Women (TV series) Vanessa Chamberlain 1992: Ladybugs Julie Benson (as Jackée) 1990: We'll Take Manhattan (TV movie) Yvonne 1990: ABC TGIF (TV series) Lisa 1985: 227 (TV series) Sandra Clark See all 99 episodes (1985-1989) 1988: Amen (TV series) Roxanne Farley / Florence Hawkins (1988-1989) 1989: "The Reluctant Agent" (Movie) Diner Waitress / FBI Agent 1989: Double Your Pleasure (TV movie) LindaCavanaugh/Sharlene Cavanaugh 1989: Jackée (TV movie) Sandra Clark (as Jackée) 1989: The Women of Brewster Place (TV movie) Etta Mae 1988: Crash Course (TV movie) Edna Savage (as Jackée) 1988: The Cheech Show (TV movie) Sheila 1987: Alf Loves a Mystery (TV movie) Countess (as Jackee Harry) 1987: The Incredible Ida Early (TV movie) Ida Early 1984: The Cotton Club Dancer 1984: Moscow on the Hudson Woman (uncredited) 1983: Another World (TV series) Lily Mason (1983-1986)
  5. COP11 replied to COP11's topic in Actresses
    Gayle, Lady Jenkins (born 6 February 1943), known by her birth name Gayle Hunnicutt, is an American actress. Personal life Hunnicutt was born in Fort Worth, Texas, the daughter of Colonel Sam Lloyd Hunnicutt and Virginia Hunnicutt, and attended the University of California, Los Angeles. She worked as a fashion model before going into acting. She was married from 1968 to 1975 to the actor David Hemmings, by whom she is the mother of actor Nolan Hemmings. She is married to the journalist Sir Simon Jenkins, and lives in London. On 27 July 2008, The Sunday Telegraph reported that the couple had separated and Ms. Hunnicutt had initiated divorce proceedings. Acting career During her brief Hollywood career, Hunnicutt was typecast as a brunette sexpot. She co-starred with James Garner in the 1969 film Marlowe, the character she played being a glamorous Hollywood actress. After she moved to England with Hemmings in 1970, however, the finer range of her acting emerged. A notable role was that of Charlotte Stant, in the critically acclaimed Jack Pulman television adaptation (1972) of Henry James's The Golden Bowl. She went on to play Lionel's wife in The Legend of Hell House in 1973, and Tsarina Alexandra in Fall of Eagles in 1974. In 1984, she appeared as Irene Adler opposite Jeremy Brett in the very first episode ("A Scandal in Bohemia") of the acclaimed series The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. Hunnicutt returned to America to play the role of Vanessa Beaumont in the US series Dallas from 1989 to 1991. Writing Hunnicutt has also written a book, Health and Beauty in Motherhood. It was published in 1984. In 2004, she brought out Dearest Virginia: love letters from a cavalry officer in the South Pacific. The book brings together love letters which were exchanged by her parents, Colonel Sam Lloyd Hunnicutt and Virginia Hunnicutt.
  6. SF1 Michea Crawford SF2 Alessandra Ambrosio 5-8 Alejandra Alonso 5-8 Doutzen Kroes 9-12 Marloes Horst 9-12 Josie Maran 13-16 Hilary Rhoda 13-16 Christy Turlington
  7. COP11 replied to COP11's topic in Actresses
    Joey Heatherton (born September 14, 1944) is an American actress, dancer, and singer. Early life Christened Davenie Johanna Heatherton and nicknamed "Joey," she was raised in Rockville Centre, New York, a suburb of New York City. There she attended St. Agnes Cathedral School, a Catholic grade and high school. Her father Ray Heatherton was a Broadway star (Babes in Arms) and television pioneer. Career Heatherton began her career as a child actress, appearing in 1959 as a member of the ensemble and an understudy in the original Broadway production of The Sound of Music, and received her first sustained national exposure that same year as a semi-regular on The Perry Como Show, playing an exuberant teenager with a perpetual crush on Perry Como. She also appeared extensively on The Dean Martin Show; Dean Martin invited her to perform numerous times on the show, starting with the premiere episode of September 16, 1965. From June to September 1968, along with Frank Sinatra, Jr., she co-hosted Martin's summer substitute musical comedy hour, Dean Martin Presents the Golddiggers. She also made multiple appearances on 1960s television shows such as The Andy Williams Show, The Hollywood Palace, The Ed Sullivan Show, and This is Tom Jones. She first appeared on television on her father's show The Merry Mailman, a popular children's show in New York. In May 1969, she appeared on the Tonight Show, where she energetically coached Johnny Carson on the finer points of dancing "The Frug." During that era, she also appeared in Bob Hope's USO troupe between 1965 and 1977, entertaining the GIs with her singing, dancing and provocative outfits. Excerpts from the USO tours were televised as part of Hope's long-running series of NBC monthly specials, culminating in the top-rated Christmas shows, where Heatherton's segments were regularly featured. Acting Throughout the 1960s, Heatherton interspersed her variety show appearances with dramatic turns in three theatrical films and on numerous episodes of series such as Route 66 (playing a 15-year-old temptress in the November 18, 1960 teleplay), Mr. Novak, The Virginian, Channing, Arrest and Trial, The Nurses, and Breaking Point. Heatherton also appeared in the movies Twilight of Honor (1963), Where Love Has Gone, (1964) and My Blood Runs Cold (1965), alongside veteran actors such as Claude Rains, Bette Davis and Susan Hayward. In Twilight of Honor, her film debut, she played the young wife of an accused murderer (Oscar-nominee Nick Adams). The only one of the three films to be made in color, 1964s Where Love Has Gone, was a big-budget melodrama based on Harold Robbins' roman-a-clef about the scandalous Lana Turner–Cheryl Crane–Johnny Stompanato manslaughter case, with Heatherton playing the daughter of the Turner character (Susan Hayward). Finally, she appeared in Blood, the second of three 1965 horror-suspense films directed by William Conrad, alongside Troy Donohue. 1970s–present In 1972, Heatherton had a #24 pop hit with the 1957 Ferlin Husky song "Gone". Her album, The Joey Heatherton Album, did not do as well on the charts as her single. By the 1970s, Heatherton's career was slowing down, but she was still popular enough to do a series of TV ads for RC Cola and Serta Mattresses. A brief high point came in July 1975 when she headlined Joey & Dad, a four-week Sunday night summer replacement series for Cher's 1975-76 variety show in which she performed alongside her own father. Each episode would involve Ray Heatherton waxing nostalgic over life with his daughter, while rooting through his attic. In subsequent years, Heatherton performed in Las Vegas and acted in a few scattered TV shows and films, including the 1972 Bluebeard (with Richard Burton in the title role). Additionally, she played the starring role as Xaviera Hollander in 1977's Watergate-inspired The Happy Hooker Goes to Washington. In April 1997, Heatherton appeared nude in an issue of Playboy. Her most recent acting role was in the 2002 Damon Packard film Reflections of Evil. Personal life In 1969, Heatherton married Lance Rentzel, a wide receiver for the Dallas Cowboys. In November 1970, Rentzel was arrested for exposing himself to a 10-year-old girl. They separated shortly afterward and divorced in 1972. Filmography Year Title Role Notes 1960 Route 66 Karen Emerson Episode: "Three Sides" 1962 to 1963 The Doctors and the Nurses Janet Clark Ellen Denby 2 episodes 1963 The Virginian Gloria Blaine 1 episode 1963 Twilight of Honor Laura Mae Brown Alternative title: The Charge is Murder 1963 Mr. Novak Holly Metcalfe Episode: "To Break a Camel's Back" 1963 Arrest and Trial Edith Episode: "Some Weeks Are All Mondays" 1964 Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre Cress Episode: "Runaway" 1964 Channing Episode: "The Trouble with Girls" 1964 Breaking Point Dory Costain Episode: "I, the Dancer" 1964 Where Love Has Gone Danielle Valerie Miller 1965 My Blood Runs Cold Julie Merriday 1966 I Spy Katie 2 episodes 1968 Of Mice and Men Curley's Wife Television movie 1969 It Takes a Thief Jodie DuBois 2 episodes 1969 The Jackie Gleason Show Emily Gogolak Episode: "The Honeymooners: Happiness Is a Rich Uncle" 1969 The Ballad of Andy Crocker Lisa Television movie 1970 Love, American Style Tippy Segment: "Love and the Hitchhiker" 1971 The Powder Room Television movie 1972 Bluebeard Anne 1973 Old Faithful Herself Television movie 1977 The Happy Hooker Goes to Washington Xaviera Hollander 1981 Laverne & Shirley Herself Episode: "Night at the Awards" 1986 The Perils of P.K. 1990 Cry-Baby Milton's mother 2002 Reflections of Evil Serta Spokeswoman Award nominations Year Award Category Title of work 1964 Golden Laurel Award Top Female New Face – 1966 Golden Laurel Award New Faces, Female – 1964 Golden Globe Awards Most Promising Newcomer - Female Twilight of Honor
  8. COP11 replied to COP11's topic in Actresses
    June Haver (June 10, 1926 – July 4, 2005), was an American film actress. She is most well known as a popular star of 20th Century-Fox musicals in the late 1940s, most notably The Dolly Sisters (1945) with Betty Grable and John Payne and also for playing the 1920s Broadway actress Marilyn Miller in Look for the Silver Lining (1949). Haver's second husband was the actor Fred MacMurray, whom she married after she retired from show business. Early life Born June Stovenour, Haver was born in Rock Island, Illinois. She later took the last name of her stepfather Bert Haver. After the family moved to Ohio, seven-year-old Haver entered and won a contest of the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. At age 10, she moved back to Rock Island, where she began performing for Rudy Vallee. Her mother being an actress and her father being a musician, Haver often doubted who she - careerwise - wanted to follow. At age eight, she won a film test by imitating famous actresses including Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn and Helen Hayes. Haver's mother, however, prohibited her daughter from becoming a child actress in the film industry, feeling she was too young. Working regularly as a band singer by her teens, she performed with the Ted Fio Rito Orchestra for $75 a week. Other bandleaders she worked for were Dick Jurgens and Freddy Martin. Furthermore, she became a well-known child star on the radio. Career In the summer of 1942, Haver moved to Hollywood, where she finished high school. She acted in plays in her spare time and during a performance of a southern belle, she was discovered by a scout from 20th Century Fox. In 1943, Haver signed a $3,500 a week contract with the studio and made her film debut playing a uncredited role in The Gang's All Here. She was dropped shortly after, because the studio executives felt that she looked too young, but then was later re-signed, after her costume and hairstyle were changed. 20th Century Fox had plans to mold Haver as a glamour girl stand-in for the studio's two biggest stars, Betty Grable and Alice Faye. She debuted on screen, in a supporting role as "Cri-Cri" in Home in Indiana (1944). According to the actress, she had just turned seventeen years old when her scenes were filmed. Even before Home in Indiana was released, she was assigned to replace Faye in Irish Eyes Are Smiling. Later that year she co-starred with future husband, Fred MacMurray, in Where Do We Go From Here?, which was the only time the pair appeared together in a film. During her career at Fox, Haver was originally groomed to be the next Betty Grable (she was known as "Pocket Grable"). She even co-starred with Grable in the 1945 film, The Dolly Sisters, a film for which she had to put on weight. While filming, there were a lot of rumors about a possible clash between the two actresses, mostly because of their frequent comparison, but Haver refuted this with: "Betty is a big star and I'm just starting. I try to be nice to her, and she reciprocated by being just as nice to me. It's silly to think two girls can't work together without querreling. You see, I've two sisters. I'm the ham between the bread and butter - the middle sister - and I understand girls pretty well. Betty likes to talk about her baby, so we talk about her baby." In 1946, she starred and received first-billing in two movie musicals, Wake Up and Dream and Three Little Girls in Blue. The following year, the role of Katie was written into the film I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now for Haver. Possibly best known for her roles in optimistic musicals, Haver's comedy star-turn in 1948's Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! was a major success. The same year, she starred as Marilyn Miller in the musical Look for the Silver Lining (1949). To resemble the actress as much as possible, Haver had to drive to the studio an hour earlier for make-up. The following year, she would star in,The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady and I'll Get By. Following her marriage to Fred MacMurray, Haver remained largely retired from acting (her last appearances were as herself on The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour in 1958 and Disneyland '59); she later found some success as an interior decorator. June Haver's final film appearance would be in 1953's The Girl Next Door. Haver and MacMurray would adopt two daughters and remained together until MacMurray's death in 1991. At the urging of friends Ann Miller and Ann Rutherford, Haver finally joined the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences at the age of 75. For her contribution to the motion picture industry, June Haver has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1777 Vine Street. Personal life Haver insisted she has always been very close with her family. Her sisters followed her to Hollywood and served as her stand-ins, while her mother was Haver's personal secretary. On March 9, 1947, Haver married trumpet player James Zito. She met him at age 15, while touring with Ted Fio Rito's orchestra. They initially lost contact after Haver moved from Illinois to Beverly Hills, but started dating when Haver made a short visit to her home town when she was already a film actress. Haver filed for divorce less than a year after eloping with Zito, winning interlocutory decree on March 25, 1948. She admitted to the press the marriage was a failure from the beginning, saying: "I want to forget as soon as possible. We hadn't been married hours before I realized I had never really known Jimmy. He was a stranger. He was either down in the dumps or up high. I never knew from one moment to the next how he would be. Because of her devotion to religion, Haver tried to make the marriage work, turning to the church to forget her unhappiness. After her divorce from Zito, Haver started dating Dr. John L. Duzik, whom she had dated before her marriage to Zito; they planned on marrying, but Duzik died on October 31, 1949 following surgery complications. While taking care of him in his final days, she started attending church more often. According to friends, it was in this period when she was inspired to become a nun.Following Duzik's death, Haver reportedly became tired of Hollywood, and never really was in love with the men she dated afterwards. In February 1953, Haver entered a convent, but she stayed there only until October, saying she left because of "poor health". Around that time, Haver met MacMurray, one of the wealthiest and most conservative men in Hollywood, again, and a romantic relationship developed. On June 28, 1954, they were married. She told the press: "When I married Fred, he was terribly set in his ways. He was a fuss-budget. He hadn't quite progressed to being a lint picker, but he was already an ash-tray emptier, and that's just about as set in his ways as a man can get." Haver insisted on adopting a girl, but MacMurray, 19 years her senior, initially refused to, explaining he already has been a father. Shortly after, he agreed on adopting a child, and with the help of a doctor, they were able to take in a twin. Haver died from respiratory failure on July 4, 2005 at her home in Brentwood, California at the age of 79 and was buried with her husband at Holy Cross Cemetery, in Culver City. She left behind two stepchildren (by MacMurray's first marriage), two adopted children and seven grandchildren. Filmography The Gang's All Here – 1943 – uncredited Home in Indiana – 1944 Irish Eyes Are Smiling – 1944 Something for the Boys – 1944 – uncredited Where Do We Go from Here? – 1945 The Dolly Sisters – 1945 Wake Up and Dream – 1946 Three Little Girls in Blue – 1946 I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now – 1947 Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! – 1948 Look for the Silver Lining – 1949 Oh, You Beautiful Doll – 1949 The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady – 1950 I'll Get By – 1950 Love Nest – 1951 The Girl Next Door – 1953
  9. COP11 replied to COP11's topic in Actresses
    Date of Birth 1 September 1930, Kansas City, Missouri, USA Birth Name Jo Ann Heckert Spouse David P. Mannhalter (5 August 1958 - present) Arnold Stanford (16 June 1951 - 31 October 1955) (divorced) First husband, Arnold ("Dok") Stanford, 16 years her senior, was a songwriter. Upon their divorce in 1955, she was awarded half interest in the songs he had written or would write within a year. She has been married over 50 years to her second husband David P. Mannhalter, a real estate broker. Appeared on CBS' "Good Morning" show with Will Rogers Jr. for a year as a talk show host and singer. Barbara Walters was her assistant producer at the time. Became a Jehovah's Witness in 1954, and later worked in the organization's main office in Brooklyn. Starred in a 1954 stage production of "The Seven Year Itch" at the Pasadena Playhouse in the Marilyn Monroe role. Had a seven-year contract with Universal but the studio dropped her option after five years. Discovered by Elizabeth Taylor's agent, Herb Brenner for Universal Pictures. Won several beauty contests, including "Miss KTLA-TV" and "Miss Southern California" of 1949. Attended Hollywood High School and then went to UCLA for two years. Had a stage mother who started her performing, dancing and singing, at the age of three. She and her mother moved to Hollywood after her parents' divorce. 1950s blonde, alluring leading lady of "B" horror and crime drama, a former Universal starlet.