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COP11

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Everything posted by COP11

  1. Jesse Capelli
  2. Jenna Haze Serinda Swan
  3. COP11 posted a topic in Actresses
    Jill Clayburgh (April 30, 1944 – November 5, 2010) was an American actress. She received Academy Award nominations for her roles in An Unmarried Woman and Starting Over. Personal life Clayburgh was born in New York City, the daughter of Julia Louise , a theatrical production secretary for producer David Merrick, and Albert Henry "Bill" Clayburgh, a manufacturing executive. Her paternal grandmother was concert and opera singer Alma Lachenbruch Clayburgh. Clayburgh's father's family was Jewish and wealthy. She was raised in a "fashionable" neighborhood on Manhattan's Upper East Side, where she attended the prestigious Brearley School. She then attended Sarah Lawrence College, where she decided that she wanted to be an actress. Clayburgh married screenwriter and playwright David Rabe in 1979. They had one son, Michael Rabe, and one daughter, actress Lily Rabe. She dated actor Al Pacino for five years (and briefly appeared with him in a November 1968 N.Y.P.D. episode, "Deadly Circle Of Violence"). Career Clayburgh joined the Charles Street Repertory Theater in Boston. She appeared in numerous Broadway productions in the 1960s and 1970s, including The Rothschilds and Pippin. Clayburgh made her screen debut in The Wedding Party, filmed in 1963 but not released until six years later, and gained attention with roles such as the love interest of Gene Wilder in the 1976 comedy-mystery Silver Streak, co-starring Richard Pryor. She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for 1978's An Unmarried Woman, for which she won the "Best Actress Award" at the Cannes Film Festival, and for 1979's Starting Over, a comedy with Burt Reynolds. She also received strong notices for a dramatic performance in I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can. Her other films include Portnoy's Complaint, Gable and Lombard (in which she portrayed screen legend Carole Lombard), as a pro football team owner's daughter in Semi-Tough, as a mathematician in It's My Turn (in which she teaches the proof of the snake lemma), as a conservative Supreme Court justice in First Monday in October and in Bernardo Bertolucci's controversial La Luna, a role in which her character masturbates her son in an attempt to ease his withdrawal from heroin. Television audiences know Clayburgh from numerous roles in series and movies including Law & Order, The Practice and as Ally McBeal's mother. She received Emmy Award nominations for her work in the made-for-television movie Hustling in 1975 and for guest appearances in the series Nip/Tuck in 2005. In 2006, she appeared on Broadway in Neil Simon's Barefoot in the Park with Patrick Wilson and Amanda Peet; she played Peet's mother, a role originated by Mildred Natwick. She also returned to the screen as a therapist's eccentric wife in the all-star ensemble dramedy Running With Scissors, an autobiographical tale of teenage angst and dysfunction based on the book by Augusten Burroughs. During 2007, Clayburgh appeared in the ABC television series Dirty Sexy Money, playing Letitia Darling. Death Clayburgh lived with chronic lymphocytic leukemia for more than two decades before succumbing to the disease. She died at her home in Lakeville, Connecticut, on November 5, 2010. The movie Love and Other Drugs was dedicated to her memory.
  4. Jesse Capelli (born May 21, 1979) is a Canadian adult model and a former pornographic actress. She was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada and described herself as a "real tomboy" when younger. In April 2004 she was the Penthouse Pet of the Month. Capelli has also modeled for other men's magazines, including Perfect 10 and the UK magazine Men's World. Capelli performed exclusively in girl/girl scenes for ClubJenna and has appeared in adult videos, including fetish titles such as Jesse Loves Pain (2007). In addition to her work in the adult entertainment industry Capelli had a recurring role on the television series Battle Dome and has appeared mainstream feature films such as Van Wilder and Not Another Teen Movie.
  5. COP11 posted a topic in Actresses
    Leonora Corbett (1908–1960) was a British film actress. On leaving school she studied art but later decided that she would prefer the stage. She made her debut at Cambridge and later appeared on the London stage before appearing on the screen, with Love on Wheels her film debut. Selected filmography Love on Wheels (1932) The Constant Nymph (1933) Friday the Thirteenth (1933) Lady in Danger (1935) Royal Cavalcade (1935) The Price of Folly (1937) I, Claudius (1937) Farewell Again (1938) Anything to Declare? (1938)
  6. COP11 posted a topic in Actresses
    Date of Birth 18 July 1920, Los Angeles County, California, USA Date of Death 31 August 1995, Paradise, Butte County, California, USA Birth Name Mildred Blanche Coles Mini Biography Mildred Coles was a former beauty queen and a Western character actress. Her favorite film was - Oklahoma Badlands (1948) which starred Alan "Rocky" Lane. An RKO starlet of the early 1940s, Mildred Coles ran the gamut from playing such "fallen" girls as the title role in Play Girl (1940) and a dysfunctional wife in the exploitation classic Bob and Sally (1948), to appearing as Allan "Rocky" Lane's leading lady in three Republic Westerns (1948). A typical road-show spectacular in which Coles' and Rick Jason's baby is born syphilitic, the aforementioned Bob and Sally became one of the highlights of a career that was decidedly on the wane. Coles appeared in a couple of bit roles at Warner Bros. before calling it quits in 1949, but Bob and Sally kept her name on theater marquees for decades.
  7. COP11 posted a topic in Actresses
    Edith Madeleine Carroll (26 February 1906 – 2 October 1987) was an English actress, popular in the 1930s and 1940s. Early life Carroll was born at 32 Herbert Street (now number 44) in West Bromwich, England. She graduated from the University of Birmingham, England with a B.A. degree. She once taught in a girl's public school. Acting career Carroll made her stage debut with a touring company in The Lash. Widely recognized as one of the most beautiful women in films (she won a film beauty competition to start herself off in the business), Carroll's aristocratic blonde allure and sophisticated style were first glimpsed by British movie audiences in The Guns of Loos in 1928. Rapidly rising to stardom in England, she graced such popular films of the early '30s as Young Woodley, Atlantic, The School for Scandal and I Was a Spy. She played the title role in the play Little Catherine. Abruptly, she announced plans to retire from films to devote herself to a private life with her husband, the first of four. Carroll attracted the attention of Alfred Hitchcock and, in 1935, starred as one of the director's earliest prototypical cool, glib, intelligent blondes in The 39 Steps based on the espionage novel by John Buchan. The film became a sensation and with it, so did Carroll. Cited by the New York Times for a performance that was "charming and skillful", Carroll became very much in demand thanks, in part, to director Hitchcock, who later admitted that he worked very hard with her to bring out the vivacious and sexy qualities she possessed offscreen, but which sometimes vanished when cameras rolled. Of Hitchcock's heroines, as exemplified by Carroll, film critic Roger Ebert once wrote that they "reflected the same qualities over and over again: They were blonde. They were icy and remote. They were imprisoned in costumes that subtly combined fashion with fetishism. They mesmerized the men, who often had physical or psychological handicaps." The director wanted to re-team Carroll with her 39 Steps co-star Robert Donat the following year in Secret Agent, a spy thriller based on a work by W. Somerset Maugham. However, Donat's recurring health problems prevented him from accepting the role and, instead, Hitchcock paired Carroll with John Gielgud. Poised for international stardom, Carroll was the first British beauty to be offered a major American film contract; she accepted a lucrative deal with Paramount Pictures. She starred opposite Gary Cooper in the adventure The General Died at Dawn and with Ronald Colman in the 1937 box-office success The Prisoner of Zenda. She tried a big musical On the Avenue (1937) opposite Dick Powell, but others of her films, including One Night in Lisbon (1941), and My Favorite Blonde (1942) with Bob Hope, were less prestigious. She made her final film for director Otto Preminger, The Fan, adapted from Oscar Wilde's Lady Windermere's Fan, in 1949. For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Madeleine Carroll has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6707 Hollywood Blvd. A commemorative monument and plaques were unveiled in her birthplace, West Bromwich, to mark the centenary of her birth. Personal life After her only sister Marguerite was killed in the Blitz, she radically shifted her priorities from acting to working in field hospitals as a Red Cross nurse during World War II. She served in the 61st Station Hospital, Foggia, Italy in 1944, where many wounded American airmen flying out of air bases around Foggia were hospitalized. During WWII, Madeleine Carroll donated her chateau outside Paris to more than 150 "adopted" orphans. She also arranged groups of young people in California to knit clothing for them. In a filmed RKO-Pathe News bulletin, she was filmed at the chateau with the children and staff wearing the clothes, where she thanked people who had contributed. She was awarded the Legion d'Honneur for bravery in France. She became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1943. Madeleine Carroll died on October 2, 1987 from pancreatic cancer in Marbella, Spain aged 81, exactly one week after her The Prisoner of Zenda co-star Mary Astor died. She was initially interred in Fuengirola, Málaga, Spain but in 1998 was reburied in the cemetery of Sant Antoni de Calonge in Catalonia, Spain. Filmography The Guns of Loos (1928) Pas si bête (1928) The First Born (1928) What Money Can Buy (1928) The Crooked Billet (1929) The American Prisoner (1929) Atlantic (1929) L'instinct (1930) The W Plan (1930) Young Woodley (1930) French Leave (1930) Escape (1930) School for Scandal (1930) Kissing Cup's Race (1930) Madame Guillotine (1931) Fascination (1931) The Written Law (1931) I Was a Spy (1933) Sleeping Car (1933) The World Moves On (1934) The 39 Steps (1935) The Dictator (1935) The Story of Papworth, the Village of Hope (1936, short) Secret Agent (1936) The General Died at Dawn (1936) Lloyd's of London (1936) The Case Against Mrs. Ames (1936) On the Avenue (1937) It's All Yours (1937) The Prisoner of Zenda (1937) Blockade (1938) Cafe Society (1939) Honeymoon in Bali (1939) My Son, My Son! (1940) Safari (1940) Northwest Mounted Police (1940) Virginia (1941) One Night in Lisbon (1941) Bahama Passage (1941) My Favorite Blonde (1942) White Cradle Inn (1947) An Innocent Affair (1948) The Fan (1949)
  8. COP11 posted a topic in Actresses
    Mary Frances Crosby (born September 14, 1959) is an American actress. She is most often credited as simply Mary Crosby for her performances. Early life She was born in Los Angeles, California. She is the daughter of the singer and actor Bing Crosby, from his second marriage to the actress Kathryn Grant. She graduated from high school at 15. She then entered the University of Texas at Austin where she became a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority, but dropped out of the University before graduating. She is fluent in Spanish. Family life Aunt of Denise Crosby (although Denise is 2 years her senior) L. Chip Crosby Jr, and Gregory Crosby Cousin of Cathy Crosby and Chris Crosby Niece of the bandleader Bob Crosby and the agent Larry Crosby Sister of Harry Crosby and Nathaniel Crosby Half-sister of Gary, Dennis, Phillip and Lindsay Crosby She has been twice married: 1) Eb Lottimer (1978[1] - 1989) divorced 2) Mark Brodka (1998–present); two children (born 1999 and 2002) Acting career Crosby may be most noted for her role as Kristin Shepard (Sue Ellen Ewing's scheming sister) on the TV series Dallas from 1979 to 1981. Her character is perhaps best remembered for her part in the cliffhanger ending of the 1979-1980 season of Dallas. In that highly watched episode, J.R. Ewing, (played by Larry Hagman) was shot by an unknown assailant. Viewers had to wait all summer (and most of the fall due to a Hollywood actors' strike) to learn whether J.R. would survive, and which of his many enemies was responsible. During the summer of 1980, the question, "Who shot J.R.?", was being asked in everyday conversations around the world. Ultimately, Kristin Shepard (Crosby) was revealed to have been the person who pulled the trigger in the classic "Who Shot J.R.?" episode that aired on November 21, 1980. It was one of the highest-rated episodes of a TV show ever aired. Crosby's character, Kristin Shepard, later crossed over to the TV series Knots Landing in the 1980-81 season. In 1981, Kristin returned to Dallas. Once again the focus of a highly rated cliffhanger, it was revealed in the season opening episode (October 9, 1981) that it was Kristin's body that was found floating in the Southfork Ranch swimming pool. She returned for the final fantasy episode of Dallas in 1991, playing the same character had she never met J.R.. Film appearances With This Ring (1978)...Lisa Harris A Guide for the Married Woman (1978) (TV)...Eloise Pearl (1978) (mini) (TV Series)...Patricia North Brothers and Sisters (1979) (TV Series)...Suzy Cooper Dallas (TV Series) (1978)...Kristin Shepard # 2 (1979–1981) Midnight Lace (1981) (TV)...Cathy Preston Golden Gate (1981) (TV)...Natalie Kingsley Confessions of a Married Man (1983) (TV)...Ellen Last Plane Out (1983)...Elizabeth Rush The Ice Pirates (1984)...Princess Karina Cover Up (1984) (TV)...Merilee Taylor Child's Play (1985) (TV)...Ann Preston Hollywood Wives (1985) (mini) (TV Series)...Karen Lancaster Final Jeopardy (1985) (TV)...Susan Campbell North and South, Book II (1986) (mini) (TV Series)...Isabel Hazzard Stagecoach (1986) (TV)...Mrs. Lucy Mallory Johann Strauss - Der Konig ohne Krone (1987)...Adele...aka Johann Strauss: The King Without a Crown Tapeheads (1988)...Samantha Gregory Quicker Than the Eye (1989)...Mary Preston Deadly Innocents (1990)...Beth/Cathy Body Chemistry (1990)...Marlee Redding Corporate Affairs (1990)...Jessica Pierce Eating (1990)...Kate Crack Me Up (1991) The Berlin Conspiracy (1992)...Ursula Schneider Distant Cousins (1993)...Marcie...aka Dangerous Motive Men Who Hate Women & the Women Who Love Them (1994) (TV)...Jennifer Cupid (1997)...Dana Rhodes The Night Caller (1998)...Nikki Rogers Sharing the Secret (2000) (TV)...Irene The Legend of Zorro (2005)...Governor's Wife Television appearances The Hollywood Palace (1966–1968)...Herself - Singer (as Mary Frances Crosby) The Danny Thomas Hour (1967)...Joan (as Mary Frances Crosby) Goldilocks (1971)...Herself/Goldilocks (as Mary Frances Crosby) Starsky and Hutch (1978)...Leslie Slate in episode: "Strange Justice" (episode # 4.6) CHiPS (1979)...Chris (as Mary Frances Crosby) Dallas (1980)...Kristin Shepard # 2 Knots Landing (1980)...Kristin Shepard Dick Turpin (1981)...June Harding The Fall Guy (1982)...Coleen Wilcox The Love Boat (1982)...Megan Lewis The Fall Guy (1983)...Sue Jackson Automan (1983)...Ellen Fowler/Miss Simmons Hotel (1984)...Maggie Blackwood The Fall Guy (1984)...Kim Donnelly Cover Up (1984)...Merilee Taylor Finder of Lost Loves (1984)...Blythe Stewart (as Mary Frances Crosby) Hotel (1985)...Barbara Medford in episode "Distortions" Hotel (1985)...Natalie Rogers in episode "Saving Grace" Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense (1986)...Ann Preston in episode "Child's Play" The Love Boat (1986) in episode "The Matadors/Mrs.Jameson Comes Out/Love's Labors Found/Marry Me, Marry Me: Parts 1 & 2" The New Adventures of Beans Baxter In the Heat of the Night (1989)...J.D. Sinclaire Freddy's Nightmares (1989)...Greta in episode "Lucky Stiff" Freddy's Nightmares (1990)...Greta in episode "Easy Come, Easy Go" Shades of LA (1990)...Jessica Pope Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993)... Professor Natima Lang (Season 2, Episode 18 "Profit and Loss") Beverly Hills, 90210 (1995) and (1996) ...Claudia Van Eyck in episode "Speechless", in episode "Violated", in episode "You Say It's Your Birthday: Part 1"
  9. Marguerite Churchill (December 25, 1910 – January 9, 2000) was an American movie actress with a film career spanning from 1929 to 1952. She was daughter of a producer who owned a chain of theaters but he died when she was ten years old. She was educated in New York at the Professional Children's School and the Theatre Guild Dramatic School. She appeared on stage and was applauded on Broadway as a leading lady when just sixteen years old. An official of the Fox Company saw her acting and gave her a contract which shortly afterwards led her to debut on screen in The Diplomats. Career She played leading lady to John Wayne in The Big Trail (1930), an early widescreen epic and Wayne's first leading role. She appeared with Wayne the following year in Girls Demand Excitement (1931); with Spencer Tracy in Quick Millions (1931); with Will Rogers in Ambassador Bill (1931); with Warner Oland in Charlie Chan Carries On (1931); with George O'Brien in Riders of the Purple Sage (1931); with Charles Farrell in Girl Without a Room (1933); with Ralph Bellamy in The Final Hour (1936); and with Boris Karloff in The Walking Dead (1936). Family Churchill appeared in more than 25 films and was married to her one-time costar George O'Brien from July 15, 1933 until their divorce in 1948. They had three children, one of whom was novelist Darcy O'Brien, whom she outlived by two years. Her daughter Orin O'Brien has played double bass for the New York Philharmonic Orchestra since 1966. A third child, Brian, died in infancy in 1934. After her divorce from O'Brien, she appeared in one movie and a few television plays. In 1954, she announced her engagement to Peter Ganine, a sculptor. It is unclear whether they ever married. {citation Hedda Hopper, Los Angeles Times, May 13, 1954 p.A1:"Marguerite Churchill. to Be Wed" Former Film Star Marguerite Churchill will marry Peter Ganine at the Russian Orthodox Church here} Later years In 1960, she moved to Rome, Italy and in 1970 to Lisbon, Portugal. She came back to the United States in the 1990s to live near her son, Darcy, whom she outlived by two years. Death She died on January 9, 2000, aged 89, from natural causes in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. She was survived by her daughter, Orin.
  10. COP11 replied to COP11's topic in Actresses
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