Word: actresses
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...find what he was looking for in their relationship. She had spent the first days of her sophomore year crouched over her cumbersome, gray Women’s Leadership Project binder as she brushed up on feminist issues in her DeWolfe suite. She knew she wanted to be an actress, and that in the months that would follow her graduation her dreams would take her to only one city—Los Angeles. Her mother, a nurse, had given up many of her career goals to raise a beautiful family, and she always taught her only daughter to never...
...years and now gets to stand center screen, tall and gorgeous. Combined with her stalwart turn in Elie Chouraqui's Harrison's Flowers, as a journalist searching hell-on-earth Bosnia for her photographer husband, Crush proves that the South Carolinian beauty has completed her trek from actress-model to model actress...
...ended up there after her very first film. The Tarzan adventure Greystoke made her the punch line to an industry joke, when her dialogue was dubbed by Glenn Close. It took a complex role as the frustrated wife in Steven Soderbergh's sex, lies, and videotape (1989) for the actress to show moviegoers and Hollywood that she was an actress. The Object of Beauty, Groundhog Day and Four Weddings and a Funeral solidified her status as a go-to gal to ornament the smarter comedies for grownups. But in Crush, MacDowell is the center of the action and the acting...
BORN. To ELIZABETH HURLEY, 36, actress and single mom; a boy, Damian Charles; in London. The co-star of Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery and former girlfriend of Hugh Grant has named former boyfriend Stephen Bing, a film producer, as the father. Bing has questioned that claim, saying the two "were not in an exclusive relationship" when Hurley became pregnant...
...students dance in their seats. Schulz executes a handstand as Morin grabs her legs. She wraps her feet around his neck and clasps his knees with her hands as he begans to spin quickly around to the swing music playing. When Jessica L. Ross ’03, the actress playing Schulz (who, like Morin, is a character based on a real Physics 16 TF of the same name), falls on her head, the music stops and the rest of the cast, after realizing that she is not seriously injured, bursts out laughing...