Posts Tagged ‘actress’

Today, actress Audrey Hepburn would be completing 85. Google celebrated the birthday of this unforgettable actress with a Doodle:

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And you can read more about her – and see beautiful photos – in my tribute to one of the greatest divas of Hollywood just clicking here: Happy Birthday, Mrs. Hepburn.

Please, visit her official website and know more about her life and career and how to support the Audrey Hepburn Children’s Funds: http://www.audreyhepburn.com/

audrey-hepburn By the end of World War II, with no water or electricity in their home in the Netherlands, Audrey and her family were eating tulip bulbs to stay alive.

audrey-oscarAudrey Hepburn receives an Oscar for her first appearance in an American picture,  “Roman Holiday”, in 1954. Her co-star Gregory Peck, was initially set to get top billing in the film but Peck made Paramount executives change it, saying, “… I’m smart enough to know this girl’s going to win the Oscar in her first picture, and I’m going to look like a damned fool if her name is not up there on top with mine”. (Photo: Underwood & Underwood/CORBIS).

audrey-fawnAudrey Hepburn gets a kiss from the fawn who appeared in the film Green Mansions in which she starred. She ended up keeping it as a pet temporarily. (Photo: Bettmann/CORBIS)

audrey-unicefSoon after becoming a UNICEF ambassador, Audrey Hepburn went on a mission to Ethiopia, where years of drought and civil strife had caused terrible famine. (Photo: Derek Hudson/Sygma/Corbis).

VIDEO TRIBUTE:

See more clipes from the greatest stars of Hollywood in the Movie Legends Channel on YouTube.

 

Sara Montiel, the first Spanish actress to make it in Hollywood and best known for her roles in international blockbusters such as “Vera Cruz”, died today at home in Madrid, aged 85, her family said.

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Sara Montiel also known as Sarita Montiel was born on 10 March 1928, in Campo de Criptana in the region of Castile–La Mancha in 1928, as María Antonia Abad (complete name María Antonia Alejandra Vicenta Elpidia Isidora Abad Fernández). After her unprecedented international hit in Juan de Orduña’s “El Último Cuplé” in 1957, Sara Montiel achieved the status of mega-star in Europe and Latin America. She was the first woman to distill sex openly in Spanish cinema at a time when even a low cut dress was not acceptable. Sara Montiel was the most commercially successful Spanish actress during the mid-20th century in much of the world. Miss Montiel’s film “Varietes” was banned in Beijing in 1973. Her films “El Último Cuple” and “La Violetera” netted the highest gross revenues ever recorded for films made in the Spanish speaking movie industry during the 1950s and 1960s. She also played the role of Antonia, the niece of Don Quixote, in the 1947 Spanish film version of Cervantes’s great novel.

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Sara Montiel started in movies at 16 in her native Spain where she filmed her first international success playing an Islamic princess in the 1948 film “Locura de Amor” (“The Mad Queen”). Later she conquered Mexico, starring in a dozen films in less than five years. Hollywood came calling afterwards, and she was introduced to United States moviegoers in the film “Vera Cruz” (1954) co-starring with Gary Cooper and Burt Lancaster, and directed by Robert Aldrich. She was offered the standard seven-year contract at Columbia Pictures, which she quickly refused, afraid of Hollywood’s typecasting policies for Hispanics. Instead she free-lanced at Warner Bros. with Mario Lanza and Joan Fontaine in “Serenade” (1956), directed by Anthony Mann, and at RKO in Samuel Fuller’s “Run of the Arrow” (1957), opposite Rod Steiger and Charles Bronson.

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The unexpected success of “El Ultimo Cuple” (1957) turned her into an overnight sensation both as an actress and a singer. From then on she combined filming highly successful vehicles, recording songs in five languages and performing live all over the world. Among the films that kept her immensely popular during the 1960s and early 1970s were “La Violetera” (1958), “Carmen, la de Ronda” (1959), “Mi Ultimo Tango” (1960), “Pecado de Amor” (1961), “La Bella Lola” (a 1962 version of Camille), “Casablanca, Nid d’espions” (1963), “Samba” (1964), “La Femme Perdue” (1966), “Tuset Street” (1967), “Esa Mujer” (1969), “Varietes” (1971) and others.

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In 2000, Montiel published her autobiography “Memories: To Live Is A Pleasure”, an instant best seller with ten editions to date. A sequel “Sara and Sex” followed in 2003. In these books Montiel revealed other relationships in her past including one-night stands with writer Ernest Hemingway as well as actor James Dean. She has been married four times: Anthony Mann, American Actor; Film Director, in Beverly Hills, 1957-1963, divorced. José Vicente Ramírez Olalla, Industrial Attorney, in Rome, 1964-1978, annulled. José Tous Barberán, Attorney-Journalist, in Palma de Mallorca, 1979-1992, Tous’s death. Antonio Hernández, Cuban Videotape Operator, in Madrid, 2002-2005, divorced. Sara Montiel passed away on this Monday, 8 April, at 85. The cause of death wasn’t revealed. According to “El Mundo” she died from a cardiac crisis. Vaya con Díos, divina Sara…

La Violetera, from “La Violetera”, 1958: . Los Piconeros, from “Carmen La De Ronda”, 1958: .

La Vie en Rose, from “Noches de Casablanca”, 1963: .

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Source: Wikipedia.

Milla Jovovich aka Alice from “Resident Evil” movies series is having a birthday today. Happy birthday, Milla!

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LIFE AND CAREER

milla_with_mom_galinaMilla Jovovich was born on December 17, 1975, in Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, former Soviet Union, the daughter of Bogić Jovović, a Serbian pediatrician, and Galina Jovovich, a Russian stage actress. She was raised in the Russian Orthodox religion. In 1980, when Milla was five years old, her family left the Soviet Union for political reasons and moved to London. They subsequently moved to Sacramento, California, settling in Los Angeles seven months later. Milla’s parents divorced soon after their arrival in Los Angeles.

In 1988, as a result of her father’s relationship with a woman from Argentina, Milla’s half-brother Marco Jovovich, was born. Milla’s mother attempted to support the family with acting jobs, but found little success, and eventually resorted to cleaning houses to earn money. Her mother and father both provided cooking and cleaning services for director Brian De Palma. Milla’s father was incarcerated for participating in an illegal operation concerning medical insurance; he was given a 20-year sentence in 1994, but was released in 1999 after serving five years in an American prison. According to Milla, “Prison was good for him. He’s become a much better person. It gave him a chance to stop and think”.

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milla_mother_galina_father_dr_Bogi_1987Milla attended public schools in Los Angeles, and became fluent in English in three months (as is common with young children). In school, she was teased by classmates because she had immigrated from the Soviet Union during the Cold War: “I was called a commie and a Russian spy. I was never, ever, ever accepted into the crowd.” At age 12, in seventh grade, Milla left school to focus on modeling. She has stated that she was rebellious during her early teens, engaging in drug use, shopping mall vandalism, and credit-card fraud. In 1994, she became a U.S. citizen.

At the age of nine, Jovovich began going to modeling auditions. She was discovered by Gene Lemuel, who shot test photos of her and later showed them to Herb Ritts in LA. In 1988, she made her first professional model contract. Later, Jovovich made it to the cover of The Face, which led to new contracts and covers of Vogue and Cosmopolitan. Since then, she has graced over one hundred magazine covers, including Seventeen, Mademoiselle, Glamour, Harper’s Bazaar, and InStyle. Her modeling career has included various campaigns for Banana Republic, Christian Dior, Damiani, Donna Karan, Gap, Versace, Calvin Klein, DKNY, Coach, Giorgio Armani, H&M, and Revlon. Since 1998, Jovovich has been an “international spokesmodel” for L’Oréal cosmetics.

milla_banana_republic_1997Jovovich’s mother had “raised [her] to be a movie star” and in 1985, enrolled Jovovich in the Professional Actors school in California. In 1988, she appeared in her first professional role in the made-for-television film “The Night Train to Kathmandu” as Lily McLeod. Following roles on the television series “Paradise” (1988), “Married… with Children” (1989) and “Parker Lewis Can’t Lose” (1990), Jovovich was cast as the lead as Lilli Hargrave in “Return to the Blue Lagoon” (1991). In 1992, Milla Jovovich co-starred with Christian Slater in the comedy “Kuffs”. Later that year, she portrayed Mildred Harris in the Charlie Chaplin biographical film “Chaplin”. Discouraged, she took a hiatus from acting roles, during which time she moved to Europe and began focusing on a music career.

Jovovich had begun working on a music album as early as 1988, when she was signed by SBK Records after the company heard a demo she recorded. In April 1994, billed under her first name, she released The Divine Comedy, a title that was a reference to the epic poem by Dante Alighieri of the same name. Jovovich toured the United States during most of 1994 to promote the album. In May 1999, Jovovich along with Chris Brenner formed an experimental band called Plastic Has Memory, in which she wrote the songs, sang, and played electric guitar. Jovovich continues to write songs which she refers to as “demos”, and which are provided for free in MP3 format on her official website. This year, she announced via Twitter and her official website a new single called Electric Sky would be released. It was released on May 18, 2012 and it’ll be part of an EP she will be releasing.

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Milla Jovovich returned to acting in 1997 with a lead in the Luc Besson-directed science fiction action film “The Fifth Element”, alongside Bruce Willis and Gary Oldman. She portrayed Leeloo, an alien who was the “supreme being”. Jovovich said she “worked like hell: no band practice, no clubs, no pot, nothing” to acquire the role and impress Besson, whom she married on December 14, 1997, but later divorced. She wore a costume that came to be known as the “ACE-bandage” costume, a revealing body suit made of medical bandages designed by Jean-Paul Gaultier.

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In 1998, Jovovich had a role in the Spike Lee drama “He Got Game” as abused prostitute Dakota Burns, appearing with Denzel Washington and Ray Allen. In 1999, she appeared in the music video for the song “If You Can’t Say No” by Lenny Kravitz. In 1999, Jovovich returned to the action genre playing the title role in “The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc”, reuniting her with director Luc Besson. She was featured in armor throughout several extensive battle scenes, and cut her hair to a short length for the role.

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In 2002, Jovovich starred in the horror/action film “Resident Evil”, released in the United States on March 15, 2002 and based on the CAPCOM video game series of the same name. She portrayed Alice, the film’s heroine, who fights a legion of zombies created by the evil Umbrella Corporation. Jovovich had accepted the role of Alice because she and her brother had been fans of the video game franchise, saying, “It was exciting for me just watching him play, I could sit for 5 hours and we would sit all day and play this game.” Jovovich had performed all the stunts required in the film, except for a scene that would involve her jumping to a cement platform, which her management deemed too dangerous, and had trained in karate, kickboxing, and combat-training. In 2004, Jovovich reprised the role of Alice in the sequel to Resident Evil, “Resident Evil: Apocalypse”. The role required her to do fight training for three hours a day, in addition to the three months prior to filming in which she had “gun training, martial arts, everything”.

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Later, Milla stars as Violet, a vampire in Kurt Wimmer’s “Ultraviolet” (2006). She plays a vampire in a civil war in the late 21st century between humans and a subculture turned into vampires. Violet is forced into protecting a young boy amidst the tumult of war. The movie is a crap, but Milla never loses her beauty.

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In 2007, Jovovich reprised her role as Alice in “Resident Evil: Extinction”, the third of the Resident Evil series. Milla returned as Alice in the fourth movie of the Resident Evil series, “Afterlife”, which was directed by her husband, Paul W. S. Anderson.

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Milla Jovovich currently resides in homes in Los Angeles and New York with her husband, film writer and director Paul W. S. Anderson, whom she married on 22 August 2009. The two met while working on “Resident Evil”, which Anderson wrote and directed, and in which Jovovich starred. Anderson proposed to Jovovich in 2003, but the two separated for a period of time before becoming a couple again.

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On November 3, 2007, Milla Jovovich gave birth to her and Anderson’s first child, a daughter, Ever Gabo Anderson.

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She returned to her role as Alice in the fifth installment of Resident Evil for “Resident Evil: Retribution”, which was released on September 14, 2012.

Source: Wikipedia. Photos by Google and Milla Jovovich Official Website.

MODELLING AND GALLERY:

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One of my favorite actress from all-time is having a Birthday today! Happy 50th Anniversary, Jodie Foster.

I grew up watching the films of Jodie Foster in the 70s, such as “Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore”, “Taxi Driver”, “Bugsy Malone”, “The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane” and “Freaky Friday”.

That little girl with golden hair and deep blue eyes enchanted me from the very first movie I saw with her. In the ’80s were few films because she was finishing her studies. She then attended Yale University, earning a bachelor’s degree in literature in 1985.

Jodie Foster was born on November 19, 1962, in Los Angeles, California. She is the youngest of four children born to Evelyn Ella “Brandy” (née Almond) and Lucius Fisher Foster II. Jodie has an older brother, “Buddy”, who was also a child actor, and two older sisters, Lucinda and Constance. After appearing as a child in several commercials, Jodie Foster made her first credited TV appearance on “The Doris Day Show”. Her first film role was in the 1970 television movie “Menace on the Mountain”, which was followed by several Disney productions.

Unlike other child stars such as Shirley Temple or Tatum O’Neal, Jodie Foster successfully made the transition to more mature roles, but it was not without initial difficulty, as several of the films in her early adult career were financially unsuccessful. These included “The Hotel New Hampshire”, “Five Corners”, and “Stealing Home”.

She had to audition for her role in “The Accused”. She won the part and the first of her two Golden Globes and Academy Awards and a nomination for a BAFTA Award as Best Actress for her role as a rape survivor. She starred as FBI trainee Clarice Starling in the 1991 thriller “The Silence of the Lambs”, for which she won her second Academy Award and Golden Globe, and won her first BAFTA Award for Best Actress. This is the film for which Foster has won the most awards.

Jodie Foster made her directorial debut in 1991, with “Little Man Tate”, a critically acclaimed drama about a child prodigy, in which she also co-starred as the child’s mother. She also directed “Home for the Holidays” (1995), a black comedy starring Holly Hunter and Robert Downey Jr. In 1992, Jodie founded a production company called Egg Pictures in Los Angeles. It primarily produced independent films for distribution by other companies until it was closed in 2001. Source: Wikipedia.

Jodie and Connie on the set of Taxi Driver. The actress, then 12 years old, had to be replaced by her older sister in heavy scenes of the film directed by Martin Scorsese.

In an extensive filmography as hers, I have many favorite movies of Jodie Foster, and they are:

Taxi Driver, 1976, directed by Martin Scorsese, as Iris Steensma.


Bugsy Malone, 1976, directed by Alan Parker, as Tallulah.


The Little Girl who Lives Down the Lane, 1976, directed by Nicolas Gessner, as Rynn Jacobs.


The Accused, 1988, directed by Jonathan Kaplan, as Sarah Tobias.


The Silence of the Lambs, 1991, directed by Jonathan Demme, as Clarice Starling.


Sommersby, 1993, directed by Jon Amiel, as Laurel Sommersby.


Maverick, 1994, directed by Richard Donner, as Annabelle Bransford.


Nell, 1994, directed by Michael Apted, as Nell Kellty.


Contact, 1997, directed by Robert Zemeckis, as Dr. Eleanor Arroway.


Panic Room, 2002, directed by David Fincher, as Meg Altman.

Sylvia Maria Kristel
28 September 1952 – 17 October 2012

The Dutch actress Sylvia Kristel, best known for her roles in soft-porn films in the 1970s particularly the French hit “Emmanuelle”, has died in Amsterdam at the age of 60.

Over a 30-year career she starred in more than 50 international feature films. But she shot to fame with “Emmanuelle” in 1974, an erotic story set in Bangkok about a bored housewife, her husband, and their many companions.

The movie was followed by work with directors including Alain Robbe-Grillet, Claude Chabrol and Roger Vadim. Later films included “The Nude Bomb” (1980) and “Private Lessons” (1981). She also starred in a 1981 film version of the D.H. Lawrence novel “Lady Chatterley’s Lover”.

“She was known for her erotic work, but she could do a lot more than that,” said Marieke Verharen, her agent. “She is the most famous Dutch actress ever.”

Before falling ill recently, she had been preparing for a role in an Amsterdam theatre production of the Tim Firth play “Calendar Girls”. Her last film role was in a 2010 Italian television production about a trio of Dutch female singers who were popular in inter-war Italy.
Source: Reuters.

FOREVER EMMANUELLE

Sylvia Maria Kristel was a Dutch actress who performed in over 50 movies but she always will be remember for playing the lead character in four of the seven “Emmanuelle” films.

Sylvia was born in Utrecht, Netherlands, the elder daughter of an innkeeper, Jean-Nicholas Kristel, and his wife. In her 2006 autobiography “Nue”, she claims to have been sexually abused by an elderly guest at the hotel at the age of nine, an event which she has refused to discuss in detail. Her parents divorced when she was 14 years old after her father left home for another woman.


She began modeling when she was 17. She entered the Miss TV Europe contest in 1973 and won. Multilingual, she spoke Dutch, English, French, German and Italian. She gained international attention in 1974 for playing the title character in the softcore film “Emmanuelle” which remains one of the most successful French films ever produced.

After the success of “Emmanuelle”, she often played roles that capitalised on that sexually provocative image, most notably starring in an adaptation of “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” (1981), and a nudity-filled biopic of the World War I spy in “Mata Hari”.

Her Emmanuelle image followed her to the United States, where she played Nicole Mallow, a maid who seduces a teenage boy, in the 1981 sex comedy “Private Lessons”. Another mainstream American film appearance was a brief comic turn in the Get Smart revival film “The Nude Bomb” in 1980.

In September 2006 Kristel’s autobiography “Nue” (Nude) was published in France. It was translated into English as “Undressing Emmanuelle: A Memoir”, in which she told of a turbulent personal life blighted by addictions to drugs, alcohol, and her quest for a father figure, which resulted in some harmful relationships with older men. The book received some positive reviews.

A heavy smoker of unfiltered cigarettes from the age of 11, Kristel was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2001 and underwent three courses of chemotherapy, and surgery after it spread to her lung. On 12 June 2012, she suffered a stroke and was hospitalized in a life-threatening condition. She died in her sleep, aged 60, on 17 October 2012, from esophageal and lung cancer. She was survived by her son Arhtur, from her relationship with the Belgian novelist Hugo Claus, and her younger sister.
Source: Wikipedia.

FILMOGRAPHY:
The Swing Girls (2010) (TV)
Two Sunny Days (2010)
Bank (2002)
Sexy Boys (2001)
De vriendschap (2001)
Vergeef me (2001)
Die Unbesiegbaren (2000) (TV)
Lijmen/Het Been (2000)
An Amsterdam Tale (1999)
Film 1 (1999)
Harry Rents a Room (1999)
Gaston’s War (1997)
Die Sexfalle (1997) (TV)
“Onderweg naar morgen” (1994) TV
“De eenzame oorlog van Koos Tak” (1996) – Tante Heintje (1996) TV
Emmanuelle au 7ème ciel (1993)
Le secret d’Emmanuelle (1993) (TV)
Beauty School (1993)
Le parfum d’Emmanuelle (1993) (TV)
Magique Emmanuelle (1993) (TV)
L’amour d’Emmanuelle (1993) (TV)
Emmanuelle à Venise (1993) (TV)
La revanche d’Emmanuelle (1993) (TV)
Éternelle Emmanuelle (1993) (TV)
Seong-ae-ui chimmuk (1992)
Hot Blood (1990)
In the Shadow of the Sandcastle (1990)
Dracula’s Widow (1988)
The Arrogant (1988)
Casanova (1987) (TV)
Red Heat (1985)
Mata Hari (1985)
The Big Bet (1985)
Emmanuelle IV (1984)
Private School (1983)
Private Lessons (1981)
Lady Chatterley’s Lover (1981)
The Million Dollar Face (1981) (TV)
Un amore in prima classe (1980)
The Nude Bomb (1980)
The Concorde … Airport ’79 (1979)
The Fifth Musketeer (1979)
Letti selvaggi (1979)
Mysteries (1978)
Pastorale 1943 (1978)
Goodbye Emmanuelle (1977)
René la canne (1977)
Alice ou la dernière fugue (1977)
La marge (1976)
Une femme fidèle (1976)
Emmanuelle: L’antivierge (1975)
Le jeu avec le feu (1975)
Un linceul n’a pas de poches (1974)
Der Liebesschüler (1974)
Emmanuelle (1974)
Naakt over de schutting (1973)
Because of the Cats (1973)
Frank en Eva (1973)

WARNING: Nude Content (Not Safe For Work)

TRIBUTE:

EMMANUELLE SONG (HERVE ROY) ON YOUTUBE: