Jenna Dewan Biography

Jenna%20Dewan Jenna Dewan Biography

Born in Hartford, Conneticut, Jenna grew up in Dallas, Texas. Never the shy child, Jenna discovered her love of dancing at age 5, and began taking dance classes immediately. During her teenage years, Jenna agressively pursued her dance career, winning numerous scholarships and awards. Jenna attended college at the University of Southern California, and she was simultaneously booking dancing roles in music videos from artists such as Mandy Moore and Toni Braxton. But things changed dramatically when Jenna was cast in Janet Jackson’s video, Doesn’t Really Matter. Shortly following the video, Jenna was asked to tour with Janet, and Jenna left USC to follow her dreams. Jenna is currently dancing as well as pursuing her acting career.

Amanda Detmer Biography

amanda detmer Amanda Detmer Biography

A petite blonde actress with pretty, pixiesh features and a high energy presence, California native Amanda Detmer made her debut in the TV-movie “Stolen Innocence” (CBS) in 1995. A local girl (the project was lensed in her native Chico), Detmer impressed with a featured role in the telepic, but resumed her education, earning her BA and later her MFA in theater. In 1998 she spent a summer on stage in Minneapolis and that same year lensed a starring role in the mystical independent drama “Last Seen”. Although she had by now completed her graduate degree at New York University and was in her late twenties, Detmer easily adapted to teen roles, possessing youthful looks and bubbly charm. 1999 saw the actress make her big screen debut playing Miss Minneapolis in the Minnesota beauty pageant-set comedy “Drop Dead Gorgeous”. Television work in the NBC miniseries “To Serve and Protect” (NBC) and the very short-lived series “Ryan Caulfield: Year One” (Fox) put her among fictional police that same year.

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Zooey Deschanel Biography

Zooey Deschanel Zooey Deschanel Biography

An attractive young brunette with a style more reminiscent of an early Hollywood ingenue than the average crop of teen stars, Zooey Deschanel–the daughter of Academy Award-nominated cinematographer Caleb Deschanel and actress Mary Jo Deschanel (“The Right Stuff” 1983) and named after the beloved J D Salinger character–began to quickly rack up credits starting in 1998, making her TV debut in an episode of “Veronica’s Closet”. The following year she was featured in her first film, “Mumford”, a comedy about a man (Loren Dean) posing as a psychologist in a small town. Here Deschanel played a troubled young woman obsessed with models and impressed critics and the film’s limited audience with her spot-on portrayal.

In 2000 she was featured in the ensemble of the long-awaited Cameron Crowe film “Almost Famous”, a semi-autobiographical look at a teenage rock journalist who goes on tour with an up and coming band. Deschanel played the older and musically influential sister of the character based on Crowe (played by newcomer Patrick Fugit). Decked out in timely miniskirts with teased hair, Deschanel was at ease in the period piece, lighting up the screen in her scenes and proving an asset to the film. The actress was poised to breakout into the big time in 2000, lensing featured roles in the mental institution-set drama “Manic”, the comedic crime caper “Big Trouble” and the romantic comedy “Beauty Loop”.

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Emily Deschanel Biography

Emily%20Deschanel Emily Deschanel Biography

Emily Deschanel is an American actress. She was born in Los Angeles, California on October 11, 1976 to father Caleb Deschanel and mother Mary Jo Deschanel. She has one sister, Zooey Deschanel who is also an actress.

Emily graduated from Boston University’s Professional Actors Training Program with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theater.

She made her feature film debut in the 1994 film It Could Happen to You. She has been gaining recognition as an actress and in October of 2004 she was named one of six actresses to watch by Interview Magazine.

In addition to starring in feature films, Emily has had several guest starring roles in television shows such as Crossing Jordan and Law and Order: Special Victims Unit.

Emily can be seen most recently playing the role of forensic anthroplogist Temperance Brennan in the FOX TV show Bones, based on the real life of forensic anthropologist Kathy Reichs.

Laura Dern Biography

Laura Dern Laura Dern Biography

A luminous, willowy blonde, Laura Dern is a rare hybrid of character actress and movie star. With role models like father Bruce Dern, mother Diane Ladd and godmother Shelly Winters, it’s little wonder that she grew up unafraid to tackle unglamorous roles, acquiring a reputation as a risk-taker who lives and dies by the “authenticity” of her work. Conceived during the filming of Roger Corman’s “The Wild Angels” (1966, in which both parents acted), she remembers seeing at an early age her father’s severed head bounce down the stairs when “Hush … Hush, Sweet Charlotte” (1965) played on TV. Dern became further enthralled by her own ice cream-eating episode in Martin Scorsese’s “Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore” (1974) not to mention watching Alfred Hitchcock put her father through his paces on the set of “Family Plot” (1976). She began studying at the Lee Strasberg Institute at the age of nine and was ecstatic to land a bit part as an irksome party crasher in Adrian Lyne’s “Foxes” (1980).

Dern first registered as a troubled pregnant teen in “Teachers” (1984) and was then so convincing as a blind girl in love with the disfigured protagonist of “Mask” (1985) that many audience members believed she really was sight-impaired. Before Hollywood could lock her in as a “symbol of purity”, filmmakers Joyce Chopra and David Lynch came along and rescued her from such typecasting, exploring her aura of latent dangerous sexuality in films that exposed the darker side of American small-town life. Chopra’s “Smooth Talk” (1995), adapted from a Joyce Carol Oates short story, cast her opposite a sinisterly seductive Treat Williams, playing the brooding, alluring, teenage tease who’s just beginning to discover the power of lust. Lynch’s “Blue Velvet” (1986) poised her provocatively between innocence and the outlandishly weird: her smart, sweet Nancy Drew, the good twin to Isabella Rossellini’s lewdly masochistic chanteuse, one half of the Madonna-whore complex. Despite the character’s blue-eyed wholesomeness, she is the catalyst that propels the film into its most disturbing disclosures.

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Bo Derek Biography

Bo%20Derek Bo Derek Biography

Beautiful, glamorous protege and fourth wife of Svengali-like writer-director John Derek who gained fame as the perfect fantasy woman with the trend-setting corn-row hairstyle in the Blake Edwards comedy “10″ (1979). Daughter of a hairstylist for a number of Hollywood figures, Derek met her future husband in Greece when she was just 16, and he promptly cast her–in more ways than one–in a role in his “Fantasies” (1973). Her second film did not come till 1977 with a thankless, if prominent, supporting role in the silly killer whale tale “Orca”, but Derek hit the jackpot when she became a “10″. With her tawny complexion, high cheekbones and voluptuous figure, Derek gave what was probably her most effective performance. She wasn’t called on to do very much other than serve as the perfect “10″, the lush embodiment of the hero’s (Dudley Moore)–and, by extension many male audience members’ sexual fantasies–this Derek certainly accomplished.

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Catherine Deneuve Biography

 Catherine Deneuve Biography

This acclaimed French actress first appeared in films as a teenager, using her mother’s maiden name, Dorleac, in several routine movies, such as “Les Portes Claquent” (1960), with elder sister Francoise. Deneuve’s blonde youthfulness mirrored the sparkle of Jacques Demy’s playful musical “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg” (1964), which made her an international star. Deneuve later developed an icy charm that brilliantly embodied contemporary repression and ennui in Roman Polanski’s “Repulsion” (1965), and Luis Bunuel’s “Belle de Jour” (1967) and “Tristana” (1970).

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