Paul Simon

(born October 13, 1941, Newark, New Jersey, U.S.) American singer-songwriter who brought a highbrow sensibility to rock music.
One of the most paradoxical figures in rock-and-roll history, Simon exemplified many of the principles against which the music initially reacted. From his first big hit, “The Sounds of Silence,” in 1965, Simon aspired to a self-consciously elevated poetic tone in his lyric writing that was the antithesis of rock-and-roll spontaneity. Infatuated with teenage street music in the mid-1950s, he returned throughout his career to the wellspring of dreamy doo-wop vocal harmony for inspiration and refreshment. But his approach to the style that enraptured him was analytical, as though he wanted to enshrine under glass a sound that his surreal 1983 song “René and Georgette Magritte with Their Dog After the War” described as “deep forbidden music.”
As a teenager Simon teamed up with his classmate from Queens, New York, Art Garfunkel, to form Simon and Garfunkel (first known as Tom and Jerry). Beginning with “The Sounds of Silence,” they were the most popular folk-pop duo of the 1960s and the musical darlings of literary-minded college-age baby boomers. In 1967 their music was a key ingredient in the success of the hit film The Graduate, and in 1970 they reached their zenith with Simon's inspirational gospel-flavoured anthem “Bridge over Troubled Water,” which showcased Garfunkel's soaring, semioperatic tenor.
Simon's best early songs tend to be bookish, angst-ridden reveries with simple folk rock melodies and earnest, poetically ambitious (but often mannered) lyrics, some influenced by Bob Dylan. Simon's best narrative song from this period, “The Boxer” (1969), is the streamlined dramatic monologue of a down-and-out prizefighter.
Simon's fascination with pop vocal sound quickly expanded to include the sparkle of English folk music, the ethereal pipes and voices of Andean mountain music, and the arching passion of gospel. After he and Garfunkel broke up in 1970 (they reunited briefly in the early 1980s for a tour and a live album), Simon pursued a successful career as a singer-songwriter of whimsical, introspective songs with tricky time signatures. His biggest solo success came in 1975 with Still Crazy After All These Years, a collection of wistful ruminations on approaching middle age.
When his popularity began to ebb, Simon jumped on the emerging world-music bandwagon. On a visit to South Africa, he met many of the musicians with whom he made Graceland (1986), an exquisite, multifaceted fusion of his own sophisticated stream-of-consciousness poetry with black South Africa's doo-wop-influenced “township jive” and Zulu choral music. Although some accused him of cultural thievery—i.e., the appropriation and exploitation of another culture's music—the album was one of the most critically acclaimed and commercially successful of the decade and helped put South African music on the world stage.

Simon made a similar pilgrimage to Brazil to record Rhythm of the Saints (1990), an even denser (and somewhat less popular) fusion of African-derived percussion with American folk rock. Its quirky nonlinear lyrics were indebted to the language of the Nobel Prize-winning Caribbean poet Derek Walcott. Walcott became Simon's collaborator on The Capeman, Simon's first Broadway musical, which opened in January 1998 and was a critical and commercial failure. Based on a highly publicized 1959 New York City murder involving a Puerto Rican street gang, The Capeman featured a score by Simon (Walcott collaborated on the lyrics) that was a theatrical elaboration of the New York street music that had originally inspired him. But it also emphasized the long-underappreciated Hispanic contribution to urban pop.
In 1999 Simon teamed with Bob Dylan for a summer tour in the United States. The concert series, which ended Simon's eight-year absence from the road, marked the first time the two performers formally worked together. Later that year Simon continued on a solo tour, and in 2000 released You're the One, an understated and introspective album that was a departure from the expansive sound of Graceland and Rhythm of the Saints.
Among songwriters of his generation, Simon enjoyed one of the longest-lasting careers as a pop innovator. Searching out and exploring the sounds of indigenous musical cultures, from Southern gospel to Brazilian and West African percussion, he integrated them into American rock and folk styles to create a highly flexible, personalized style of world music that was at once primitive and elegant. Simon was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001.
Simon and Garfunkel
Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme (1966)
Paul Simon
Paul Simon (1972)
Graceland (1986)

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Roald Dahl

born Sept. 13, 1916, Llandaff, Wales—died Nov. 23, 1990, Oxford, Eng.) British writer, a popular author of ingenious, irreverent children's books and of adult horror stories.
Following his graduation from Repton, a renowned British public school, in 1932, Dahl avoided a university education and joined an expedition to Newfoundland. He worked from 1937 to 1939 in Dar es Salaam, Tanganyika (now in Tanzania), but he enlisted in the Royal Air Force (RAF) when World War II broke out. Flying as a fighter pilot, he was seriously injured in a crash landing in Libya. He served with his squadron in Greece and then in Syria before doing a stint (1942–43) as assistant air attaché in Washington, D.C. There the novelist C.S. Forester encouraged him to write about his most exciting RAF adventures, which were published by the Saturday Evening Post.
Dahl's first book, The Gremlins (1943), was written for Walt Disney and later became a popular movie. He achieved best-seller status with Someone like You (1953; rev. ed. 1961), a collection of stories for adults, which was followed by Kiss, Kiss (1959). His children's book James and the Giant Peach (1961; film 1996), written for his own children, was a popular success, as was Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (1964), which was made into the film Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971). His other works for young readers include Fantastic Mr. Fox (1970), The Enormous Crocodile (1978), and Matilda (1988; film 1996). Dahl also wrote several scripts for movies, among them You Only Live Twice (1967) and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968).

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Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen

Actresses. Born June 13, 1986 in Sherman Oaks, California. The twin daughters of mortgage banker David Olsen and manager Jarnie Olsen, Mary-Kate and Ashley have become among the most popular—and bankable—female personalities in America. They made their acting debut in 1987 at nine months old, sharing the role of the youngest daughter, Michelle Tanner, on the ABC family sitcom Full House.
By the age of twelve, the girls had starred in home videos, feature films, multi-media entertainment and another ABC TV series, Two of a Kind. In addition to acting, the Olsens have become a huge force in girl marketing. On their 17th birthday, CNN announced the twins' total financial worth: $300,000,000. Products bearing their names, including computer games, dolls, and an enormously popular clothing line for Wal-Mart, are estimated to generate about $1 billion in retail sales alone per year. Mary-Kate and Ashley currently attend New York University.

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William H Macy

Theatre and film actor, born in Miami, Florida, USA. After leaving high school, he spent 1969 in Europe studying English and Drama at the Foreign Language League School in Reading, England. On returning to America he initially read Veterinary Science at Bethany College in West Virginia, but quickly transferred to Goddard College, Vermont, where he studied drama under David Mamet. Having graduated from college, he co-formed the St Nicholas Company with Mamet and Steven Schachter. Productions with this company include Squirrels (1974) and The Water Engine (1977). During the 1970s–80s he appeared in numerous stage productions, television shows, and advertisements. He became a household name in 1994 when he appeared in the popular American television series ER, and in 2003 he won an Emmy for his role in the TV mini-series Door to Door. His films include Fargo (1996, Oscar nomination), Boogie Nights (1997), Magnolia (1999), State and Main (2000), Seabiscuit (2003), and Bobby (2006). Although a great success in the film world, he is still a committed theatre actor, continuing to teach students and taking workshops all over the world. Further theatre productions include Oleanna (1993) and American Buffalo (2000).

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Stockard Channing

Actress. Born Susan Williams Antonia Stockard on February 13, 1944 in New York City. The daughter of a shipping magnate, Channing's acting career has been marked by incredible highs and lows. She attended Radcliffe College in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she majored in American history and literature and graduated summa cum laude in 1965. After graduation, she joined Boston's experimental Theater Company. Her first break came in a starring role in a Los Angeles production of Two Gentlemen of Verona, but true recognition didn't arrive until 1985 when she won a Tony for her Broadway performance in A Day in the Death of Joe Egg.
In 1971, Channing made her feature film debut in The Hospital. Her first major film role came two years later when she starred in The Fortune with Jack Nicholson and Warren Beatty. And in 1978, she landed the memorable supporting role of Rizzo, one of the Pink Ladies in the film adaptation of the musical Grease. Throughout the 1970s, she continued to make appearances on television, and even starred in two short-lived sitcoms: Stockard Channing in Just Friends and The Stockard Channing Show.
By 1980, with her film career at a standstill, Channing turned her energies once again to theater. But she made her comeback in 1993 when she was nominated for an Oscar and a Golden Globe for her performance as a formidable Upper East Side matron in Six Degrees of Separation; she also won a Tony nomination when she performed the role on stage. Throughout the 1990s she continued working on stage and film, and joined the cast of NBC's political drama The West Wing in 1999. Her portrayal of First Lady Abby Bartlett earned her an Emmy award in 2002. That same year, she won an Emmy for her supporting role in the television movie The Matthew Shepard Story.
Channing has been married and divorced four times: to business executive Walter Channing Jr. from 1963 to 1967; to actor Paul Schmidt from 1970 to 1976; to screenwriter David Debin from 1976 to 1980; and to businessman David Rawle from 1980 to 1988. She is currently seeing gaffer and director of photography Daniel Gillham.

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Julia Louis-Dreyfus

Actress. Born January 13, 1961 in New York City. The great-great granddaughter of businessman Leopold Louis-Dreyfus, who founded the international Louis Dreyfus Group. After studying drama at Northwestern University, Louis-Dreyfus began her acting career in nearby Chicago at the Practical Theatre Company and with the prestigious Second City comedy troupe. After moving to New York, she was cast as a regular on Saturday Night Live in 1982, where she showcased her comedic talents for the next two seasons.
In 1986, Julia Louis-Dreyfus launched her film career, appearing in Woody Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters and Soul Man. But it was her portrayal of the fabulously flawed and cynical Elaine Benes on NBC's hit sitcom Seinfeld that launched Louis-Dreyfus to stardom. The New Yorkcentric comedy, also costarring Jason Alexander and Michael Richards, was created by Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David and ran for nine seasons (1989-1998). Though the role of Elaine was not part of the show's original concept, NBC producers insisted that Seinfeld needed a feminine perspective. She earned a Golden Globe in 1993 and an Emmy in 1996 for her performance.
During breaks from Seinfeld, Julia Louis-Dreyfus continued to make films, with uneven results. These included Jack the Bear (1993), Rob Reiner's North (1994), Father's Day with Billy Crystal and Robin Williams, and Woody Allen's Deconstructing Harry (1997). And in 1998, she lent her voice for the role of Princess Atta in the computer-animated feature A Bug's Life.
In 2002, Julia Louis-Dreyfus starred in her own NBC sitcom called Watching Ellie. Despite a promising debut, the real-time comedy featuring Louis-Dreyfus as a Los Angeles lounge singer took a dive in the ratings and was canceled midway through its first season. A revamped version of the show returned to NBC's prime time lineup for spring 2003, but it failed to find an audience.
Undaunted, Julia Louis-Dreyfus returned to television with a new sitcom, New Adventures of Old Christine, in 2006. She stars as Christine, a divorced mother of one, navigating the ups and downs of parenting, dating, and running a business. The show’s title is drawn from the fact that her former husband gets involved with a younger woman who shares her first name and becomes known as “New Christine.” Louis-Dreyfus won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series in 2006 for her work on the show.Julia Louis-Dreyfus is married to actor and producer Brad Hall. The couple met at Northwestern University and married in 1987. Their son, Henry, was born in 1992.

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Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg

Click here to see Caroline Kennedy's video biography.

In the News: Lawyer and heir to the famous Kennedy legacy, Caroline Kennedy, has expressed interest in running for New York Senator. The position, currently filled by Senator Hillary Clinton, will soon be left vacant when Clinton fills her role as Secretary of State in president-elect Barack Obama's cabinet.
Saying she can "do anything," New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg gave a boost Monday (December 8th, 2008) to Kennedy. "Caroline Kennedy is a very experienced woman, she's worked very hard for the city. I can just tell you she's made an enormous difference in New York City," Bloomberg said after meeting on Capitol Hill with other U.S. mayors to seek stimulus spending from Congress.
Kennedy's possible run for senate would continue her family's long legacy in the political arena. Father, John F. Kennedy, served as U.S. president in 1960, and uncles Robert and Edward have both worked as U.S. Senators.

Biography: writer, editor, lawyer. Born Caroline Bouvier Kennedy on November 27, 1957, in New York, New York, to Jacqueline and John F. Kennedy. Caroline spent her early years living in the White House during her father's term as president. His time in office is often referred to as the "Camelot Presidency" for the hope and optimism the young politician brought to America. As a result, the Kennedy's were thrust into the spotlight as the ideal American family. Caroline was a frequent media darling; people couldn't get enough of the little girl who walked her father to the Oval Office each morning, and rode her pony on the White House lawn.
Not everything in the Kennedy household was idyllic, however, and the family suffered numerous tragedies. Among them was the loss of Caroline's eldest sister, who was stillborn 15 months before Caroline was born. Three years later, on August 7, 1963, her youngest brother, Patrick, was born prematurely. He died two days later from lung failure. But chief among the young Caroline's early losses came on November 22, 1963, when her father was assassinated by sniper fire. Caroline was not yet six years old at the time.
Kennedy grew extremely close to her younger brother John Jr. during her youth. Together, they endured a series of family tragedies, later dubbed "The Kennedy Curse." Among them were the assassination of their uncle and U.S. Senator, Robert F. Kennedy, and the death of a former campaign worker during a car accident involving their other uncle, U.S. Senator Edward "Ted" Kennedy. Ted survived, but the incident became a national scandal.
In 1968, Caroline's mother, Jacqueline, made headlines when she married Greek Shipping magnate, Aristotle Onassis. The Kennedy family moved to New York City to be with their stepfather, and Jacqueline began working as an editor for Viking Press. Caroline's mother tried hard to shield her children from the public eye, often keeping them away from their rebellious, scandal-making cousins.
As a result of their mother's raising, Caroline and her brother strayed away from drugs and alcohol, instead becoming conscientious students. Caroline performed well in New York private school, and went on to attend Radcliffe College (now part of Harvard) for her undergraduate work. In addition to her studies, the young Kennedy interned for the New York Daily News and worked in the summers as a political intern for her uncle Ted.
After earning her bachelor's degree in 1979, Caroline worked at the Metropolitan Museum of Art where she met her future husband, an interactive-media designer named Edwin Schlossberg. She also began serving as the president of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to providing financial support, staffing, and creative resources for the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.
On July 19th, 1986, Caroline married 41-year-old Schlossberg in an elaborate Cape Cod, Massachusetts, wedding. Despite the family's efforts to avoid publicity, the wedding became a topic of wide interest in the media. A crowd of more than 2,000 spectators surrounded the church and a nearby hillside. Many perched in trees in an attempt to view the nuptials. When they heard applause from inside the church, the crowd outside also applauded.
Interested in politics, but not the limelight, Caroline quietly entered Columbia Law School. She graduated with little fanfare in 1988, during a private pre-commencement ceremony along with 380 other students. That same year, she gave birth to her first child, Rose. In 1989, the young lawyer stayed busy by establishing the Profile in Courage Awards, which honors elected officials who have shown political courage, and beginning research on her first book.
Fascinated with constitutional law, Caroline co-wrote In Our Defense: The Bill of Rights in Action with fellow law graduate Ellen Alderman. She refused to use her mother's publishing industry contacts, instead publishing the book through William Morrow & Co. in February of 1991. She also surprised Washington officials and stumped the media the next year, when she turned down an offer to be chairwoman of the 1992 Democratic National Convention. Instead, the private Kennedy invested time in her family and personal projects.
In 1994, Caroline's mother passed away after a long battle with lymphatic cancer. As a tribute to her mother's work in the arts, Caroline took on Jacqueline's role as the honorary chairperson at the American Ballet Theatre. In addition to her charitable work, Kennedy co-wrote another book entitled The Right to Privacy (1995). She also took up her role as the guardian of the Kennedy name, spending several difficult months trying to settle her mother's $ 200 million estate while under heavy public scrutiny. In 1998, she and her brother went public in an auction dispute against Evelyn Lincoln, President Kennedy's former secretary, who attempted to sell "intensely personal" pieces of memorabilia that belonged to their father.

On July 16, 1999, Caroline endured more hardship when her only sibling, John F. Kennedy, Jr., was killed along with his wife and sister-in-law, when the plane he was piloting crashed in the ocean near Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. The effect the tragedy had on Caroline was kept very private, but the only remaining heir to the Kennedy legacy quickly took up the family mantle. In 2000, she finally agreed to become a speaker at the 2000 Democratic National Convention.
She also kept writing. To honor her late mother, Kennedy helped create The Best-Loved Poems of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, published in 2001. She has served as editor for two other anthologies: Profiles in Courage for Our Time (2002) and A Patriot's Handbook: Songs, Poems and Speeches Every American Should Know (2003). She published A Family of Poems: My Favorite Poetry for Children in 2005, and her latest work, A Family Christmas, in 2007.
Kennedy serves as a member of the national board of directors for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the vice-chair for the Fund for Public Schools in New York City, and chief executive for the New York City Department of Education Office of Strategic Partnerships.
In 2008, the normally very private Kennedy made headlines when she was rumored as a possible replacement for Hillary Clinton in the U.S. Senate. Clinton recently accepted the post of Secretary of State designate in president-elect Barack Obama's cabinet.Kennedy and Schlossberg now have three children: Rose, Tatiana, and Jack. They currently reside in New York City.

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Charlize Theron

In the News: South African-born actress Charlize Theron was made a United Nations messenger of peace on Friday (November 14, 2008). Theron, the U.N.'s 10th peace envoy, will promote U.N. activities and ideals with a special emphasis on ending violence against women.
The 33-year-old actress has long been involved with charitable causes, including the support of mobile health clinics in her native South Africa. Theron's recent film roles have also addressed important women's issues. Her portrayal of real-life serial killer and abuse victim, Aileen Wuornos, in the film “Monster” won Theron an Oscar in 2003. In the 2005 film, "North Country," the actress played a woman fighting sexual harassment in the work place.
Theron will be joining nine other famous messengers of peace, including actors George Clooney, musician Yo-Yo Ma, author Elie Wiesel and naturalist Jane Goodall. Her official induction ceremony will be held in New York on Monday (November 17, 2008).
Biography: Actress. Born August 7, 1975 in Benoni, South Africa. Theron grew up on her parents' farm in rural South Africa and began taking ballet lessons at the age of six. After attending boarding school in Johannesburg to study dance, she took a few modeling jobs before moving to New York to dance with the Joffrey Ballet. In 1995, a career-ending knee injury resulted in a move to Los Angeles to try her luck as an actor.
In 1996, Theron received both exposure and critical praise for her first film, Two Days in the Valley. The film proved to be a stepping stone for the young actress, who landed subsequent roles as Keanu Reeves' wife in The Devil's Advocate and Trial and Error, both in 1997. In 1998, Theron was cast as a perpetually aroused supermodel in Woody Allen's Celebrity, and earned her first starring role in Disney's remake of Mighty Joe Young.
In 1999, she landed a string of roles in notable films, including The Astronaut's Wife opposite Johnny Depp and the critically acclaimed The Cider House Rules with Tobey Maguire. In 2001, she reteamed with Reeves for the weepy and romantic Sweet November. Two years later, she starred opposite Mark Wahlberg in the heist thriller The Italian Job. In 2004, Theron received an Academy Award for her performance in Monster, a biopic of serial killer Aileen Wuornos.
Off screen, Theron as been coupled with actor Craig Bierko and Third Eye Blind vocalist Stephan Jenkins.

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Ray Walston

Actor. Born November 2, 1914, in Laurel, Mississippi. His parents, Harrie and Mittie Walston, led a modest life, with Mr. Walston bringing home merely ten dollars a week. The young Ray often attended the local movie house, where silent films awakened what would become a life long passion. After an adolescence interrupted by the ravages of the Great Depression, Walston, at age twenty-one, began to realize his dream of acting. He auditioned at a small local theater and won a part.
Walston began acting with Margo Jones' Community Players in Houston, Texas in 1938, and for almost four years he performed in a play every month. In 1943, he left Houston with Margo Jones, who was going to the Cleveland Playhouse in Ohio to direct Tennessee Williams’ first play, You Touch Me. The 29-year-old Walston made his professional stage debut in the play. He worked under contract at the Cleveland Playhouse for two years and acted in 22 plays while simultaneously working on workshop productions, which he would show to the company after-hours.
Walston eventually began to crave a wider audience, and in 1945, he left Cleveland for New York with his new bride, Ruth Calvert. He worked consistently on Broadway, and in 1948 hit big playing Mr. Kramer in Tennessee Williams’ Summer and Smoke. For his performance, the young thespian won a Clarence Dewart Award in 1949. He followed up this success with several hit performances. In 1950, he took a job playing Luther Billis in Rogers and Hammerstein’s South Pacific and eventually brought the role to a production at London’s Drury Lane Theatre for nine months. Returning to New York, he appeared in another Rogers and Hammerstein production, Me and Juliet, as well as a musical written by Truman Capote, House of Flowers. In 1956, Walston won a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical, for his performance in Damn Yankees, opposite Gwen Verdon. However, after 12 years on the New York stage, Walston wanted new challenges, and turned his attention toward Hollywood.
In 1957, the 43-year-old actor made his big screen debut alongside Cary Grant and Jayne Mansfield in Kiss Them For Me. Over the next few years he became one of the industry’s most sought after character actors, appearing in the screen version of Damn Yankees (1958), South Pacific (1958), and the Academy Award-winning film, The Apartment (1960), directed by Billy Wilder and starring Jack Lemmon and Shirley Maclaine. However, it was on television that all of America fell in love with Ray Walston. In 1962, he was offered the title role in the television series, My Favorite Martian. He didn’t want to do the show, initially, but agreed to make the pilot, convinced that it would never get on the air.
In 1963, My Favorite Martian premiered on CBS, and the show went on to make Walston a household name. The countenance of his character, “Uncle Martin O’Hara” was on everything from magazine covers to lunch boxes. He attempted to continue his prosperous stage and film career, but the one film he appeared in, Wilder’s Kiss Me Stupid (1967), was a disappointment and his Broadway show, Agatha Sue I Love You, lasted only four nights.
By the third season of My Favorite Martian, the ambitious Walston was ready to move on. It wasn’t easy to escape the notoriety of the nation’s favorite Martian, but over the next decade Walston fought for roles. The actor revived his film career with several hits including The Sting (1973), starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford, and Silver Streak (1976). In 1982’s Fast Times at Ridgemont High the veteran actor introduced himself to a new generation of fans with his performance as the unflappable Mr. Hand.
Despite family troubles and rumors of divorce, he continued to work, and in 1992, won a role in the David E. Kelley television series, Picket Fences. At the age of 77, Walston once again created a fresh, unique character with Judge Henry Bone. He was twice awarded the Emmy for Best Supporting Actor in a Dramatic Series.
Walston died on January 1, 2001, at his home in Beverly Hills, California, where he lived with his wife, Ruth. The couple had one daughter, Kate.

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Marlene Dietrich

Actress, singer. Born Maria Magdalene Dietrich on December 27, 1901, in Berlin, Germany. One of the most glamorous leading ladies of the 1930s and 1940s, Marlene Dietrich is remembered for her smoldering sex appeal, distinctive voice, and unusual personal style. Her police officer father died when she was young, and her mother later married Edouard von Losch, a cavalry officer. Growing up, Dietrich studied French and English at her private school. She also took violin lessons with the hopes of becoming a concert pianist.
While in her late teens, Dietrich gave up music to explore acting. She attended Max Reinhardt’s drama school and soon started to land small parts on stage and in German films. Because of her family’s disapproval of her career choice, Dietrich chose to use a combination of her first and middle name professionally.
In 1923, Dietrich married Rudolf Sieber, a film professional who helped her land a part in Tragedy of Love (1923). The couple welcomed their only child, Maria, the following year. They later separated, but never divorced.
Dietrich’s career in Germany began to take off in the late 1920s. Making film history, she was cast in Germany’s first talking picture Der Blaue Engel (1930) by Hollywood director Josef von Sternberg. An English language version, The Blue Angel, was also filmed using the same cast. With her sultry good looks and sophisticated manner, Dietrich was a natural for the role of Lola Lola, a nightclub dancer. The film follows the decline of a local professor who gives up everything to have a relationship with her character. A big hit, the film helped make Dietrich a star in the United States.
In April 1930, shortly after the premiere of Der Blaue Engel in Berlin, Dietrich moved to America. Again working with von Sternberg, Dietrich starred in Morocco (1930) with Gary Cooper. She played Amy Jolly, a lounge singer, who gets entangled in a love triangle with a member of the Foreign Legion (Cooper) and a wealthy playboy (Adolphe Menjou). For her work on the film, Dietrich received her one and only Academy Award nomination.
Continuing to play the femme fatale, Dietrich challenged accepted notions of feminity. She often wore pants and more masculine fashions on- and off-screen, which added to her unique allure and created new trends. Dietrich made several more films with von Sternberg, including Dishonored (1931), Shanghai Express (1932), and The Scarlet Empress (1934), in which she played the famed member of Russian royalty, Catherine the Great. Their last film together was The Devil Is a Woman (1935)—reportedly her personal favorite film. Considered by many to her most ultimate portrayal of a vamp, Dietrich played a cold-hearted temptress who captivates several men during the Spanish revolution.
Dietrich later softened her image somewhat by taking on lighter fare. Starring opposite Jimmy Stewart, she played a saloon gal in western comedy Destry Rides Again (1939). Around this time, Dietrich also made several films with John Wayne, including Seven Sinners (1940), The Spoilers (1942), and Pittsburgh (1942). The two were said to have had a romantic relationship, which later turned into a strong friendship.
In her personal life, Dietrich was a strong opponent of the Nazi government in Germany. She had been asked to return to Germany by people associated with Adolf Hitler in the late 1930s to make films there, but she turned them down. As a result, her films were banned in her native land. She made her new country her official home by becoming a U.S. citizen in 1939. During World War II, Dietrich traveled extensively to entertain the allied troops, singing such songs as “Lili Marlene” and others, which would later become staples in her cabaret act. She also worked on war-bond drives and recorded anti-Nazi messages in German for broadcast.
After the war, Dietrich made several more successful films. Two films directed by Billy Wilder, A Foreign Affair (1948) and Witness for the Prosecution (1957) with Tyrone Power, were among the most notable from this period. She also turned in two strong supporting performances in Orson Welles’ Touch of Evil (1958) and Judgment at Nuremberg (1961).
As her film career faded, Dietrich began a thriving singing career in the mid-1950s. She performed her act around the world, from Las Vegas to Paris, to the delight of her fans. In 1960, Dietrich performed in Germany, her first visit there since before the war. She encountered some opposition to her return, but she received a warm reception overall. That same year, her autobiography, Dietrich’s ABC, was published.
By the mid-1970s, Dietrich had given up performing. She moved to Paris where she lived out the remainder of her life in near-seclusion. In the mid-1980s, she did provide some audio commentary for Maximillian Schell’s documentary film on her, Marlene (1984), but she refused to appear on camera.
Dietrich died on May 6, 1992, in her Paris home. After her funeral, she was buried next to her mother in Berlin. Dietrich was survived by her daughter Maria and her four grandchildren. Her daughter later wrote her own biography of her famous mother, Marlene Dietrich, in the mid-1990s.

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Heather Graham


Name : Heather Graham
Date Of Birth : 29 January 1970

Place Of Birth : Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA.

Sign : Sun in Aquarius, Moon in Libra

Height : 5' 8''

Education : Dropped out of UCLA

Occupation : Actress, Model

Sister : Aimee Graham (actress)

Father : Works For FBI

Ex-Companions : Kyle MacLachlan (actor)James Woods (actor)Elias Koteas (actor)Stephen Hopkins (director)Edward Burns (actor)

Fan Mail : Hetaher Graham28721 Timberland StreetAgoura Hills, CA 91301USA



On the 29th day of January1970, Heather Graham wasborn in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.While her strict- Catholic fatherwas busy learning anti-terroristtechniques for the FBI, Heatherwould attend her very firstelementary school in Virginia,where she had very fondmemories, particularly of thelandscape and people. Later,she would attend SumacElementary School, followedby Lindero Canyon MiddleSchool, and finally, AgouraHigh School, where she wouldspend some of her worstyears. While studying there, she always felt that she didn't really know how to talk topeople. Boys would have no time for her. People would tease her. She was evenconsidered a sort of ''theater geek'' by her classmates. Heather was neverconsidered part of the 'popular' crowd. Her family life didn't seem very comfortableeither, as Heather and her parents did not get along.After High School she began landing various roles such as License to Drive and thecritically acclaimed Drugstore Cowboy, and appearing on the popular televisionseries Twin Peaks. She eventually decided to enroll at the University of California atLos Angeles. There, she majored in English, but dropped out after only two years. Itwas, however, at UCLA where she first read one of her favorite books, The BrothersKaramazov. Little did she know that Dostoevsky would indirectly play a part in herlove life.For the next few years, she would go on to play various roles in films like SixDegrees of Separation, Don't Do It, and Even Cowgirls Get the Blues. Throughoutthis time, she won the admiration of several filmmakers, including James Tobackand Jon Favreau. One night, as legend has it, Favreau took Graham to go swingdancing, and 18 months later, she played Lorraine in the critically-acclaimedFavreau vehicle, Swingers. Toback eventually got his chance and cast her in theupcoming film, Two Girls and a Guy.In 1997 her mesmerizing performance as Roller Girl in Boogie Nights launched herinto the stardom that was long overdue.

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Heather Locklear



In The News: Actress and model Heather Locklear was arrested Saturday (September 27, 2008) on suspicion of driving under the influence of a controlled substance.
Locklear was pulled over by a California Highway Patrol officer, after a resident in the upscale Santa Barbara area reportedly witnessed her leaving a parking lot and "driving erratically," patrol spokesman Tom Marshall said.
The officer allegedly noticed Locklear's car parked on a state highway and blocking a lane in Montecito, a wealthy community about 90 miles northwest of Los Angeles.
"In talking with her, (the officer) determines that she seems to be under the influence of something," Marshall said.
Locklear, who was believed to be alone in the car, was tested for intoxication, booked on suspicion of driving under the influence of prescription medication and then released.
Locklear checked into an Arizona medical clinic in June to seek treatment for anxiety and depression. She returned home four weeks later.
"Heather has been dealing with anxiety and depression," publicist Sarah Fuller said June 24 in a statement. "She requested an in-depth evaluation of her medication and entered into a medical facility for proper diagnosis and treatment.”

Biography: Born September 25, 1961, in Los Angeles, California. Frequently referred to by the media as "The Queen of Mean," Locklear is popular for portraying some of the most notable television villains of the 1980s and 1990s.
Locklear was born and raised in the Los Angeles suburb of Thousand Oaks. Her father is the director of the registrar's office at UCLA. and her worked as an administrative assistant in the offices of the Walt Disney Company in the early 1990s.
Locklear entered UCLA in 1979 with the intention of majoring in psychology. Casual modeling jobs soon turned into regular work in television commercials for major companies. Pepsi, Polaroid and the California Dairy Council were only a few of her more popular clients. After a year at UCLA, Locklear dropped out to pursue a full time career in acting.
She made her first television series appearance in CHiPs in 1980 and also guest-starred on Eight Is Enough and Twirl. In 1981, Locklear got her big break when she successfully auditioned for a role in Dynasty- The popular prime-time soap opera starring John Forsythe, Joan Collins, and Linda Evans.



Locklear played Sammy Jo Carrington, the conniving wife of Blake Carrington's son Steven. After 13 weeks, Locklear was written out of the show, but was quickly offered a part on producer Aaron Spelling's other project, T.J. Hooker. Shortly after that Locklear was written back into Dynasty, making her the only actress working regularly in two popular prime-time series. Dynasty aired for nearly a decade, while T.J. Hooker was cancelled after five seasons.
Always the driven worker, Locklear appeared in several big-screen and television movies including Firestarter (1984) and Return of the Swamp Thing (1989). She also served as spokeswoman for a national chain of health clubs and produced an exercise video.
In 1993 Locklear rejoined Spelling as part of the cast of Melrose Place, a spinoff of the extremely successful Beverly Hills 90210. Prior to Locklear's appearance on Melrose, the show's ratings were dismal. After her arrival as Amanda Woodward, a scheming advertising executive and apartment-complex owner, the show's ratings soared.
While Melrose Place was cancelled in 1998, the following year Locklear had the opportunity to remake her image as mayoral advisor Caitlin Moore in the sitcom Spin City. Trading verbal jibes with co-stars Michael J. Fox (and later Charlie Sheen) Locklear boosted the shows ratings and demonstrated her facility with ensemble comedy. In 2003, she signed on to star in her own NBC sitcom, One Around the Park, playing a single mom with two kids, but the show never really got off the ground. Locklear returned to television the next year with LAX, a drama set in an airport. Again she faced disappointment. The show did not do well in the ratings and ended after 13 episodes.
Locklear received raves for her 2005 guest appearance on Boston Legal as a man-eating widow. Locklear has broadened her horizons beyond television recently with leading roles in a few films. She starred in Uptown Girls (2003) and The Perfect Man (2005) with Hillary Duff and Chris Noth.
Locklear's seven-year marriage to heavy-metal drummer Tommy Lee ended in divorce in August 1993. Locklear married Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora in December 1994. Three years later the couple had their first daughter, Ava Elizabeth Sambora. In 2006, the couple filed for divorce, which was finalized in April 2007.
© 2008 A&E Television Networks. All rights reserved.ROUND: white">In The News: Actress and model Heather Locklear was arrested Saturday (September 27, 2008) on suspicion of driving under the influence of a controlled.
Locklear was pulled over by a California Highway Patrol officer after a resident in the upscale Santa Barbara area reported seeing her leaving a parking lot and "driving erratically," patrol spokesman Tom Marshall said.



The officer allegedly noticed Locklear's car parked on a state highway and blocking a lane in Montecito, a wealthy community about 90 miles northwest of Los Angeles.
"In talking with her, (the officer) determines that she seems to be under the influence of something," Marshall said.
Locklear, who was believed to be alone in the car, was tested for alcohol and drugs, booked on suspicion of driving under the influence of prescription medication and released.
Locklear checked into an Arizona medical clinic in June to seek treatment for anxiety and depression. She returned home four weeks later.
"Heather has been dealing with anxiety and depression," publicist Sarah Fuller said June 24 in a statement. "She requested an in-depth evaluation of her medication and entered into a medical facility for proper diagnosis and treatment.”


Biography: Born September 25, 1961, in Los Angeles, California. Frequently referred to by the media as "The Queen of Mean," Locklear is popular for portraying some of the most notable television villains of the 1980s and 1990s.
Locklear was born and raised in the Los Angeles suburb of Thousand Oaks. Her father, Bill, is the director of the registrar's office at UCLA. Her mother, Diane, worked as an administrative assistant in the offices of the Walt Disney Company in the early 1990s.
Locklear entered UCLA in 1979 with the intention of majoring in psychology. Casual modeling jobs soon turned into regular work appearing in television commercials for major companies like Pepsi, Polaroid and the California Dairy Council. After a year at UCLA, Locklear dropped out to pursue acting full time.
She made her first television series appearance in CHiPs in 1980 and also guest-starred on Eight Is Enough and Twirl. In 1981, Locklear got her big break when she successfully auditioned for a role in Dynasty, the popular prime-time soap opera that starred John Forsythe, Joan Collins, and Linda Evans.
Locklear played Sammy Jo Carrington, the conniving wife of Blake Carrington's son, Steven. After 13 weeks, Locklear was written out of the show, but was quickly offered a part on producer Aaron Spelling's other project, T.J. Hooker. Shortly after that, Locklear was written back into Dynasty, making her the only actress working regularly in two popular prime-time series. Dynasty aired for nearly a decade, while T.J. Hooker was cancelled after five seasons.
At the same time, Locklear appeared in several big-screen and television movies including Firestarter (1984) and Return of the Swamp Thing (1989). She also served as spokeswoman for a national chain of health clubs and produced an exercise video.



In 1993, Locklear rejoined producer Spelling as part of the cast of Melrose Place, a spinoff of the extremely successful Beverly Hills 90210. Prior to Locklear's appearance on Melrose, the show's ratings were dismal. After her arrival as Amanda Woodward, a scheming advertising executive and apartment-complex owner, the show's ratings soared.
While Melrose Place was cancelled in 1998, the following year Locklear had the opportunity to remake her image as mayoral advisor Caitlin Moore in the sitcom Spin City. Trading verbal jibes with co-stars Michael J. Fox and later, Charlie Sheen, Locklear boosted the shows ratings and demonstrated her facility with ensemble comedy. In 2003, she signed on to star in her own NBC sitcom, One Around the Park, playing a single mom with two kids, but the show never really got off the ground. Locklear returned to television the next year with LAX, a drama set in an airport. Again she faced disappointment. The show did not do well in the ratings and ended after 13 episodes.
Locklear received raves for her 2005 guest appearance on Boston Legal as a man-eating widow. Locklear has broadened her horizons beyond television recently with leading roles in a few films. She starred in Uptown Girls (2003) and The Perfect Man (2005) with Hillary Duff and Chris Noth.
Locklear's seven-year marriage to heavy-metal drummer Tommy Lee ended in divorce in August 1993. Locklear married Bon Jovi guitarist Richie Sambora in December 1994. Three years later the couple had their first daughter, Ava Elizabeth Sambora. In 2006, the couple filed for divorce, which was finalized in April 2007.




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Frank Sinatra



Singer and film actor, born in Hoboken, New Jersey, USA. As a teenager, he organized a singing group, the Hoboken Four, which won first prize on the Major Bowes Original Amateur Hour.
Following graduation from the Drake Institute, he spent several years singing in New Jersey roadhouses before finding work in the late 1930s as a radio studio singer in New York City. In 1939, while performing at a club in New Jersey, he was heard by Harry James, who signed him to appear with his new swing band. After touring with James (1939), he rose to prominence with Tommy Dorsey's orchestra (1940–2).
Breaking away from Dorsey, in 1943 he began working solo and serving as emcee on the popular radio programme, Lucky Strike Hit Parade. He quickly emerged as one of the earliest and most adulated teen idols, and the hysteria he engendered in his ‘bobby-soxer’ fans culminated in rioting at the Paramount Theatre in New York on Columbus Day, 1944.
He remained a popular radio star throughout the 1940s and recorded many hits for Columbia Records (1943–52), but becoming unhappy with conditions there he moved to Capitol Records (1953–62). His recordings during this period came to epitomize American popular singing at its finest, with a style that maintained fidelity to a song's lyric and mood while imbuing it with subtle elements of jazz beat and phrasing. In 1960 he was a co-founder of Reprise Records, which he recorded for exclusively after 1963.
He also had a successful career as a film actor, beginning as a straight actor in Higher and Higher (1943). Throughout the 1950s and 1960s he played dramatic roles that brought him considerable acclaim, including From Here to Eternity (1953), for which he received an Academy Award as Best Supporting Actor.
This work brought him into the Hollywood community, where he became a member of the ‘Rat Pack’, a group that included his occasional concert partners, Sammy Davis Jr and Dean Martin. During these years he also had highly publicized marriages to film stars Ava Gardner and Mia Farrow.
His regular appearances at Las Vegas and such locales, the lifestyle that inevitably went with such a celebrity (bodyguards, hangers-on), a temperament that involved him in occasional fights, fabulous wealth, and various business ventures - all this added up in some people's minds to alleged involvement with the underworld, but nothing beyond personal acquaintances was ever proved.
In practice he was most generous in his gifts to both individuals and organizations, and his overall status in the entertainment industry earned him the title ‘Chairman of the Board’. He announced his retirement in 1971 but he returned for various concerts and tours in the next two decades. Among the many testaments to his special status as a pop superstar was his 1980 recording of ‘New York, New York’ which made him the first singer in history to have hit records in five consecutive decades.
Sinatra died on May 14, 1998, at the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after suffering a heart attack. His wife Barbara and daughter Nancy were at his side.


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Salma Hayek


Actress, director, producer. Born on September 2, 1966 in Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz, Mexico. Raised in a well-to-do Catholic home, Hayek is the daughter of a Spanish mother and Lebanese father. She attended a convent school in Louisiana at the age of 12 and lived with her aunt in Houston, Texas, during her teens. After a brief stint at a university in Mexico City, she dropped out to pursue a career in acting, eventually becoming a soap star in her native Mexico.
In 1991, the ambitious Hayek moved to Los Angeles, determined to improve her English and become a Hollywood actress. After small gigs, she landed a role opposite Antonio Banderas in 1995’s Desperado. The success of the film garnered her work in relatively lackluster movies, including the teen thriller The Faculty, 1999’s Wild Wild West and 1997’s Fools Rush In. Subsequently, Hayek became engaged with smaller, independent pictures and started her own production company, Ventanarosa.
Hayek’s increasingly intellectual and passionate approach to filmmaking culminated in her dream role in 2002’s Frida, in which she both produced and starred. The film was nominated for six Academy Awards, including a Best Actress nomination for Hayek, who was the first Latin actress to be nominated in the category.
Large-scale projects followed the success of Frida, including directing 2002’s The Maldonado Miracle, starring in the final episode of the Desperado trilogy, Once Upon a Time in Mexico, and appearing in the heist thriller After The Sunset with Pierce Brosnan.
Emmy-winner and Oscar nominee Salma Hayek is executive producer of the hit television series Ugly Betty which is based on the Colombian telenovela "Yo Soy Betty La Fea." The show premiered on ABC in September 2006 and won a Golden Globe for Best Comedy in 2007. Also in 2007, the show's star, America Ferrera, won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series.
In March 2007, Salma's publicist confirmed that the actress was engaged to billionaire Francois Pinault's son, Henri and that the couple were expecting their first child together.
Hayek gave birth to daughter Valentina Paloma Pinault on September 21 in Los Angeles. This is Hayek's first child, Henri is already a father of two. Salma Hayek previously dated several actors, including Edward Norton, Edward Atterton, and Richard Crenna, Jr.


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Woody Allen



(born Dec. 1, 1935, Brooklyn, N.Y., U.S.) American motion-picture director, screenwriter, actor, and author, best known for his bittersweet comic films containing elements of parody, slapstick, and the absurd. He was also known as a sympathetic director for women, writing strong and well-defined characters for them. Among his featured performers were Diane Keaton and Mia Farrow, with both of whom he was romantically involved.
Much of Allen's comic material derives from his urban Jewish middle-class background. Intending to be a playwright, Allen began writing stand-up comedy monologues while still in high school. His introduction to show business came a few years later when he was hired to write material for such television comedians as Sid Caesar and Art Carney. In the early 1960s, after several false starts, he acquired a following on the nightclub circuit, where he performed his own stand-up comedy routines. His comic persona was that of an insecure and doubt-ridden person who playfully exaggerates his own failures and anxieties.
Soon Allen began writing and directing plays and films, often also acting in the latter. He appeared in and wrote the screenplay for What's New, Pussycat? (1965), and his first play, Don't Drink the Water, appeared on Broadway in 1966. He starred in and directed the film Take the Money and Run (1969), a farcical comedy about an incompetent would-be criminal. The films that followed, Bananas (1971), Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex but Were Afraid to Ask (1972), and Sleeper (1973), employed a highly inventive, joke-oriented style and secured his reputation as a major comic filmmaker.
In Love and Death (1975), a parody of 19th-century Russian novels, critics discerned an increased seriousness beneath the comic surface. This was borne out in the next film that Allen directed, Annie Hall (1977), in which the self-deprecating humour of the protagonist (played by Allen) serves as but one motif in a rich portrayal of a contemporary urban romantic relationship. Annie Hall won four Academy Awards, including the award for best picture and Oscars for Allen as best director and for best screenplay (cowritten with Marshall Brickman). Allen also starred in the film version (1972) of his successful Broadway play Play It Again, Sam (1969) and in the motion picture The Front (1976).
Allen's subsequent films contain a paradoxical blend of comedy and philosophy and a juxtaposition of trivialities with major concerns. The commercial failure of Interiors (1978), a bleakly serious drama much influenced by Ingmar Bergman, was followed by the highly acclaimed seriocomedy Manhattan (1979). In later films such as Stardust Memories (1980), Zelig (1983), The Purple Rose of Cairo (1985), Hannah and Her Sisters (1986), Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989), and Alice (1990), Allen attempted with varying success to blend his vein of absurd humour with more realistic narratives, a wider range of character portrayals, and light but basically serious themes.

Through most of the 1990s, Allen worked largely outside of the Hollywood system, producing low-budget films that attracted loyal fans and that included Husbands and Wives (1992), Bullets over Broadway (1994), Mighty Aphrodite (1995), and Sweet and Lowdown (1999). In 1992 he found himself at the centre of a scandal when his longtime relationship with Farrow ended in a custody battle and the revelation that he was having an affair with Farrow's adopted daughter Soon-Yi Previn, whom Allen later married.
Allen continued to write and direct movies into the 21st century. He found success with Match Point (2005), a dramatic thriller in which his usual quirky humour was absent. The film received an Oscar nomination for best screenplay, and it featured actress Scarlett Johansson, who also starred in Allen's comedy-drama Scoop (2006).


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Larry Flynt



Publisher, civil liberties advocate. Born Larry Claxton Flynt, on November 1, 1942, in the isolated Appalachian village of Lakeville, Kentucky. He was the eldest of three children born into a poverty-stricken family, where his life was a struggle from the start. In 1951, tragedy struck when his four-year-old sister died of leukemia. A year later, the Flynt family unit began to disintegrate. Larry’s parents, Claxton and Edith, separated; his brother, Jimmy, stayed with his maternal grandparents; and Larry moved with his mother to Hamlet, Indiana.
In his early teens (under a false age), Flynt spent a year in the U.S. Army until he was discharged because of low test scores. He then joined his mother in Dayton, Ohio, where he held various jobs, including one at a General Motors Assembly Plant. Flynt soon grew frustrated with his job, and sought the familiar discipline of the military. This time he enlisted in the Navy, where he outshined first time recruits because of his previous experience. He eventually landed an esteemed position aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise. With a renewed confidence, Flynt took correspondence courses and received his high school equivalency.
After a five-year stint in the Navy, Flynt returned to Dayton, where he bought a local bar and transformed it into a successful strip club. Within a year he expanded business, opening similar clubs in Columbus, Toledo, Akron, and Cleveland. The establishments quickly gained loyal customers, which influenced Flynt to send out a short newsletter about upcoming events to his growing clientele.
During the next few years, Flynt’s life became a whirlwind of flashy clubs, cars, and women. He had fathered four children (all by different mothers) by 1974. Around this time, he also met a 17-year-old dancer named Althea Leasure, who became his most trusted advisor, eventually managing his 300 dancers. The couple married in 1976.
Fueled by his vision that the artsy layouts of Penthouse and the unattainable models of Playboy alienated the average man, Flynt set out to launch his own men’s magazine. Using his newsletter as a template, he nationally released the first issue of Hustler magazine in 1974. Geared toward working-class men, Hustler’s contents were implicitly anti-establishment and class antagonistic. The publication prided itself on hard core depictions of raw sex, which often included graphic nude photos of disabled, pregnant, and elderly women. One issue featured nude pictures of former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, while another depicted a woman being feed into a meat grinder. As expected, the magazine outraged anti-porn advocates and feminists.
From the first day Hustler hit the newsstands, Flynt challenged America’s interpretation of the First Amendment. Over the next few years, his brash style was showcased in a series of closely watched lawsuits that pitted freedom of speech against pornography. In May of 1976, Flynt was indicted on several counts of pandering obscenity and organized crime. The case was significant because it suggested that individual communities had the right to define obscenity. Initially, he was convicted and sentenced to 7-25 years in prison. However, the ruling was later overturned.



In 1977, a 60 Minutes producer introduced Flynt to Ruth Carter Stapleton, the evangelist sister of President Jimmy Carter. The two formed a fast friendship, which resulted in Flynt’s surprising and publicized conversion to Christianity. Under the guidance of Stapleton, Flynt altered his mindset about Hustler’s objective, vowing to no longer portray women in such a vulgar manner.
In March 1978, alleged gunman and white supremacist Joseph Paul Franklin shot Flynt and his lawyer, Gene Reeves, outside a Georgia courthouse. Flynt’s injuries included permanent paralysis of his legs, as well as a minor speech impediment. Shortly after, he renounced his enlightened Christian thinking. Althea and Flynt retreated to a lavish Bel Air estate where, over the next few years, the couple lived in their bedroom behind a steel door. In constant pain, Flynt grew dependent on painkillers, while Althea developed an addiction to heroin.
In the fall of 1983, Flynt again challenged the U.S. government when he threatened to publicize surveillance tapes that were potentially embarrassing to the FBI. When he refused to reveal the source of the tapes the courts fined him $10,000 a day. In a display of defiance, Flynt delivered his fine wearing a diaper made out of the American flag. He was tried and convicted for desecration of the flag, and spent six months (from February to July 1984) in a federal prison.
Flynt was once again thrust into the national spotlight in November 1983, when Reverend Jerry Falwell sued him for publishing a satirical cartoon, which implied that Falwell had an incestuous affair with his mother. The televangelist filed a libel suit for $45 million with the additional charge of intent to inflict emotional distress. Six months later, a jury found Flynt innocent of libel but awarded Falwell $200,000.
In the mid 1980s, Althea was diagnosed with AIDS. She spiraled into a severe depression, which culminated in her death by drowning. She was 34 years old. A devastated Flynt refocused his attention on his First Amendment crusade. Unsatisfied with the Falwell decision, he appealed the ruling, which was unanimously overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1988. The verdict was considered a landmark decision because it constitutionally protected offensive speech aimed at public figures (as long as it did not claim to be fact). The victory seemed to mark a turning point in Flynt’s life. Once again, he began to focus on his publishing empire, which had miraculously continued to thrive.
In 1996, Flynt re-emerged as the subject of a major motion picture, The People vs. Larry Flynt, starring Woody Harrelson (Flynt), Courtney Love (Althea), and Edward Norton (Reeves). Directed by Milos Foreman, the feature focused on Flynt’s career-long battle against censorship, portraying him as a charismatic champion of free speech who fought for his right to offend. That same year, he wrote an autobiography, An Unseemly Man: My Life as a Pornographer, Pundit, and Social Outcast, which candidly documented how he built a publishing enterprise out of the most violent and shockingly graphic mass circulation magazine in America.
To date, Larry Flynt Publications, Inc. consists of over 30 magazines, including Chic, and Barely Legal. Most recently, he released Rage magazine, which is geared toward Generation X-ers. Flynt currently lives in Beverly Hills with his current wife, Liz Berrios, whom he married in 1998.


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Jimmy Carter



Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter shouted his way back into the news Wednesday (Oct. 3, 2007), confronting Sudanese security officials who tried to block him from meeting with ethnic African refugees in a town in Darfur. The former president made it to a school in the town before the local security chief yelled that he couldn't go any farther.

"You can't go. It's not on the program!" the local security chief yelled. An angry Carter shot back, “We're going anyway! You don't have the power to stop me."

U.N. officials told Carter's entourage the Sudanese state police could block his way and his Secret Service detail urged him to get into a car and leave.

"I'll tell President Bashir about this," Carter said, referring to Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir. Carter agreed to a plan to meet tribal representatives at another location later Wednesday. But the delegates never showed up.

Carter was in Darfur as part of a delegation of respected international figures known as "The Elders, " which also includes billionaire businessman Richard Branson and Graca Machel, the wife of former South African President Nelson Mandela.

The Darfur conflict began when ethnic African rebels took up arms against the Arab-dominated Sudanese government four years ago. More than 200,000 people have been killed and 2.5 million displaced.

James Earl Carter, the 39th president (1977–81), was born in Plains, Georgia, USA. He trained at the US Naval Academy (1946) and served in the navy until 1953, during which time he worked under Admiral Hyman Rickover on the naval nuclear reactor project.


He left the navy to take over the family's peanut business, which he expanded. He served two terms as a Democrat in the Georgia legislature (1963–67), and after serving as a liberal governor of Georgia (1970–75), began campaigning for the presidency and won the Democratic nomination of 1976, narrowly beating President Gerald Ford.

In contrast to recent administrations, he had promised an open and progressive government responsive to the public, but despite a Democratic Congress, his presidency was notable more for good intentions than achievements. He did effect the Panama Treaty and the historic Camp David agreements between Israel and Egypt (1979), but his initial popularity waned during 1979–80 as a result of mounting economic difficulties and the seizure of US hostages in Iran, and he lost the 1980 election to Ronald Reagan.

Back in private life, he was active in national and international social concerns, taking a hands-on approach to everything from building homes for poor Americans to mediating between hostile parties, notably in the 1994 crisis in Haiti. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 2002 for his efforts to find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights, and to promote economic and social development.

He is the first U.S. president to write a novel, The Hornet's Nest (2004).


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Jerry Garcia



Band leader, guitarist, and songwriter. Born on August 1, 1942, in San Francisco, California. Garcia was the son of a Spanish immigrant who grew up to become a bandleader popular in the San Francisco area. He studied piano as a boy but turned to the guitar in his teens. He dropped out of school at age 17 and served nine months in the U.S. Army before being discharged for poor conduct. He began to play folk and blues guitar, alone or with pickup groups, in clubs in the San Francisco area while working as a salesman and music teacher in a music store.
In 1965 he formed a band, the Warlocks, but on discovering another group with that name, it was changed to the Grateful Dead (1966). Closely involved with the San Francisco hippie movement and the use of drugs such as LSD, the band first played "psychedelic" rock but moved on to a more diverse repertory of rock styles in the 1970s. From around 1974 the band's members began to go their own ways, and Garcia made solo appearances and albums. In the 1980s he became heavily addicted to drugs, and after being arrested in 1985 was sent to a treatment center. After emerging from a diabetic coma, he decided to turn his life around, and the band made a comeback (1987) with a hit single, "Touch of Gray" and an album, In the Dark.
Garcia and the rest of the band enjoyed this new wave of success and continued to tour, drawing legions of fans—new and old—to their shows. The Grateful Dead had built quite a following over the years and their loyal fans, sometimes called "Deadheads," were known to travel around the country to catch their concerts. Unfortunately, the show could not go on forever. Despite Garcia's efforts to improve his lifestyle, all of the years of hard living caught up with him. He died of heart failure on August 9, 1995, in Forest Knolls, California.


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Judy Collins


Singer. Born Judith Marjorie Collins on May 1, 1939, in Seattle, Washington. As a child, Collins was considered a piano prodigy, but she soon switched to guitar to pursue her love of folk music. She moved to New York City where she played in bars and coffeehouses until she signed with Elektra Records, releasing her first album in 1961 at age 22.
Her first gold album, 1967’s Wildflowers, included her own compositions as well as a cover of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now,” for which she won a Grammy Award for Best Folk Performance. Subsequent albums, including 1968's Who Knows Where the Time Goes produced by then-boyfriend Stephen Stills, established her reputation as a folksinger. In 1975, she won her second Grammy, this time for Song of the Year for her rendition of “Send in the Clowns.” She continues to record and tour.
Collins is the author of a memoir, Trust Your Heart and two novels. She also directed the 1974 documentary Antonia: A Portrait of the Woman about her piano instructor, which was nominated for an Academy Award.


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Debbie Reynolds



Actress, singer. Born Mary Frances Reynolds, on April 1, 1932, in El Paso, Texas. Reynolds, who got her start in beauty pageants before being discovered by a Warner Bros. film scout, made her cinematic debut in a modest part in 1948's June Bride, followed by a more noticeable role in musical The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady (1950). Signing with MGM later that year, she showcased her flair for impersonation in Three Little Words, in which she portrayed 1920s vocalist Helen Kane.
Known for her boundless energy and pert demeanor, Reynolds' most memorable turn was in Singin' in the Rain (1952), in which she offered a spirited performance opposite Gene Kelly and Donald O'Connor. Parts in lighthearted fare followed, including The Affairs of Dobie Gillis (1953), Athena (1954), and The Catered Affair (1956). The following year, Reynolds secured a place at No. 1 on the pop charts with the sentimental ballad "Tammy" from the popular romantic film Tammy and the Bachelor, in which she starred opposite Leslie Nielsen.
In 1964, Reynolds won the respect of her peers with her title role in The Unsinkable Molly Brown, for which she received an Academy Award nomination. After starring in the short-lived television sitcom The Debbie Reynolds Show (1969) and the campy feature What's the Matter with Helen? (1971), Reynolds did not act in films for the next two decades. Instead, she turned toward stage work, spending the next few years performing in Las Vegas nightclubs and on Broadway, where she received a Tony Award nomination for the 1973 revival of Irene. After a recurring role on the TV sitcom Alice, Reynolds returned to Broadway, where she replaced Lauren Bacall in the lead role of the musical version of Woman of the Year (1983). In 1989, Reynolds began to tour nationally with a stage production of The Unsinkable Molly Brown.
Reynolds returned to feature films in 1992, with a cameo appearance in The Bodyguard followed by a supporting role in Oliver Stone's Heaven and Earth (1993). In 1996, she headlined her first film in 25 years, when she was cast in the title role of Albert Brooks' endearing comedy Mother. Currently, Reynolds has a recurring role on the hit NBC sitcom Will & Grace.
Reynold's sunny film persona belied a life behind the scenes that was filled with stress and unhappiness. In 1955, she wed singer Eddie Fisher, but was embroiled in a media scandal when it was revealed that he was having an affair with actress Elizabeth Taylor. The couple had two children, Todd and Carrie (an accomplished actress and writer), before divorcing in 1959. The following year, Reynolds married shoe mogul Harry Karl, who funded his gambling habit with most of her money. Burdened with his debt, Reynolds filed for divorce in 1973. In 1985, she wed real estate developer Richard Hamlett; they divorced in 1996.


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Ron(ald William) Howard



Actor, director, producer. Born March 1, 1954 in Duncan, Oklahoma. Born into a show business family, Ron Howard began appearing regularly on stage, television, and in films from an early age. Among his best-known TV roles are Opie Taylor from The Andy Griffith Show (1960–8) and Richie Cunningham from Happy Days (1973–80). He also made several notable performances in films, including The Music Man, The Courtship of Eddie’s Father, American Graffiti and The Shootist.
In the 1980s, Ron Howard gave up acting to pursue a career as a movie director and producer, making his directorial debut with Grand Theft Auto in 1977. He has had a prolific career making movies that span genres, experiment ambitiously with the medium, and appeal to mainstream audiences. Successes include Splash (1984), Cocoon (1985), Parenthood (1991), Apollo 13 (1995), A Beautiful Mind (2002, Oscar Best Director; Golden Globe Best Film), and Cinderella Man (2005). His next film, 2008’s Frost/Nixon, covers the post-Watergate TV interviews between British talk-show host David Frost and former president Richard Nixon.
In 1985, Howard started a production company, Imagine Films Entertainment, with Brian Grazer. The company is responsible for such hit TV shows as Felicity, 24 and Arrested Development. Howard lives in Connecticut with his wife, Cheryl, and their four children.


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Lisa Marie Presley



In The News: Singer Lisa Marie Presley and her husband Michael Lockwood welcomed twin girls on Tuesday (October 7, 2008).

"The babies and mom are happy and healthy and resting at home," Presley spokeswoman Cindy Guagenti announced Saturday (October 11, 2008).

The infant girls, named Finley and Harper, were delivered by C-section at 2:46 p.m. and weighed in at 5 lbs., 15 oz. and 5 lbs., 2 oz.

Presley lives in Los Angeles, but Guagenti would only say the births took place somewhere on the West Coast.

The girls are the first children together for Presley, the daughter of Elvis Presley, the "King of Rock 'n' Roll," and Lockwood, who is a music producer.

Presley also has a daughter (Riley, 19, a model) and a son (Benjamin, 15) with ex-husband Danny Keough. Presley was also formerly married to pop singer Michael Jackson and actor Nicolas Cage.


Biography: Lisa Marie Presley was born on February 1, 1968, the only child of Elvis Presley and his wife, actress Priscilla Beaulieu Presley. Her parents divorced on October 11, 1973, and Priscilla received custody of Lisa Marie, although her father saw her as often as he could and lavished her with gifts.

When Elvis died on August 16, 1977, Lisa Marie was his sole heir and inherited Graceland, his legendary estate in Memphis, Tennessee.

As a teenager, Lisa Marie became a member of the Church of Scientology, where she met her first husband, Danny Keough. The couple married in 1988, and had two children, Danielle and Benjamin, before divorcing in 1994.

On May 26, 1994, Lisa Marie married pop-music superstar Michael Jackson in a private ceremony in the Dominican Republic. Lisa Marie first met Jackson when she was a child and her father took her to a Jackson Five concert in Las Vegas, where Michael was performing with his brothers.


The Presley-Jackson marriage received intense media scrutiny: some viewed it as a public relations ploy to improve Jackson’s poor image, which had been tarnished by charges of child abuse, while others thought it fitting that the “King of Pop” had married the daughter of the “King of Rock ‘n’ Roll.”

The couple went on national television to defend their marriage and shared a memorable on-air kiss at the MTV Music Awards. Presley also appeared in Jackson’s video “You Are Not Alone.” Despite these efforts, the marriage ended in divorce in January 1996.

After her second divorce, Presley has had modeling jobs, signed a record deal, and been involved in projects with the Graceland estate. Her debut album, To Whom It May Concern, is due out in 2003.

In late 1999, Presley became engaged to John Oszajca, a Hawaiian-born singer-songwriter, but the couple broke their engagement in the spring of 2001.

In August 2002, she married actor Nicolas Cage; they divorced three months later. She married for a fourth time in February 2006 to guitarist and music producer Michael Lockwood.


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Mel Gibson



In the News: Los Angeles Superior Court Judge, Gregory Alarcon, says Oscar-winner Mel Gibson will have to sit for a deposition over the planning and filming of The Passion of the Christ. Screenwriter Benedict Fitzgerald is suing Gibson after he says he was underpaid for the script.
Fitzgerald's attorneys claimed Tuesday (November 25, 2008) that the writer took a reduced fee to complete the script with the understanding that the movie was a low-budget production. He also says that Gibson promised he would refrain from taking any revenue until he had properly compensated his crew.
Gibson's spending habits during filming included what Fitzgerald says were "tens of thousands" of dollars on his children's tuition and a $78,000 chiropractor bill.
Alarcon ordered Gibson to appear for a deposition by mid-January, even after the star’s attorneys had successfully convinced the judge to keep his money matters out of public record. In a court declaration, Gibson claims he was unaware of negotiations on the project, insisting his company's accountant handled all financial transactions.
Biography: Actor, director, producer. Born on January 3, 1956, in Peekskill, New York. Gibson was the sixth of 11 children born to Hutton and Ann Gibson, who were Roman Catholics of Irish descent. Shortly after the onset of the Vietnam War, Hutton Gibson relocated his family to Australia for fear that his sons would be drafted into battle. Mel spent the remainder of his childhood in Sydney, where he attended an all-boys Catholic high school.
After Gibson's high school graduation, he considered becoming a chef or journalist. However, when his sister submitted an application on his behalf to The National Institute of Dramatic Art in Sydney, he decided to audition. Without any prior acting experience, he was accepted and enrolled in the drama school. While there, he made his stage debut in a production of Romeo and Juliet, and his screen debut in the low-budget film Summer City (1977). Upon his graduation that year, Gibson joined the Southern Australian Theater Company, where he appeared in the title roles of classical productions, such as Oedipus and Henry IV.
After conquering the stage, Gibson tried his hand at television, landing his first role on the Australian series The Sullivans. In 1979, Gibson graduated to mainstream cinema with his role as a futuristic warrior in Mad Max, and as a mentally retarded man in love with Piper Laurie in Tim, for which he earned his first Australian Film Institute (AFI) Award for Best Actor. Furthermore, Mad Max became the biggest commercial success of any Australian film, grossing over $100 million worldwide.
Gibson received his second AFI Award for Best Actor for his performance as a patriotic idealist in Peter Weir’s World War I drama Gallipoli (1981). Later that year, he reprised his role as the leather-clad hero in Mad Max 2 (1981). The film was released in the U.S. as The Road Warrior in 1982, and its success established Gibson as an international star. His second collaboration with Weir, The Year of Living Dangerously (1982), featured the actor in his first romantic lead alongside Sigourney Weaver.

Gibson’s American film debut in The River (1984) was considered a success. The film earned four Oscar nominations, including a Best Actress nod for Sissy Spacek. In 1985, he returned to Australia to complete the Mad Max trilogy in the less impressive Mad Max: Beyond the Thunderdome, which co-starred singer Tina Turner. Later that year, Gibson's popularity was confirmed when he was featured on the cover of People magazine as the first ever "Sexiest Man Alive."
After a brief hiatus, Gibson returned to the screen with the blockbuster hit Lethal Weapon (1987), playing volatile cop, Martin Riggs, opposite Danny Glover's by-the-book character, Roger Murtaugh. The success of Lethal Weapon inspired three sequels - Lethal Weapon 2 (1989), Lethal Weapon 3 (1992), and Lethal Weapon 4 (1998), all of which featured Glover and Gibson in their respective roles as good cop and bad cop.
In Franco Zeffirelli's Hamlet (1990), Gibson gave a notable performance as the tormented prince. In addition, Hamlet was the first film produced by Gibson's newly formed production company, Icon productions. Other productions by Icon included the Beethoven biopic Immortal Beloved (1994), and the 1997 remake of Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenia.
In the early '90s, Gibson appeared in a few poorly received films, including Air America (1990) and the sappy Forever Young (1992). He made his feature directorial debut with the 1993 tearjerker The Man Without a Face, in which he also played a severely disfigured burn victim.
In 1995, Gibson released his most passionate project to date, directing and starring as the 13th century Scottish nobleman, Sir William Wallace, in the medieval epic Braveheart. The film triumphed at the Oscars, winning top honors in five categories, including Best Picture and Best Director. Gibson diversified his range of characters later the same year, when he provided the voice of John Smith in Disney's Pocahontas (1995).
In the late '90s, Gibson starred in a handful of crime thrillers, including 1996's Ransom (with Renee Russo and Gary Sinise), 1997's Conspiracy Theory (with Julia Roberts), and the independent film Payback (1999). In 2000, he headlined the highly anticipated war saga The Patriot, in which he played a reluctant hero during the American Revolution. Also that year, he starred in the romantic comedy What Women Want, costarring Helen Hunt, Lauren Holly, and Bette Midler. In 2002, Gibson headlined another box-office hit, M. Night Shyamalan's Signs, where he plays a rural Pennsylvania farmer whose life takes a drastic turn when 500-foot crop circles appear in his cornfields.
Mel Gibson's next project put him back in the director's chair in an ambitious film about the final 12 hours of Jesus' life entitled The Passion of the Christ. Released in 2004, the unlikely blockbuster made headlines for its controversial adaptation of a biblical story. A devout Catholic, Gibson said that the Holy Spirit was making the film through him, "I was just directing traffic." His next historical epic, Apocalypto, focused on the decline of the Mayan civilization and was released in December 2006.


In recent years, Mel Gibson has been accused of being anti-Semitic and racist. He has also openly acknowledged his battle with alcohol addiction. In 2006, he pled no contest to a drunk-driving charge and admitted to making anti-Semitic remarks during his arrest. He was sentenced to three years of probation, including mandatory AA meetings.
Gibson has kept a relatively low profile since this incident. He served as a producer on the 2008 PBS documentary Another Day in Paradise and as an executive producer for the related PBS miniseries Carrier.
After years of directing and producing, Gibson has stepped back in front of the cameras for the upcoming thriller Edge of Darkness. He stars as a police detective who investigates his daughter’s death.
In 1980, Gibson married Robyn Moore; they have seven children. His eldest daughter, Hannah, married musician Kenny Wayne Shepherd in 2006.


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J.D. Salinger


Writer, born on January 1, 1919 in New York City, New York, USA. Jerome David Salinger graduated from Valley Forge Military Academy (1936) and studied at New York University, Ursinus College, and Columbia University. He began to write when young, worked as an entertainer on a cruise ship (1941), served in the army (1942–6), and began to publish short stories. The Catcher in the Rye (1951), his first and only novel, was an immediate success, generating a cult-like dedication among many readers. His subsequent collections of short stories, many of which first appeared in the New Yorker, such as Franny and Zooey (1961) and Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction (1963), raised more speculation about the elusive writer. Critics have been puzzled by his work - he is considered to be either too intellectual or too sentimental, a supreme stylist or a didactic practitioner of self-absorbed musings. He also became something of a media preoccupation by virtue of his becoming a recluse for most of his adult life. About all that has ever been known of his personal life is that he lived and wrote in Cornish, NH. He allowed publication of Hapworth 16, 1924 (first published in 1965) as a novella in 1997.


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Brenda Lee



Born Brenda Mae Tarpley on December 11, 1944 in Atlanta GA., Brenda Lee's recording career has spanned an unbelievable five decades. Brenda's parents, Grayce and Reuben, were poor but managed to support their children through carpentry and long hours in the Georgia cotton mills. Brenda sang from the time she was a baby. When her sister entered her into a talent contest when she was three, Brenda won. She continued to sing at local halls and baseball games. When she was only eight years old, Brenda's loving father was tragically killed in a construction accident. Brenda's singing jobs became necessary to the financial survival of her family. Brenda and her mother Grayce worked tirelessly getting Brenda singing jobs. A local DJ named Peanuts Fairclough shortened her name from Brenda Mae Tarpley to Brenda Lee saying that it would be easier to remember when she was famous. Brenda's mother remarried a man named Jay Rainwater who opened a record store where Brenda sang on weekends. Her first break came in 1955 when she was only ten. She turned down a performing gig in order to meet Country & Western star Red Foley. He was blown away by the little girl's incredibly powerful voice. Foley put her on his television show, "The Junior Jamboree," and Brenda was a sensation when she sang songs like "Jambalya" and the explosive, "Dynamite." From that day on, Brenda was nicknamed, Little Miss Dynamite.In 1957, the family eventually moved to Nashville where Brenda was taken under the wing of manger Dub Allbritten and the legendary producer Owen Bradley. These two men were both very loving father figures in her life. Young Brenda toured the country with stars like Patsy Cline, Mel Tillis, and George Jones. By 12, she starred at the Grand Ole Opry and in Vegas. In September of 1959, Brenda rocketed to number one on the Rock and Roll charts with, "Sweet Nothings." Although Brenda was making good money, most of it was held in trust until she was 21 due to the Jackie Coogan Law. In 1959, Brenda's stepfather deserted the family leaving them broke. Even though 15-year-old Brenda was touring the world and singing her heart out, Brenda, her mother, her brother and two sisters were forced to live in a trailer park on 75 dollars a month. In 1960, Brenda hit the top of the charts with "I'm Sorry." It was her biggest hit to date and won her both a Grammy nomination and a gold record. She petitioned the court to let her have a little more money and get her family out of the trailer park. She won and bought her mom a house, which subsequently burned down.Brenda with her huge singing voice and her diminutive stature (she was only 4'9" tall) was confusing for the foreign press who had not seen her in person. A rumor began circulating in France that she was a "32- year-old midget." Her tour in France at the tender age of 15 led to over-engagements. The normally blas? French press compared her to the legendary Judy Garland. She had fans all over the world. At the age of 18, she met and fell in love with Ronnie Shacklett (6'4" tall). Against the wishes of her manager and her mother, they were married. They had two daughters, Julie and Jolie. Julie's birth was very traumatic. She was born with a Hyalin Membrane disease and was not expected to live. Her life was saved by the brilliance of Dr. Mildred Stalman -- the same doctor who had attended the births of the Kennedy Children.It was the mid 1960's, and the Beatles had taken over the North American music scene. Her longtime manager and father figure Dub Allbritten died. Brenda became depressed and could not find a place for herself in the music industry that she loved so much. And the years on the road caught up with her. In 1974, Brenda was rushed to hospital with life threatening blood clots. Emergency surgery saved her life. Eventually, Brenda returned to her country and western roots. In late 1974, she recorded songwriter Kris Kristopherson's first song, "Nobody Wins." It hit the top ten on the Country Charts, and Brenda was back on top with a string of C&W hits. She received awards and accolades from The Georgia Music Hall of Fame and The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. Brenda continued to perform and tour at a relentless pace. Her 1989 appearance on K.D. Lang's album "Shadowland" gave her yet another Grammy nomination. In 1998, Owen Bradley died, and Brenda was completely devastated. She mustered every fiber in her being to sing "There Will Be Peace In the Valley" at his funeral. In 1999, Brenda was diagnosed with cysts on her vocal chords. Facing surgery that may permanently damage her vocal chords, Brenda chose instead to take time off and rest. Although not cured, the damage has been halted. Still married to her loving Ronnie and with her children close by, Brenda continues to sing her heart out for audiences all over the world. She is still "Little Miss Dynamite."


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