Lynn Hancock

Lynn Hancock

Birth : 1951-01-25, Palo Alto, California, USA

History

The lovely and talented Lynn Hancock was born on January 25, 1951 in Palo Alto, California. Lynn grew up in Yakima, Washington. In 1970 she won the title Miss Yakima in a local beauty pageant. Hancock had a regrettably brief acting career; she was especially memorable as bitchy secretary Miss Friedemeyer in the horror cult favorite "Evilspeak" and had a recurring role on the music/comedy variety TV series "The Nashville Palace." Lynn quit acting in 1985 and moved back to Washington. On March 14, 1985 she married her husband Eric Hahn; the couple are the proud parents of a son. An avid martial artist, Lynn earned a black belt in American Kenpo Karate and opened a martial arts school in 1997. Hancock has a 3rd degree black belt and is the Washington State regional representative for the American Kenpo Legacy. Moreover, Hancock has been involved with the physical fitness industry for over forty years; she started out in a small women's gym in Yakima, Washington. She became certified with the American Council on Exercise in 1995. In 2006 Lynn and Eric formed the company Get Real Fit. Get Real Fit has produced a series of fitness DVDs for women. In addition, Hancock has written martial arts manuals and teaches self-defense courses. In 2008 Lynn Hancock became certified as a Lifestyle and Weight Management Consultant with the American Council on Exercise.

Profile

Lynn Hancock

Movies

Good-bye Cruel World
Martha - JoyCrotch Jeans Woman
The story involves newscaster Rodney Pointsetter (Shawn) who is so depressed between his job and his family that he tries to make a film about his life, which he intends to culminate with his own suicide. It is often interrupted with irrelevant comic sketches that an emcee claims that the audience prefers to see.
Evilspeak
Miss Friedemeyer
Bullied by classmates, a pudgy military-school student fights back by computer with the devil.
Enola Gay: The Men, the Mission, the Atomic Bomb
The story of Col. Paul Tibbets and his crew who flew the Enola Gay, the plane that dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, bringing World War II to a close.