Leland Palmer

Leland Palmer

Nascimento : 1945-06-16, Port Washington, New York, U.S.

História

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Leland Palmer (born June 16, 1945, Port Washington, New York) is an American actress, dancer, and singer who has appeared on stage, in motion pictures, and on television. She appeared on Broadway in Bajour, A Joyful Noise, Hello, Dolly!, Applause, and Pippin. Palmer received two Tony Award nominations: in 1967 for featured actress in a musical (Miss Jimmie in A Joyful Noise), and in 1973 for actress in a musical (Fastrada in Pippin). Her U.S. television appearances include guest roles on Love, American Style; Laverne & Shirley; and Rhoda. She was also a regular on Dinah Shore's summer variety television show, Dinah and Her New Best Friends in 1976. To motion-picture audiences, Palmer is known best for Bob Fosse's All That Jazz (1979), in which she played Audrey Paris, a character believed to be modeled on Fosse's wife, Gwen Verdon. Palmer is known now as Linda Posner. Although she no longer performs, she continues to work with community theatres in California. She most recently served as choreographer of 42nd Street Moon-San Francisco's production of Irma La Douce. Description above from the Wikipedia article Leland Palmer (actress), licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Perfil

Leland Palmer

Filmes

O Show Deve Continuar
Audrey Paris
Joe Gideon (Roy Scheider) é um diretor de cinema e coreógrafo mulherengo, que trabalha simultaneamente na edição de seu filme e nos ensaios de um musical. Nisto ele sofre um infarte e, com a vida por um fio, revê momentos da sua vida, transformando-os em sua imaginação em números musicais. Sua atenção é disputada por 4 mulheres: sua namorada, a ex-esposa, a filha e a Morte, representada por uma bela loira vestida de branco, que conversa com ele de forma bem instigante.
Rudolph Valentino - O Ídolo, O Homem
Marjorie Tain
In 1926 the tragic and untimely death of a silent screen actor caused female moviegoers to riot in the streets and in some cases to commit suicide...
James Dean
Arlene
A dramatization of the story of legendary movie actor James Dean. The film's writer, William Bast, had roomed with Dean in the early '50s, when both were trying to break into films as actors, and was his lover for a time.