Word: actresses
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...serve as "cohost" of a two-hour morning program. Still on the rolls of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, the former actress will collect minimum scale for her appearance, $701. The money will go to charity. Nancy Reagan's real reward is the opportunity to promote her favorite cause-the fight against drug and alcohol abuse among the young. The timing of the broadcast, which had been planned for months, turns out to be advantageous. Washington has been buzzing about Nancy Reagan's health, tying rumors of illness and low morale to her husband...
...which is displaying his work in conjunction with the publication of Karsh: A Fifty-Year Retrospective. The book ranges from his classic picture of Winston Churchill, which became a symbol of British resistance during World War II, to a recent photo of Italy's leading lady. "When an actress has the intelligence and professionalism as well as the beauty of Sophia Loren," says Karsh, "photographing her becomes a highly enjoyable collaboration...
...scandal caused by his action was compounded when Dickens took the extraordinary step of publishing a statement about the separation in the London Times. In tones of outrage he denied that another woman was involved; in reality he was having a secret love affair with a young actress. Had it not been for his public statement, few newspaper readers would have heard of the Dickens marital debacle, Rose points out. "Dickens was foundering in the fantasy that his private life was public, uniquely visible, centrally important to his readers...
Shortly after she finished filming the spy thriller Gorky Park in Finland and Sweden, Polish Actress Joanna Pacula, 25, began mastering the fearsome Los Angeles freeways ("My car is like my purse, you have to take it everywhere") and polishing her English before a promotion tour to plug the movie, which will be released in December. Pacula plays Irina, a Siberian dissident who gets mixed up with a triple murder in the park and then falls in love with a Soviet detective, played by William Hurt. After such a heavy role, she says, "I'd like...
...above his apartment in Adelphi Terrace, London. At 3 a.m. he sent a note of protest to the disturbers. At 5 a.m. the noise and the party ceased. The party was given by two newlyweds, David Tennant (son of Viscountess Grey of Fallodon) and Mrs. Tennant (nee Hermione Baddeley, actress). They wore orange sleeping suits of silk; the guests, too, came in blazing pajamas; many brought bottles of hair restorers, ink, gasoline, Thames water. Champagne was not lacking. After the party, Mrs. Tennant said: "Bottle and pajama parties ought to be the vogue in weather like the present . . . I think...