Word: jaclyn
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Angeles Correspondent Alessandra Stanley, who interviewed a dozen or so expectant actresses, found normally high-pressured and publicity-wise film stars surprisingly serene and open. "Jaclyn Smith is so into pregnancy and motherhood, I felt like I was talking to Melanie Wilkes in Gone With the Wind," says Stanley. "And after almost every interview, the mother-to-be would turn to me and ask, 'But when are you planning to have a baby?' " Chicago's Bonnie Bell had a ready answer for that one: "I just did." Bell, 36, gave birth to her first child last June...
...steed that appears on page 53, designed by Artist Mari Kaestle in foam rubber and feathers, was attached to an especially sturdy metal stand so pregnant Model Lori Coen could perch in perfect security. As for the cover image itself, after gallantly twirling and bouncing through two studio sessions, Jaclyn Smith warned Photographer Raúl Vega-facetiously, of course...
...rarefied heights of Bel Air, Calif., Charlie's Angel turned Madonna Jaclyn Smith, 35, enjoys the seventh month of her pregnancy in the cool interior of her eleven-room minimansion. She became pregnant shortly after portraying Jacqueline Kennedy in a television movie. "I would put on the maternity padding to play Jackie Kennedy," she says, "and it felt so right. I found myself whispering, 'I wish, I wish...
Some women buy a new wardrobe when pregnant. Others redecorate their nests. Jaclyn Smith tackled a big one. The eleven-room French-colonial-style house in Bel Air that the actress is renovating is an architectural celebration of her swelling condition. The edifice is filled with French-provincial antiques. Soon it will be enhanced by a crib that replicates in loving detail Smith's own antique bed, complete with details like hand-painted flowers and gold leaf. The master builder is sedately curled up on a plush flower-print couch in an upstairs parlor. Now seven months pregnant, she radiates...
...dominatrix regalia: breeches, riding crop and withering stare. If only the film had been subjected to some of the same discipline. The camera glides discreetly through Newport drawing rooms and Georgetown dining rooms-always the visitor on a guided tour, never the Knowledgeable Source with some dirt to dish. Jaclyn Smith is a stunner and a competent actress; as J.F.K., James Franciscus brings crinkled eyes and a Boston accent that he engages seemingly at whim. But the movie never comes to life, as love story or tragedy or even tattletale. The Queen of Celebrity deserves better...