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WorkinGirls describes the daily life of a company which employs six girls and which records their behavior: Karine, the sadistic director, Nathalie, the mother with a large family, the psychologically disturbed Helen, Deborah, the nymphomaniac, and Sophie, the welcoming but very lazy switchboard operator.
Working Girl is an American sitcom television series that aired on NBC from April 16 to July 30, 1990. Loosely based [1] on the 1988 film of the same name starring Melanie Griffith, [2] the series stars Sandra Bullock [3] [4] [5] as Tess McGill (Melanie Griffith's character), a role that was initially meant as a starring vehicle for Nancy McKeon.
Working Girl: Alice Baxter [10] 1992 Alan & Naomi: Ruth Silverman [11] 1995 Boys on the Side: Anna [12] 2002 Undisputed: Darlene Early [13] White Oleander: Miss Martinez [14] 2003 National Security: Councilwoman [15] The Singing Detective: Nurse Nozhki [16] 2004 In Good Company: Alicia [17] Woman Thou Art Loosed: Miss Rodgers [18] 2005 A Lot ...
Upon Charlie's abrupt return in season 5, he and Marnie briefly decide to run away together until Marnie realizes Charlie isn't the person he used to be. Katherine and Jeff Lavoyt, played by Kathryn Hahn and James LeGros respectively (season 1), the parents of two young girls that Jessa babysat. Katherine is a documentary filmmaker, and Jeff is ...
Girls explores several topics across its six seasons. Dunham explains Girls never started with an "overt, political, or even [exact] artistic mission statement." [10] While the primary themes in the television show explore interpersonal relationships—particularly female friendship and romantic affairs—New York City culture, coming-of-age struggle, career, mental health, artistic boundaries ...
When Yellowstone premiered in 2018, fans couldn't get enough of the Dutton family. With its complex characters and fascinating storylines that touch on themes of power and greed, the compelling ...
Tori Spelling, Jenn Tran, Anna Delvey, Reginald VelJohnson, a.k.a. Carl Winslow from "Family Matters," and more will compete for the Mirrorball Trophy.
After screening at the Cannes Film Festival, Working Girls was released theatrically in the United States by Miramax, opening in New York City on February 5, 1987. [1] It was a commercial success, grossing $1,777,378 in the U.S. out of the estimated budget of $300,000. [6]