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Merle "Mimsy" Farmer (born February 28, 1945) [2] [3] is a former French-American actress, artist and sculptor. She began her career appearing in several Hollywood studio films, such as Spencer's Mountain (1963) and Bus Riley's Back in Town (1965), followed by roles in the exploitation films Devil's Angels and Riot on Sunset Strip (both 1967).
The film stars Frank Alesia, Aldo Ray, Mimsy Farmer, Michael Evans, Anna Strasberg, Laurie Mock, Gene Kirkwood, Tim Rooney, and features musical appearances by The Standells and The Chocolate Watch Band. Earlier that year, Farmer, Mock and Kirkwood appeared in Hot Rods to Hell, where Farmer portrayed the bad girl and Mock a vulnerable virgin ...
Spencer's Mountain is a 1963 American family drama film written, directed and produced by Delmer Daves, from the 1961 novel of the same name by Earl Hamner Jr., [2] and starring Henry Fonda and Maureen O'Hara. [3]
Mimsy may refer to: Mimsy, a word introduced by Lewis Carroll in his poem "Jabberwocky" Mimsy Were the Borogoves, a short story partly about the poem; a nanotechnology object from the future in The Last Mimzy, a 2007 science fiction film, based on the above short story; nickname of Merle Mimsy Farmer (born 1945), American actress
Farmer Wants a Wife returns for its third season on FOX with a new host — Kimberly Williams-Paisley — and four new farmers: Matt Warren, Jay Woods, John Sansone and Colton Hendricks, who will ...
Mimsy Farmer was working in a hospital in Canada when director Dan Haller called asking if she wanted to be in the film. "I jumped at the chance to go to Europe and also to see my brother Philip, who was living in London at the time", she later recalled. "It was the best move I’d made up to then and I loved traveling in France, Spain, and ...
A dead-end dirt road cutting through rural Wisconsin leads to a pasture dotted with shaggy-coated Highland cattle, fluffy Icelandic sheep and a vintage Airstream trailer that farmer Brit Thompson ...
He did, however, give praise to Mimsy Farmer and said of her that she "deserves to get some of those Mia Farrow roles." [7] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film one star out of four and wrote, "Argento's script contains more red herrings than the Cape Cod Room. Each time evidence overwhelmingly points to a possible threat to our ...