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Mary Elizabeth "Sissy" Spacek (/ ˈ s p eɪ s ɛ k /; born December 25, 1949) is an American actress. She is the recipient of numerous accolades , including an Academy Award , three Golden Globe Awards , a Screen Actors Guild Award , and nominations for four BAFTA Awards , three Primetime Emmy Awards , and a Grammy Award .
After fifteen years of traveling around the world, famous photographer Gussie (Spacek) returns for a two-week break to the Maryland coastal resort where she grew up. She meets her high school sweetheart Henry (Kline), now married and running the local newspaper he inherited from his father. Soon after, an awkward and tension-filled romance ensues.
If These Walls Could Talk is a 1996 American anthology television film, broadcast on HBO.It follows the plights of three women and their experiences with abortion.Starring Anne Heche, Cher, Demi Moore and Sissy Spacek, each of the three stories takes place in the same house, albeit 22 years apart (in 1952, 1974, and 1996, respectively).
Chastain explained that Sissy Spacek is the woman behind her foundation-free mantra. While filming The Help together in 2011, Chastain asked the 74-year-old actress for skincare secrets and she ...
J.K. Simmons and Sissy Spacek take stargazing to a whole new level in the trailer for Night Sky, a sci-fi drama that’s dropping all eight episodes onto Prime Video on Friday, May 20. “Spanning ...
Move over Bridgerton — Sissy Spacek and J.K. Simmons are here to show all the young lovers out there what "happily ever after" looks like.The veteran actors play older married couple Irene and ...
Raggedy Man is a 1981 American drama film based on William D. Wittliff and Sara Clark's 1979 novel, and directed by Jack Fisk. [1] It follows a divorced mother and telephone switchboard operator (Sissy Spacek) living with her two sons in a small town during World War II.
' night, Mother is a 1986 American drama film starring Sissy Spacek and Anne Bancroft. It was directed by Tom Moore and written by Marsha Norman, based on Norman's Pulitzer Prize-winning play of the same name. The film was entered into the 37th Berlin International Film Festival. Tom Moore had also directed the play on Broadway. [2] [3]