Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following American film actresses are listed alphabetically. It contains both actresses born American and those who acquired American nationality later. Some actors who are well known for both film and TV work are also included in the list of American television actresses. Meryl Streep Michelle Pfeiffer Jodie Foster Julia Roberts
A. Michael A'Hearn; Uma Aaltonen; Antti Aarnio-Wihuri; Ole Aarsvold; Mohammad Va'ez Abaee-Khorasani; Josephine Abaijah; Pierre-Ernest Abandzounou; Namig Abbasov
People born in the 1940s. See also: Category:1940s deaths. 1890s; ... Pages in category "1940s births" ... (actress) Donnie Anderson;
A native of Los Angeles, Julie Anne Payne was the daughter of John Payne, film and television leading man of the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, and Anne Shirley, who started as a child actress in the late silent-early talkie period and became an ingenue and, later, leading lady of the late 1930s and early 1940s. They were married from 1937 to 1943 ...
Julie Christie (born 1940) (born in Chabua, India) Warren Clarke (1947–2014) Stephanie Cole (born 1941) David Collings (1940–2020) Lewis Collins (1946–2013) Pauline Collins (born 1940) Billy Connolly (born 1942) Tom Conti (born 1941) Ron Cook (born 1948) Charlotte Cornwell (1949–2021) Judy Cornwell (born 1940) Brian Cox (born 1946 ...
Evelyn Ebersis Young (November 17, 1915 – February 14, 1983) was an American film actress. In 1940, at the height of her career, she appeared in 9 feature films.She was the leading female actress in The Wildcat of Tucson [2] [3] [4] and Prairie Schooners, [5] [4] [6] playing alongside Wild Bill Elliott and Dub Taylor in a Wild Bill Hickok series.
Susan Peters (born Suzanne Carnahan; July 3, 1921 – October 23, 1952) was an American actress who appeared in more than twenty films over the course of her decade-long career. Though she began her career in uncredited and ingénue roles, she would establish herself as a serious dramatic actress in the mid-1940s.
Pin-up photo of McDonald for Yank, the Army Weekly in 1943. McDonald's work in Babes in Arms led to a film contract with Universal Pictures. [3] She made her screen debut in 1940's Dancing on a Dime, [1] [4] and appeared in Give Out, Sisters (1942), It Ain't Hay (1943), Destiny (1944), See My Lawyer (1945), [5] and Strictly in the Groove in 1942.