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Brooke Adams

 
Actor: Brooke Adams
  • Born: Feb 08, 1949 in New York City, New York
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '70s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Days of Heaven, Cuba, Gas Food Lodging
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Daughters of Joshua Cabe Return (1975)

Biography

The daughter of actors, Brooke Adams was once praised by the press for her supremely flexible countenance -- with expressions and demeanors to accommodate virtually any emotion or situation. Adams attended New York's High School of Performing Arts and the Institute of American Ballet, and took private acting lessons from Lee Strasberg. At age six, she made her Broadway debut in the 1954 revival of Finian's Rainbow. Eleven years later, she was cast as Burl Ives' teenaged daughter in the extremely short-lived TV sitcom O.K. Crackerby (1965-1966) on ABC.

Adams then kept a low professional profile until making her adult off-Broadway bow in 1974, appearing in yet another revival, The Petrified Forest. A great future was predicted for Brooke when she starred as Abby, the romantic bone of contention between Richard Gere and Sam Shepard in Terrence Malick's critically acclaimed 1978 film, Days of Heaven. That same year, she played Elizabeth Driscoll (the Dana Wynter role) in the remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, opposite Donald Sutherland, and in 1979 she was Sean Connery's ethereal leading lady in the Richard Lester-directed Cuba. Any one of those three roles could have spelled superstardom for Brooke -- had she really wanted to be a superstar. Instead, she deliberately avoided the trappings of celebritydom, preferring to measure her achievements by her own standards rather than Hollywood's. And, if that meant accepting "small" but artistically rewarding theatrical projects or teaching acting classics to emotionally disturbed children, rather than accepting a role in the latest Spielberg or Scorsese blockbuster, so be it.

Brooke Adams' more notable credits during the mid- to late '80s and '90s included guest appearances on TV's Moonlighting (as single mother and David Addison Lamaze partner Terri Knowles), a role in the Broadway production The Heidi Chronicles, the narration duties for the 1994 miniseries The Fire This Time, and the role of Ione Skye's hardscrabble mother in the Allison Anders-directed Gas Food Lodging (1992). These represented high points, however, and more often than not, Adams found herself relegated to parts unworthy of her, such as the unevenly received 1985 adaptation of Kevin Wade's play Key Exchange (in which she reprised her stage role) and the histrionic TV movies Lace (1984) and Lace II (1985).

In subsequent years, Adams made a greater splash on television, with guest appearances on such series programs as Wings, Monk (both opposite husband Tony Shalhoub), and Touched by an Angel. She also returned to the big screen for supporting roles in several projects, including the 1995 Baby-Sitters Club and the 2007 Griffin Dunne-directed romantic comedy The Accidental Husband. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Brooke Adams (actress)
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Brooke Adams
Born February 8, 1949 (1949-02-08) (age 60)
New York, U.S.
Other name(s) Brooke Adams-Shalhoub
Spouse(s) Tony Shalhoub (1992–)

Brooke Adams (born 8 February 1949) is an American actress.

Contents

Personal life

Adams was born in New York City, New York, the daughter of Rosalind (née Gould), an actress, and Robert K. Adams, who was a producer, actor, and former vice president of CBS, as well as a descendant of Presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams.[1][2][3] She attended the High School for the Performing Arts and the School of American Ballet. Adams is married to actor Tony Shalhoub, who adopted her oldest daughter Josie Lynn (born 1989) when they married in 1992; the couple adopted a second child, Sophie, in 1994.

Career

After playing small roles in television and low-budget movies, Adams' performances in Days of Heaven (1978) and the remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers (also 1978) brought her positive reviews. She has also starred in the films Cuba (1979), The Dead Zone (1983), Key Exchange (1985), and Gas Food Lodging (1992). In 1995 she temporarily retired from film-making due to family responsibilities and a dearth of good roles, resuming her career around 2002.

In 2002 she received rave reviews for her performance in the romantic comedy Made-Up, which was written by her sister, actress Lynne Adams and directed by her husband Tony Shalhoub, star of Monk. Adams most recently appeared in the films At Last and The Legend of Lucy Keyes (both 2005) and starred on Broadway in The Cherry Orchard, as well as guest-starring on Monk.

Filmography

Movies

Television

  • Monk (Mr. Monks 100TH Case, 2008)
  • Monk (2005) ... Mrs. Abigail Carlyle (2002) ... Leigh
  • Gun (1997) ... Joyce
  • Wings (1996) ... Mary
  • Frasier (1995) ... Marilyn (voice)
  • Touched by an Angel (1994) ... Susana
  • Probable Cause (1994)
  • Picture Windows (1994) (mini-series) ... Angie Varnas
  • The Last Hit (1993) ... Anna
  • thirtysomething (1991) ... Bree Ann Pratt
  • Sometimes They Come Back (1991) ... Sally Norman
  • Bridesmaids (1989) ... Pat
  • Moonlighting (1988) (3 episodes) ... Terri Knowles
  • The Lion of Africa (1987) ... Grace Danet
  • Lace II (1985) ... Pagan Tralone
  • Special People (1984) ... Diane Dupuy
  • Lace (1984) ... Pagan Tralone
  • Haunted (1984)
  • The Innocents Abroad (1983) ... Julia Newell
  • Summer (1981)
  • Nero Wolfe (1979) ... Sarah Dacos
  • Family (1977 - 1978) (3 episodes) ... Lizzie
  • Kojak (1976) ... Julie Winston
  • The Bob Newhart Show (1976) ... Mitzi Margolis
  • James Dean (1976) ... Beverly
  • Police Woman (1976) ... Angela
  • Murder on Flight 502 (1975) ... Vera Franklin
  • Black Bart (1975) ... Jennifer
  • Song of the Succubus (1975) ... Olive Deems/Gloria Chambers
  • Who is the Black Dahlia? (1975) ... Diane Fowler
  • The Daughters of Joshua Cabe Return (1975) ... Mae
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald and 'The Last of the Belles' (1974) ... Kitty Preston
  • O.K. Crackerby! (1965) ... Cynthia Crackerby
  • East Side/West Side (1963) ... Marky Morgan

As a producer

  • Made-Up (2002)

As herself

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Brooke Adams (actress)" Read more