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・ Cookie jar
・ Cookie jar (disambiguation)
・ Cookie Jar (song)
・ Cookie jar accounting
・ Cookie Jar Butte
・ Cookie Jar Group
・ Cookie Jar Kids Network
・ Cookie Jar Toons
・ Cookie Jar TV
・ Cookie Lavagetto
・ Cookie Lyon
・ Cookie Marenco
・ Cookie Monster
・ Cookie Monster (computer program)
・ Cookie Monster (disambiguation)
Cookie Mueller
・ Cookie press
・ Cookie pusher
・ Cookie Puss
・ Cookie Rojas
・ Cookie salad
・ Cookie sandwich
・ Cookie stuffing
・ Cookie table
・ Cookie Tackwell
・ Cookie Time
・ Cookie's Fortune
・ Cookie-cutter campaign
・ Cookiecutter shark
・ Cookiejacking


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Cookie Mueller : ウィキペディア英語版
Cookie Mueller

Dorothy Karen "Cookie" Mueller (March 2, 1949 – November 10, 1989) was an underground American actress, writer, and Dreamlander, who starred in many of filmmaker John Waters' early films, including ''Multiple Maniacs'', ''Pink Flamingos'', ''Female Trouble'', and ''Desperate Living''.
==Early life==
Cookie Mueller grew up with her parents Frank Lennert Mueller (d. 1984) and Anne (Sawyer) Mueller (d. 1995, aged 82) in the Baltimore suburbs in a house near the woods, a mental hospital and railroad tracks. She was nicknamed ''Cookie'' as a baby: "Somehow I got the name Cookie before I could walk. It didn't matter to me, they could call me whatever they wanted." During her childhood Cookie, along with her parents, brother Michael, and sister Judy, took road trips across the country:
"In 1959, with eyes the same size, I got to see some of America traveling in the old green Plymouth with my parents, who couldn't stand each other, and my brother and sister, who loved everyone. (brother Michael actually died in an accident on March 20, 1955. ) I remember the Erie Canal on a dismal day, the Maine coastline in a storm, Georgia willow trees in the rain, and the Luray Caverns in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia where the stalagmites and -tites were poorly lit."

Mueller had many pets as a child, including many turtles (one named Fidel), a dog named Jip, snakes, and tadpoles. Cookie began to write at age 11, when she wrote a 321-page book about the Johnstown flood of 1889. She stapled it together, wrapped it in butcher paper and Saran wrap, and placed it on the shelves of a local library in what would have been its proper place. The book was never seen again.
With a swath of pivotal events in Mueller's life—including her brother's death at age 14, the result of climbing a dead tree, which collapsed on him in the woods near their home—she went on to pursue her writing, and in high school hung out with the hippie crowd. One of Mueller's idiosyncrasies as a teen was that she constantly dyed her hair: "Whenever you're depressed, just change your hair color," she (mother ) always told me, years later, when I was a teenager: I was never denied a bottle of hair bleach or dye. In my closet there weren't many clothes, but there were tons of bottles."
She took a small job at a Baltimore men's department store and saved up enough funds to head to Haight-Ashbury, where she continued the hippie lifestyle.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Cookie Mueller」の詳細全文を読む



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