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・ Julie Goiorani
・ Julie Gold
・ Julie Goldman
・ Julie Golob
・ Julie Gonzalo
・ Julie Goodenough
・ Julie Goodnight
・ Julie Goodwin
・ Julie Goodyear
・ Julie Gore
・ Julie Goskowicz Koons
・ Julie Gould
・ Julie Graham
・ Julie Grant
・ Julie Green
Julie Gregg
・ Julie Gregg (cyclist)
・ Julie Gregory
・ Julie Greig
・ Julie Gross
・ Julie Hagerty
・ Julie Halard-Decugis
・ Julie Hall
・ Julie Halpern
・ Julie Halston
・ Julie Hammer
・ Julie Hamos
・ Julie Hanan Carruthers
・ Julie Hanna
・ Julie Hardaker


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Julie Gregg : ウィキペディア英語版
Julie Gregg

Julie Gregg (born Niagara Falls, January 24, 1944) is an American television, film and stage actress. She generally played supporting or guest, but not lead, roles. She is best known for her portrayal of Sandra Corleone in ''The Godfather''. Very little information is available on her personal life.
==Roles on television==
Gregg's first television role was in 1964 as a nurse in ''McHale's Navy''. She guest starred in many television shows in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, in both dramatic and comic roles. For example, she twice appeared on ''Bewitched'', in two different guest roles. The first was in "Double Split," episode no. 62 in season 2, 1966, and the second in 1967 during season 3, episode no. 99, "The Crone of Cawdor." In the latter show, she played Terry Warbell, a magic crone, who stole the youth of people when she kissed them, which she tried with Darrin Stevens, but which ultimately failed. In 1966 she played in Batman (episodes 33 and 34).
In 1970, she appeared in the episode "The Gift" (Season 8, Episode 24) of the ''The Virginian'', portraying a saloon girl who is targeted by the partner of a bank robber who dies in her room after hiding his loot. She had a recurring role in ''Banyon'', an NBC detective series that aired from 1972 to 1973. In ''Banyon'' – a period drama starring Robert Forster set in Los Angeles in the late 1930s – Gregg played Banyon's girlfriend, Abby Graham, a nightclub singer who was constantly trying to encourage him to settle down and marry her, but to no avail.
Among her guest roles in the late 1960s and early 1970s were two separate episodes of ''Mission: Impossible'', where she again played different characters. In 1969, in season 4, episode 91 ''Amnesiac'', she played Monique, an Impossible Missions Force operative. That was the season when the show had no permanent female operative because Barbara Bain, who played Cinnamon Carter in seasons 1-3, had resigned and Lesley Ann Warren, who played Dana Lambert in season 5, had not yet signed on. Then in 1970 in season 5, she played Anna Kerkoska, a premier's daughter who needed rescuing, in episode no. 112, ''Decoy''. Anna fell in love with Jim Phelps, who did indeed rescue her by driving her across the border in a specially outfitted, low to the ground, automobile that could drive under the border gate. Also in 1970, she guest starred in a season 2 episode of ''Hawaii Five-O'', ''The One with the Gun'', as the wife of the man shot after a crooked card game.
Gregg was cast in a starring role in the short-lived drama series, ''Mobile One'', on ABC in 1975. She played Maggie Spencer, a television news assignment editor, in all 11 episodes with co-star Jackie Cooper. The show was cancelled in December 1975. In 1978, she appeared as Susan in the episode "The Two-Million-Dollar Stowaway" of the NBC crime drama series ''The Eddie Capra Mysteries'', and as Edna Clapper in the 1979 miniseries ''The Seekers''.
Her last television role was as Sally in the "Thanksgiving" episode on Showtime's ''Brothers'' in 1987.〔( TV.com's summary of Julie Gregg's TV Roles )〕

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