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・ Valerie Morales
・ Valerie Morgan
・ Valerie Mulcahy
・ Valerie Murtagh
・ Valerie Muzzolini Gordon
・ Valerie Niehaus
・ Valerie Norman
・ Valerie of Limoges
・ Valerie Ogoke
・ Valerie on the Stairs
・ Valerie Park
・ Valerie Parv
・ Valerie Pearl
・ Valerie Pedro
・ Valerie Perez
Valerie Perrine
・ Valerie Petts
・ Valerie Phillips
・ Valerie Pitts
・ Valerie Plame
・ Valerie Preston-Dunlop
・ Valerie Pringle
・ Valerie Pringle Has Left The Building
・ Valerie Randle
・ Valerie Red-Horse
・ Valerie Robertson
・ Valerie Saiving
・ Valerie Sanderson
・ Valerie Sargent Meyers
・ Valerie Saurette


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Valerie Perrine : ウィキペディア英語版
Valerie Perrine

Valerie Ritchie Perrine (born September 3, 1943) is an American actress and model.
==Life and career==
Perrine was born in Galveston, Texas, the daughter of Winifred "Renee" (née McGinley), a dancer who appeared in ''Earl Carroll's Vanities'', and Kenneth Perrine, a Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army.〔 Owing to her father's career, Perrine lived in many locations as the family moved to different posts.
She began her career as a Las Vegas showgirl. Some believe she made her film debut with an uncredited part in ''Diamonds Are Forever'' (1971), but this is not true. She played soft-core pornography actress Montana Wildhack in Kurt Vonnegut's ''Slaughterhouse-Five'' (1972). Perrine was photographed for a pictorial layout in the May 1972 issue of ''Playboy'', later appearing on the cover in August 1981. She then became the first actress to purposely display herself nude on American television by completely baring her breasts during the May 4, 1973, PBS broadcast of Bruce Jay Friedman's ''Steambath'' on ''Hollywood Television Theater.'' (She was seen taking a shower from the side totally undressed.) Only a few PBS stations nationwide were adventurous enough to carry the program. Later in 1973, she appeared in the episode "When the Girls Came Out to Play" of the romantic anthology television series ''Love Story'' (1973).
In 1975, Perrine was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress and the Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture Actress (Drama) and won the Best Actress Award at the Cannes Film Festival for her role as comedian Lenny Bruce's wife, stripper Honey Bruce, in Bob Fosse's ''Lenny'' (1974).
She was Carlotta Monti in the biopic ''W.C. Fields and Me'' (1976) and one of her best-remembered movie roles came as Miss Eve Teschmacher, moll of criminal mastermind Lex Luthor, in ''Superman'' (1978). For this role, she was nominated for the 1979 Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress. She reprised her role as Miss Teschmacher in ''Superman II'' (1980).
Perrine played Charlotta Steele, ex-wife of a rodeo champion played by Robert Redford, in ''The Electric Horseman'' (1979). Her career grew uneven after an appearance in ''Can't Stop the Music'' (1980), for which she was nominated for a Razzie Award for Worst Actress. This film has since become a cult classic. In 1982, she played the role of Marcy, the wife of a corrupt police officer, in ''The Border'' with Jack Nicholson. In the years since then, Perrine has worked in lower-profile projects, although she did have a small supporting role in the 2000 Mel Gibson film ''What Women Want''. In 1995, Perrine made a guest appearance on the series ''Homicide: Life on the Street'', playing an ex-wife of Richard Belzer's Detective John Munch.

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