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Zane Buzby
Zane Buzby is an American actress, philanthropist, film director and television director. ==Life and career== Zane Buzby grew up in New York and graduated with honors from Hofstra University with degrees in Performance and Dramatic Literature. She began her show business career as a film editor and actress. Her first major acting credit was in the Carl Reiner film ''Oh, God!'' (1977). She later appeared in the films ''Up in Smoke'' (1978) (opposite Cheech & Chong), ''Americathon'' (1979) (opposite John Ritter), the John Hughes-scripted film ''National Lampoon's Class Reunion'' (1982), the Jerry Lewis-directed film ''Cracking Up'' and the Rob Reiner film ''This Is Spinal Tap'' (1984). She also co-starred in and directed the feature film comedy, ''Last Resort'' (1986), starring Charles Grodin. She later became a television director mentored by James Burrows and Producer Edgar J. Scherick. She went on to amass over two hundred directing credits in episodic television, directing episodes of ''Dads'', ''Married... with Children'', ''Newhart'', ''My Sister Sam'', ''Head of the Class'', ''My Two Dads'', ''The Van Dyke Show'', ''Charles in Charge'', ''The Golden Girls'', ''Blossom'' and ''Sister, Sister''. Buzby also directed HBO's "Women of the Night" starring Martin Short, Joy Behar, Ellen DeGeneres, Rita Rudner and Judy Tenuta. Buzby had a television production/development deal at Paramount where she Executive Produced several television pilots. Buzby has devoted herself to philanthropy, assisting Holocaust survivors in Eastern Europe. She is the founder of The Survivor Mitzvah Project. She has been awarded the KCET LOCAL HERO AWARD for her humanitarian work, and has been profiled as a "Hero At Home" by KTLA Television. In June 2014 Zane Buzby was named a CNN HERO.
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