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词条 Shelley Hack
释义

  1. Life and career

  2. Credits

     Production  Film  Television  Stage  Home Video  Discography/Audio Book 

  3. References

  4. External links

{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2018}}{{Infobox person
| name = Shelley Hack
| image =
| imagesize =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|mf=yes|1947|7|6}}
| birth_place = Greenwich, Connecticut, U.S.
| birth_name = Shelley Marie Hack
| occupation = Actress, producer, model, advisor
| years_active = 1975–present
| spouse = {{marriage|Harry Winer|1990}}
| children = Devon Rose Winer (b. 1990)[1][2]
}}

Shelley Marie Hack (born July 6, 1947) is an American model, actress, producer, and political and media advisor. Hack is best remembered as the face of Revlon's Charlie perfume from the mid-1970s until the early 1980s, and for her role as Tiffany Welles in Season 4 (1979–1980) of the ABC television drama Charlie's Angels, replacing the departing Kate Jackson. She appeared in a total of 26 episodes of the series, before being replaced in Season 5 by model-actress Tanya Roberts.

Life and career

Hack was born in Greenwich, Connecticut.[3][4] She graduated from Greenwich Academy, Smith College with a BA in History, and an MBA from NYIT.[5] She began her career as a teen fashion model and became the face of Revlon's Charlie perfume from the mid-1970s until the early 1980s. Life proclaimed her one of the million-dollar faces in the beauty industry who were able to negotiate previously unheard of lucrative and exclusive deals with giant cosmetics companies, were instantly recognizable, and whose names became known to the general public. Shelley ranked among a handful of the 1970s supermodels.[6]

Her feature film debut was a bit part in Woody Allen's award-winning film Annie Hall (1977), as "Street Stranger". In her second film appearance, she was the leading lady in the Joe Brooks romance drama, If Ever I See You Again, but the film was not a success. Shortly thereafter she was cast as Kate Jackson's replacement on the television series Charlie's Angels for one season (1979), playing the character "Tiffany Welles", the role for which she is probably best known. She beat out many competitors for the role, including Michelle Pfeiffer and Barbara Bach.[7]

Following Hack's departure from Charlie's Angels, the actress played a variety of supporting roles. Hack received positive reviews in Martin Scorsese's film The King of Comedy (1983), in which she played a passive-aggressive executive. She starred with Annette O'Toole and Meredith Baxter Birney in the critically acclaimed Vanities (1981), a television production of the comedy-drama stage play about the lives, loves and friendship of three Texas cheerleaders starting from high school to post-college graduation; it aired as a part of Standing Room Only, a series on the premium-television channel HBO. She had a well-received leading role in the cult horror film The Stepfather and was a regular on two short-lived TV series of the 1980s: Cutter to Houston (1983) and Jack and Mike (1986–87). She had several more notable guest appearances in film and television up until 1997.

After Hack retired from acting in the late '90s, she entered politics. Hack became a voting registration and polling station supervisor in the 1997 elections in Bosnia-Herzegovina and produced the first-ever televised presidential debates there as well. She also produced the debates in Sarajevo, Mostar, and the two in Banja Luka. She established herself in a new field as a media consultant for pre- and post-conflict countries. Among her duties was to help spread independent media such as newspapers, radio and television, citing the fact that, with autocratic governments, the population is often fed only State television, which delivers biased content. She also worked for two years with the largest media conglomerate in Eastern Europe where she helped develop and build the infrastructure for the largest state of the art film studio complex in the region.[8] Hack worked in the television sector for ten years, creating ethnically diverse television programs in Eastern Europe. Additionally, she became a member of the Pacific Council on International Policy (PCIP), whose mission is to give a more effective voice to West Coast perspectives on critical global policy issues.

In October 2000, appearing as herself, Hack returned to the Charlie's Angels Townsend Agency office as guest host on A&E Biography, which featured profiles of several Charlie's Angels stars during Hello Angels Week.

In January 2008, Hack made an appearance on The Oprah Winfrey Show. The episode, "Classic Americana",[9] featured Hack as Revlon's Charlie perfume model in a 1976 television ad with Bobby Short at the piano.[10][11] "It was a time when women were changing" Hack stated to Oprah Winfrey. "Women looked at [the ad] and said, 'I want to be like that.'" Referring to the later Revlon commercials and Charlie's Angels, Hack stated "I was lucky. There were two things I was in that were about making women feel a little more empowered".[9]

Hack and her husband, Harry Winer, are company principals for the production company Smash Media ("Entertainment That Brings People Together") that develops and produces content for motion pictures, television and new media.

Credits

Production

  • Lucky Christmas - Hallmark Channel - (2011)
  • Perfect Match - Hallmark Channel - (2015)
  • Summer of dreams - Hallmark Channel - (2016)
  • Christmas In Evergreen - Hallmark Channel - (2017)

Film

  • Annie Hall - Street Stranger (1977)
  • If Ever I See You Again - Jennifer Corly (1978)
  • Time After Time - Docent (1979)
  • The King of Comedy - Cathy Long (1983)
  • Troll - Anne Potter (1986)
  • The Stepfather - Susan Maine (1987)
  • Blind Fear - Erika (1989)
  • The Finishing Touch - Hannah (1991)
  • Me, Myself & I - Jennifer (1992)
  • House Arrest - Dr. Erica Gilliland, Ph.D. [uncredited] (1996)

Television

  • Charlie's Angels - Tiffany Welles (1979–1980)
  • Married: The First Year (TV Series) - Linda (1979)
  • Death Car on the Freeway (TV movie) - Janette Clausen (1979)
  • The Love Boat ("Dumb Luck") - Carol Ketay (1980)
  • Vanities - Mary (1981)
  • The American Sportsman - Herself (1982)
  • Cutter to Houston (TV series) - Dr. Beth Gilbert (October 1, 1983 – December 31, 1983)
  • Finding the Goodbar Killer (TV Movie) - Logan Gay (1983)
  • Single Bars, Single Women (TV Movie) - Frankie (1984)
  • Kicks (TV Movie) - Maggie Pierson (1985)
  • Jack and Mike (TV series) - Jackie Shea (September 16, 1986 – March 24, 1987)
  • Bridesmaids (TV movie) - Kimberly (1989)
  • Frederick Forsyth Presents: A Casualty of War (TV movie) - Monica Browne (1990)
  • Taking Back My Life: The Nancy Ziegenmeyer Story (TV movie) - Nan Horvat (1992)
  • seaQuest DSV (TV movie/pilot) - Capt. Marilyn Stark (1993)
  • Not in My Family (TV movie) - Becky Worth (1993)
  • A Perry Mason Mystery: The Case of the Wicked Wives (TV movie) - Abby Walters Morrison (1993)
  • L.A. Law (TV Series) Whose San Andreas Fault is it, Anyway? - Lynn Barnett (1994)
  • Tales from the Crypt (TV series) The Assassins - Janet McKay (1994)
  • Flight 174 (TV movie) - Lynn Brown (1995)
  • Frequent Flyer (TV movie) - JoBeth Rawlings (1996)
  • Diagnosis Murder (TV series) Looks Can Kill - Dr. Elaine Denell (1997)
  • Biography: Hello Angels Week - Guest Hostess (2000)
  • TV Tales: Charlie's Angels (Documentary) - Herself (2002)
  • The Oprah Winfrey Show, "Classic Americana" - Herself (2008)
  • Lucky Christmas (Executive Producer) (2011)
  • Zombie Blondes (Executive Producer) (2012)
  • Summer of Dreams (Producer) (2016)

Stage

  • Vanities (1981)
  • Born Yesterday (1982)
  • Close Ties (1983)
  • Tamara (1989)

Home Video

  • The Celebrity Guide to Wine - Herself (1990)
  • The Celebrity Guide to Entertaining - Herself (1993)

Discography/Audio Book

  • The First Family Rides Again (1981)
  • The Big Book for Our Planet - Narrator (1993)
  • Lord of Hawkfell Island - Narrator (1993)

References

1. ^http://harrywinerdirector.com/about.html
2. ^https://tisch.nyu.edu/about/directory/film-tvs/99643858
3. ^Cheryl Lavin. (September 14, 1986). VITAL STATISTICS SHELLEY HACK :[FINAL EDITION, C]. Chicago Tribune (pre-1997 Fulltext), p. 7. Retrieved February 13, 2010, from Chicago Tribune. (Document ID: 24939531).
4. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20074661,00.html|title=Charlie's Latest Angel|author=Martha Smilgis}}
5. ^http://smashmediafilms.com/?q=content/about-us
6. ^Best–Selling Beauties, Life October 1981, page 120
7. ^{{cite journal |last1=Smilgis |first1=Martha |title=Charlie's Latest Angel |date=September 24, 1979|journal=People|url=http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20074661,00.html |access-date=November 18, 2015 }}
8. ^http://smashmediafilms.com/content/about-us
9. ^Oprah show - Charlie Girl Shelley Hack
10. ^{{YouTube|5juK-UrgJG0|Video of Charlie TV commercial}}
11. ^RealVideo format of Charlie TV commercial

External links

  • {{IMDb name|0352379}}
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Hack, Shelley}}

9 : 1947 births|American film actresses|American television actresses|Living people|Actresses from Greenwich, Connecticut|Female models from New York (state)|Smith College alumni|20th-century American actresses|American female models

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