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词条 Tina Louise
释义

  1. Early life

  2. Career

     Early work  Hollywood and Gilligan's Island  Later work 

  3. Music

  4. Personal life

  5. Filmography

     Film  Television 

  6. Stage work

  7. References

  8. External links

{{short description|American actress, singer, author}}{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2013}}{{Infobox person
|name = Tina Louise
|image = Tina Louise 1964.JPG
|imagesize = 230px
|caption = Louise in 1964
|birth_name = Tina Louise Blacker
|birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1934|02|11}}
|birth_place = New York City, New York, U.S.
|death_date =
|death_place =
|occupation = Actress, singer, author
|spouse = {{marriage|Les Crane
|1966|1971|end=divorced}}
|children = Caprice Crane
|years_active = 1952–2004, 2014–present
}}

Tina Louise (born February 11, 1934) is an American actress best known for playing movie star Ginger Grant in the CBS television situation comedy Gilligan's Island. She began her career on stage during the mid-1950s, before landing her breakthrough role in 1958 drama film God's Little Acre for which she received Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year.

Louise had starring roles in a number of Hollywood movies, including The Trap, The Hangman, Day of the Outlaw, and For Those Who Think Young. Louise later returned to film, appearing in The Wrecking Crew, The Happy Ending, and The Stepford Wives (1975).

Early life

Tina Blacker was born in New York City. By the time she was four years of age, her parents had divorced.[1]

An only child, she was raised by her mother, Sylvia Horn (née Myers) Blacker (1916–2011), a fashion model. Tina's father, Joseph Blacker, was a candy store owner in Brooklyn[1][2] and later an accountant.[3] The name "Louise" was allegedly added during her senior year in high school when she mentioned to her drama teacher that she was the only girl in the class without a middle name. He selected the name "Louise" and it stuck.[2] She attended Miami University in Ohio.[6]

Career

Early work

At the early age of just two years, Tina got her first role, after being seen in an ad for her father's candy store. She played numerous roles until she decided it was best to focus on school work. By the age of 17, Louise began studying acting, singing and dancing. She studied acting under Sanford Meisner at the prestigious Neighborhood Playhouse in Manhattan. During her early acting years, she was offered modeling jobs, including as a rising starlet, who along with Jayne Mansfield, was a product advocate in the 1958 Frederick's of Hollywood catalog, and appeared on the cover of several pinup magazines such as Adam, Sir! and Modern Man. Her later pictorials for Playboy (May 1958; April 1959) were arranged by Columbia Pictures studio in an effort to further promote the young actress. {{citation needed|date=February 2014}}

Her acting debut came in 1952 in the Bette Davis musical revue Two's Company,[4] followed by roles in other Broadway productions, such as John Murray Anderson's Almanac, The Fifth Season, and Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? She appeared in such early live television dramas as Studio One, Producers' Showcase, and Appointment with Adventure. In 1957, she appeared on Broadway in the hit musical Li'l Abner. Her album, It's Time for Tina, was released that year, with songs such as "Embraceable You" and "I'm in the Mood for Love". {{citation needed|date=February 2014}}

Hollywood and Gilligan's Island

Louise made her Hollywood film debut in 1958 in God's Little Acre. That same year, the National Art Council named her the "World's Most Beautiful Redhead."[5] The next year she starred in Day of the Outlaw, with Robert Ryan. She became an in-demand leading lady for major stars like Robert Taylor and Richard Widmark, often playing somber roles quite unlike the glamorous pinup photographs and Playboy pictorials she had become famous for in the late 1950s. She turned down roles in Li'l Abner and Operation Petticoat[6] taking roles on Broadway and in Italian cinema and Hollywood. Among her more notable Italian film credits was the historical epic Garibaldi (1960), directed by Roberto Rossellini, that concerned Garibaldi's efforts to unify the Italian states in 1860. When Louise returned to the United States, she began studying with Lee Strasberg[7] and eventually became a member of the Actors Studio.[8][9] In 1962, she guest-starred on the sitcom The Real McCoys, portraying a country girl from West Virginia in an episode titled "Grandpa Pygmalion". Two years later, prior to the development of Gilligan's Island, she appeared with Bob Denver in the beach party film For Those Who Think Young.

In 1964, she left the Broadway musical Fade Out – Fade In to portray movie star Ginger Grant on the situation comedy Gilligan's Island, after the part was turned down by Jayne Mansfield. Over time she became unhappy with the role and worried that it would typecast her. The role did make Louise a pop icon of the era, and in 2005 an episode of TV Land Top Ten ranked her as second only to Heather Locklear as the greatest of television's all-time sex symbols.{{cn|date=December 2017}}. After the series ended in 1967, Louise continued to work in film and made numerous guest appearances in various television series. She did not appear in the 1978 movie Rescue from Gilligan's Island nor on another cast reunion film, The Castaways on Gilligan's Island and The Harlem Globetrotters on Gilligan's Island, the only original cast member to decline reprising the role (which was played by Judith Baldwin and Connie Forslund in the later film).

She appeared in the Matt Helm spy spoof The Wrecking Crew (1969) with Dean Martin. Louise played a doomed suburban housewife in the original The Stepford Wives (1975), and both the film and her performance were well received.

She attempted to shed her comedic image by assaying grittier roles, including a guest appearance as a heroin addict in a 1974 Kojak episode, as well as a co-starring role as a Southern prison guard in the 1976 ABC television movie Nightmare in Badham County. Her other television films of the period included Look What's Happened to Rosemary's Baby (1976), Death Flight (1977), Friendships, Secrets and Lies (1979), and in the prime-time soap opera Dallas, during the 1978–1979 seasons, as J.R. Ewing's secretary, Julie Grey, a semi-regular character. Her character was finally killed off. In the fall of 1984, she replaced Jo Ann Pflug as Taylor Chapin on the syndicated soap opera Rituals after Pflug refused to do love scenes with co-star George Lazenby because of her religious beliefs. After a few months, however, Louise did not renew her own contract and the character was written out. She later made cameo appearances on the network daytime soaps Santa Barbara and All My Children.{{cn|date=December 2017}}

The question "Ginger or Mary Ann?" is considered a classic pop-psychological question when given to American men of a certain age as an insight into their characters, or at least their desires as regarding certain female stereotypes. With the January 2014 death of Gilligan's Island co-star Russell Johnson, Louise and actress Dawn Wells are the only two surviving cast members of the original sitcom.

Later work

Louise declined to participate in any of three reunion television films for Gilligan's Island. Despite maintaining an active career after the show's run, she maintained that the show actually ruined her career. The role of Ginger was recast with Judith Baldwin and Constance Forslund. Although she did not appear in these television movies, she made brief walk-on appearances on a few talk shows and specials for Gilligan's Island reunions, including Good Morning America (1982), The Late Show (1988) and the 2004 TV Land award show with the other surviving cast members. In the 1990s, she was reunited with costars Bob Denver, Dawn Wells, and Russell Johnson in an episode of Roseanne.[4] She did not reunite with them for the television film Surviving Gilligan's Island (2001), co-produced by Wells. She was portrayed by Kristen Dalton in the television film.[10] Her relations with series star Denver were rumored to be strained, but in 2005, she wrote a brief, affectionate memorial to him in the year-end "farewell" issue of Entertainment Weekly.[11]

Later film roles included a co-starring appearance in the Robert Altman comedy O.C. and Stiggs (1987) as well as the independently made satire Johnny Suede (1992) starring Brad Pitt. She appeared in Married... with Children as Miss Beck in episode "Kelly Bounces Back" (1990). In 2014 Louise starred in the spiritual drama, Tapestry and the horror film Late Phases.[12][13]

Music

Louise made one record album, It's Time for Tina, which was released originally on Concert Hall in 1957 (Concert Hall 1521), and later reissued on Urania Records (1958 and 1959 respectively).[14] With arrangements by Jim Timmens and Buddy Weed's Orchestra, 12 tracks include "Tonight Is the Night" and "I'm in the Mood for Love." Coleman Hawkins is featured on tenor sax. The album has been reissued on CD twice, most recently on the UK label Harkit Records.[15] The album was released on iTunes in 2012. She also recorded for United Artists Records[16] but recorded just one single for that label in 1958.[17]

Personal life

From 1966 to 1971, Louise was married to radio and TV announcer/interviewer Les Crane, with whom she has one daughter, Caprice Crane (born 1970), who became an MTV producer and a novelist. Crane's first novel, Stupid and Contagious, was published in 2006, and was dedicated to her mother.{{cn|date=December 2017}}

Louise now resides in New York City. She is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and a lifetime member of the Actors Studio.[18] Louise has been a vocal advocate for improving child literacy. She donated a portion of the proceeds of her 2007 book, When I Grow Up, to literacy programs and said in a 2013 interview that she had been volunteering at local public schools since 1996.[18][19] She has written three books including Sunday: A Memoir (1997) and When I Grow Up (2007).[4] The latter is a children's book that inspires children to believe they can become whatever they choose through creative and humorous comparisons of animal kingdom achievements.{{Citation needed|date=December 2012}} She also published a second children's book titled What Does a Bee Do? in 2009.[20]

Louise is quoted as saying, "The best movie you'll ever be in is your own life because that's what matters in the end."[21]

A Democrat, she campaigned for John F. Kennedy during the 1960 presidential election[22].

Filmography

Film

Year Film RoleNotes
1958God's Little AcreGriselda WaldenGolden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actress
Laurel Award for Best Female Supporting Performance (5th place)
1959The TrapLinda Anderson
1959The HangmanSelah Jennison
1959Day of the OutlawHelen Crane
1960L'assedio di SiracusaDiana / Artemide / Lucrezia
1960 The Warrior EmpressSappho
1961GaribaldiFrench Journalist
1961Armored CommandAlexandra Bastegar
1964For Those Who Think YoungTopaz McQueen
1967The Seventh FloorDr. Immer Mehr
1968The Wrecking CrewLola Medina
1969How to Commit MarriageLaverne Baker
1969The Good Guys and the Bad GuysCarmel
1969The Happy EndingHelen Bricker
1970But I Don't Want to Get Married!Miss SpencerTelevision film
1973Call to DangerApril TierneyTelevision film
1975The Stepford WivesCharmaine Wimpiris
1975Death ScreamHilda Murray
1976Look What's Happened to Rosemary's BabyMarjean DornTelevision film
1976Nightmare in Badham CountyGreerTelevision film
1977Death FlightMaeTelevision film
1977The Kentucky Fried MovieVoice
1978Mean Dog BluesDonna Lacey
1979Friendships, Secrets and LiesJoan HolmesTelevision film
1980The Day the Women Got EvenMary Jo AlfieriTelevision film
1981Advice to the LovelornDiane MarshTelevision film
1984Dog DayNoémie Blue
1984Hell RidersClaire Delaney
1985Evils of the NightCora
1985O.C. and StiggsFlorence Beaugereaux
1987The PoolMiloha
1988Dixie LanesViolet Hunter
1991Johnny SuedeMrs. Fontaine
1997Welcome to Woop WoopBella
2000Growing Down in BrooklynMrs. Pip
2004West from North Goes SouthCeleste Clark
2014Late PhasesClarissa
2017TapestryRose

Television

Year Show RoleNotes
1956Studio OneDoloresEpisode: "Johnny August"
1956Producers' ShowcaseMaudeEpisode: "Happy Birthday"
1957The Phil Silvers ShowGinaEpisode: "Bilko Goes South"
1957Climax!Maxene SumnerEpisode: "A Matter of Life and Death"
1961Tales of Wells FargoHelene MontclairEpisode: "New Orleans Trackdown"
1961The New BreedStella KnowlandEpisode: "I Remember Murder"
1962CheckmateCheckmateEpisode: "A Funny Thing Happened on My Way to the Game"
1963Burke's LawBonnie Belle TateEpisode: "Who Killed Billy Jo?"
1963Route 66RobinEpisode: "I'm Here to Kill a King"
1964Kraft Suspense TheatreAngie PowellEpisode: "The Deep End"
1964Mr. BroadwayThe GirlEpisode: "Smelling Like a Rose"
1966The Red Skelton ShowDaisy JuneEpisode: "Be It Ever So Homely, There's No Face Like Clem"
1964–1967Gilligan's IslandGinger GrantSeries regular, 98 episodes
1967BonanzaMary BurnsEpisode: "Desperate Passage"
1968It Takes a ThiefAnna MartineEpisode: "Totally by Design"
1970IronsideCandyEpisode: "Beware the Wiles of the Stranger"
1973MannixLinda ColeEpisode: "The Faces of Murder"
1969–1973Love, American StyleMrs. Rossi / Wilma / Lola/ Audrey4 episodes
1974KojakAudrey NorrisEpisode: "Die Before They Wake"
1973, 1974Police StoryApril / Anita2 episodes
1974Movin' OnHelen TruebloodEpisode: "The Cowhands"
1974Kung FuCarol MercerEpisode: "A Dream Within a Dream"
1975CannonNell DexterEpisode: "The Wedding March"
1976Marcus Welby, M.D.Susan DagerEpisode: "All Passions Spent"
1978–1979DallasJulie GreySpecial guest star, 5 episodes
1979The Love BoatBetty BrickerEpisode: "My Sister, Irene/The 'Now' Marriage/Second Time Around"
1980Fantasy IslandLisa CordayEpisode: "Unholy Wedlock/Elizabeth"
1980CHiPsEdie Marshall2 episodes
1982Matt HoustonJessica CollierEpisode: "The Kidnapping"
1983Knight RiderAnne TylerEpisode: "The Topaz Connection"
1984–1985RitualsTaylor Chapin Field von PlatenSeries regular
1986Blacke's MagicLainie WardeEpisode: "Death Goes to the Movies"
1986Santa BarbaraCassie DunnSpecial guest star
1986Simon & SimonRobin PriceEpisode: "Act Five"
1990Married... with ChildrenMiss BeckEpisode: "Kelly Bounces Back"
1994All My ChildrenTish PridmoreSpecial guest star
1995RoseanneRoseanne (cameo)Episode: "Sherwood Schwartz: A Loving Tribute"
1999L.A. HeatPatricia LudwigsonEpisode: "In Harm's Way"

Stage work

  • Two's Company (1952)
  • The Fifth Season (1953)
  • John Murray Anderson's Almanac (1953)
  • Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1955)
  • Li'l Abner (1956)
  • Fade Out – Fade In (1964)

References

1. ^"Jewish actors, famous Jews, Jewish celebrities", Jewishtimes.com (October 5, 2007); retrieved 2012-07-03.
2. ^Tina Louise Interview. Gilligansisle.com; retrieved 2012-07-03.
3. ^Ward Morehouse. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=42MzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=sOoFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1818,2067676&dq=tina-louise+blacker&hl=en Tina Louise Is Back In New York, And Likes To Walk In Central Park], The Miami News (January 5, 1958).
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.tvguide.com/celebrities/tina-louise/bio/176956|title=Tina Louise Biography|publisher=Tvguide.com|accessdate=February 13, 2014}}
5. ^{{Cite news |author=Grant, Ila S. |title=World's Most Beautiful Red Head Here For Film |newspaper=The Bulletin |date=November 24, 1958 |page=8 |postscript={{inconsistent citations}} }}
6. ^Tina Louise Interview. Gilligansisle.com (February 11, 1934). Retrieved on 2012-07-03.
7. ^Wilson, Earl. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=_H9QAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZBEEAAAAIBAJ&pg=7510,3387784&dq=tina-louise+actors-studio&hl=en "Tina Louise Is a Serious Type of Comedienne"]. The Milwaukee Sentinel. November 14, 1964.
8. ^Associated Press. [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=uhMwAAAAIBAJ&sjid=3VYDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3282,3009164&dq "21 More Join Actors Studio"]. The St. Petersburg Evening Independent. March 18, 1964.
9. ^{{cite book|quote=|first=David |last=Garfield|title=A Player's Place: The Story of The Actors Studio|year=1980|publisher=MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc.|location=New York|isbn=0-02-542650-8|page=279|chapter=Appendix: Life Members of The Actors Studio as of January 1980}}
10. ^An Ask Morty Page. Mortystv.com. Retrieved on 2012-07-03.
11. ^{{cite web|title=Tina Louise Remembers Bob Denver|url=http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,1101674,00.html|author=Tina Louise|publisher=Entertainment Weekly|accessdate=October 14, 2009|date=September 6, 2005}}
12. ^Stephen Baldwin, Burt Young and Tina Louise to Star in Ken Kushner's TAPESTRY broadwayworld.com Retrieved January 17, 2014
13. ^Adrian Garcia Bogliano's 'Late Phases': Check out the first image from the upcoming horror film – EXCLUSIVE PHOTO Ententainment Weekly, Retrieved January 17, 2014
14. ^Gingerly – Tina Louise {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100323071814/http://www.zimbio.com/Tina+Louise/articles/3/Gingerly |date=March 23, 2010 }}. Zimbio (March 22, 2008). Retrieved on 2012-07-03.
15. ^Welcome to Harkit Records – Specialist in Jazz and film CD Titles. Harkitrecords.com. Retrieved on 2012-07-03.
16. ^{{cite av media|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQIDiL_nkS4|title=OCIE SMITH – "LIGHTHOUSE"|date=December 28, 2013|work=YouTube|accessdate=June 27, 2015}}
17. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.globaldogproductions.info/u/united-artists-us-101-999.html|title=45 Discography for United Artists Records 101-999 series|publisher=}}
18. ^{{cite news|title=Tina Louise: What I’ve learned|first=Cal|last=Fussman|date=December 17, 2013|work=Esquire|url=http://www.esquire.com/entertainment/tv/news/a26510/tinalouisegingergilligansislandinterview0114/}}
19. ^{{cite news|title=Tina Louise gives books to children|first=Carol|last=Buchanan|date=January 22, 2008|work=St. Croix Source|url=http://stcroixsource.com/content/news/localnews/2008/01/23/gilligansislandbigislandtinalouisegivesbookschildren}}{{Dead link|date=July 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=no }}
20. ^[https://www.amazon.com/dp/143926144X What Does A Bee Do? (9781439261446): Tina Louise: Books]. Amazon.com; retrieved July 3, 2012.
21. ^{{cite web|title=Tina Louise profile|url=http://uk.tv.com/people/tina-louise|publisher=TV dot com|accessdate=April 26, 2012}}{{Dead link|date=July 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=no }}
22. ^www.glamourgirlsofthesilverscreen.com/show/166/Tina+Louise/index.html

External links

{{commons category|Tina Louise}}
  • {{IMDb name|1481}}
  • {{IBDB name}}
  • {{Tcmdb name}}
  • {{amg name|43404}}
{{Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year Actress|state=collapsed}}{{Gilligan's Island cast}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Louise, Tina}}

14 : 1934 births|Living people|20th-century American actresses|21st-century American actresses|Actresses from New York City|American female singers|American film actresses|American musical theatre actresses|American television actresses|New Star of the Year (Actress) Golden Globe winners|Jewish American actresses|Miami University alumni|New York (state) Democrats|California Democrats

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