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She and starred
She later starred in Jean-Luc Godard's 1963 film Le Mépris.
She divorced Vadim in 1957 and in 1959 married actor Jacques Charrier, with whom she starred in Babette Goes to War.
She starred opposite Anthony Perkins in the 1978 Alan Rudolph film Remember My Name and opposite Jeff Bridges in the 1979 film Winter Kills.
She intermittently took classes at Portland State University studying English, as well as San Francisco State University and the San Francisco Art Institute, where she took a film class taught by George Kuchar and starred in one of his short films.
She starred in the off-Broadway play Love, Loss, and What I Wore in February 2010.
She starred as Kitty Walker McCallister on the ABC drama, Brothers & Sisters.
She received a Golden Globe nomination as Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture in 1984 for her role in Irreconcilable Differences, in which she starred as a young girl divorcing her parents.
She starred in Alfred Hitchcock's suspense film, The Man Who Knew Too Much ( 1956 ) with James Stewart.
She starred in the western film The Ballad of Josie ( 1967 ) and starred in a comedy film centered on the Northeast blackout of November 9, 1965 called Where Were You When the Lights Went Out?
She also starred in the pilot episode of Eight Is Enough as Nancy Bradford, the role that, in the series, went to Dianne Kay.
She also starred in Rich Man Poor Man with Nick Nolte and a host of other well-received television mini-series.
She played the title role in Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette ( 2006 ) and starred in the comedy How to Lose Friends & Alienate People ( 2008 ).
She also starred in the successful musicals Lili ( 1953 ), with Mel Ferrer ; Daddy Long Legs ( 1955 ), with Fred Astaire, and Gigi ( 1958 ) with Louis Jourdan and Maurice Chevalier.
She co-wrote, directed and starred in the film and produced it under the banner of her own company, Leni Riefenstahl Productions.
She also starred in the nearly universally panned film remake of Lost Horizon in 1973.
She also starred in the short-lived Annie McGuire in 1988.
She subsequently also guest starred on Ellen DeGeneres's next TV show, The Ellen Show, in 2001.
She starred in Whose Life Is It Anyway with James Naughton, which opened on Broadway at the Royale Theatre on February 24, 1980, and ran for 96 performances, and in Sweet Sue, which opened at the Music Box Theatre ( transferred to the Royale Theatre ) on Jan. 8, 1988, and ran for 164 performances.
She soon starred in the 1953 science fiction film Donovan's Brain ; Crowther said that Davis, playing the role of a possessed scientist's " sadly baffled wife ", " walked through it all in stark confusion " in an " utterly silly " film.
She also made appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show, The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, The Man from U. N. C. L. E., and Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, The Virginian and starred in television specials.
" She also starred in Sergio Castellitto ’ s melodrama Don ’ t Move.
She then starred on the short-lived television series, CBS's Live to Dance, which lasted one season in 2011, and was subsequently a judge on the first season of American version of The X Factor with her former American Idol co-judge Simon Cowell which premiered on September 21, 2011.
She then starred in films such as The Princess Bride and Forrest Gump ( earning her a Golden Globe nomination ).
She also starred in ads for Candie's shoes and Gitano jeans, who also sponsored her 1998 – 1999 Come On Over Tour.

She and record-breaking
She remains notable for two feats: a record-breaking trip around the world in emulation of Jules Verne's character Phileas Fogg, and an exposé in which she faked insanity to study a mental institution from within.
She was a record-breaking balloonist, a pioneering aviator and during World War I became the first woman to fly combat missions as a bomber pilot.
She has even stated that her record-breaking performance was a huge motivation for her to follow a career in entertainment.
She made a return to the stage in a record-breaking national tour of Noël Coward's Private Lives in 1949, and also played Eliza Doolittle in George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion at the Edinburgh Festival of 1951, and the title role in J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan in 1949, 1950, and 1957 ( the latter with her daughter Julia Lockwood as Wendy ).
She also participated in the " Chorus Line " extravaganza to celebrate its then record-breaking run on Broadway in September 1983.
She scored the record-breaking points as part of a staged controversial layup.

She and west
She then spent the next three years seeking help from psychiatrists on both the west and the east coasts.
Guru Arjan, Nanak V, says, " God is beyond colour and form, yet His / Her presence is clearly visible " ( GG, 74 ), and " Nanak's Lord transcends the world as well as the scriptures of the east and the west, and yet He / She is clearly manifest " ( GG, 397 ).
She goes on to suggest that colored people be given land out west to build homes and prosper on.
She continues her husband's policy of attacking cities on the west coast of Greece and practising large-scale piracy in the Adriatic and Ionian Seas.
She directed boundaries to be set and to reach Cape Henlopen north along the west side of Godyn's Bay ( Delaware Bay ), up the South River ( Delaware River ), past Minquas Kill ( Christina River ), to Sankikans ( Trenton Falls ).
She is on the direct line of the new east and west railroad, and a railroad is to be built from Lakin south to Ulysses, thus insuring her of two railroads.
She named the town Silverton after Silver Creek, which flowed by the several hundred yards to the west of the oak.
She is also the second Speaker from a state west of the Rocky Mountains.
She toured regional vaudeville with some success, but became known less for her singing than for her entertaining " wild west "- related patter.
She saved money, prepared for entrance examinations at Oberlin College, Ohio, and readied herself for the trip west.
She spent five months in repair on the west coast, so VF-3 squadron transferred to the on January 31.
She suggests that Pa and Ma move west to the rapidly developing Dakota Territory, where Pa could work in Uncle Henry ’ s railroad camp.
She has also been an adviser to small businesses in west Wales, and lives in Haverfordwest.
She currently resides in a £ 1. 5 million house in Notting Hill, west London, estimated to be worth £ 5 million in 2006, and reportedly made £ 3. 2 million in 2007.
She arrived at Esquimalt, British Columbia, on November 7, 1910, and carried out fishery patrols and training duties on Canada's west coast.
She was buried at Kensal Green in north west London, before being reinterred in 1927 at Mount Vernon, Liberton, Edinburgh.
Her object, as described by herself, was “ to unite American women in an effort to provide a Christian education for 2, 000, 000 children in our country .” She made her field of labor especially in the west and south, and sought the aid of educated women throughout the United States.
She traveled west across the plains and arrived in the Salt Lake Valley on 2 October 1847.
She interpreted this as an impending attack from the Kingdom of Baekje ( the croaking frogs were seen as angry soldiers ) in the northwest of Silla ( white symbolized the west in astronomy ) at the Women's Valley ( the Jade Gate was associated with women ).
She and her husband manage an organic farm in the Kauaeranga Valley west of Thames at the base of the Coromandel Peninsula.
She also criticized it for not taking account of the situation for women outside the west.
She was born in Covent Garden, west London ; a cousin was the actor Clive Dunn.
She was first educated at St George's Primary School in Mount Street, Mayfair, west London, before attending the Royal Masonic School for Girls in Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, and then the Italia Conti Academy stage school in London.
She was born at Hano Pueblo, which is primarily made up of descendants of the Tewa tribe who fled west to Hopi lands after the Pueblo Rebellion of 1680.
Rehov ( also Rehob ), meaning " broad ", " wide place ", was an important Bronze and Iron Age city located at Tel Rehov (), an archaeological site in the Jordan Valley, Israel, approximately 5 km south of Beit She ' an and 3 km west of the Jordan River.

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