Veronica Hamel
- Reparto
- Producción
Veronica Hamel nació el 20 de noviembre de 1943 en Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Estados Unidos. Es una actriz y productora, conocida por Canción triste de Hill Street (1981), Cannonball (1976) y Perdidos (2004). Ha estado casada con Michael Irving.
- Nominado para 5 premios Primetime Emmy
- 1 premio y 5 nominaciones en total
Reparto
Producción
- Nombre alternativo
- Veronica Hamil
- Altura
- 1,73 m
- Nacimiento
- Cónyuge
- Michael Irving1969 - 1979 (divorciado)
- Niños
- No Children
- Otras obrasStage: Appeared (as "Claire Ganz"; replacement actor) in "Rumors" on Broadway. Comedy/farce. Written by Neil Simon. Scenic Design by Tony Straiges. Directed by Gene Saks. Broadhurst Theatre (moved to The Ethel Barrymore Theatre from 13 Dec 1989- close), 17 Nov 1988-24 Feb 1990 (535 performances + 8 previews that began 8 Nov 1988). Cast: Lisa Banes (as "Cassie Cooper"), Christine Baranski (as "Chris Gorman"), Charles Brown (as "Welch"), Cynthia Darlow (as "Pudney"), Andre Gregory (as "Ernie Cusack"), Ken Howard (as "Glenn Cooper"), Ron Leibman (as "Lenny Ganz"), Mark Nelson (as "Ken Gorman"), Joyce Van Patten (as "Cookie Cusack"), Jessica Walter (as "Claire Ganz"). Standbys: Gibby Brand (as "Ken Gorman" / "Lenny Ganz" / "Welch"), Kandis Chappell (as "Cassie Cooper" / "Chris Gorman" / "Pudney"), Cynthia Darlow (as "Claire Ganz" / "Cookie Cusack"), Timothy Landfield (as "Ernie Cusack" / "Glenn Cooper"). Replacement cast during Broadhurst Theatre run: Kandis Chappell (as "Chris Gorman"), Dan Desmond (as "Ernie Cusack"), Lisa Emery (as "Cassie Cooper"), Timothy Landfield (as "Glenn Cooper"), Dick Latessa (as "Ernie Cusack"), Richard Levine (as "Ken Gorman"), Larry Linville (as "Glenn Cooper") [from 26 Dec 1988-?], Kathleen Marsh (as "Pudney"), Greg Mulvaney (as "Lenny Ganz"), Alice Playten (as "Cookie Cusack"). Replacement cast during Ethel Barrymore Theatre run: None noted. Produced by Emanuel Azenberg.
- Listings de publicidad
- CuriosidadesIn 1972 she and her then husband became the new owners of Marilyn Monroe's Brentwood home. They hired a contractor to replace the roof and remodel the house, and the contractor discovered a sophisticated eavesdropping and telephone tapping system that covered every room in the house. The components were not commercially available in 1962, but were--in the words of a retired Justice Department official--"standard FBI issue."
This discovery lent further support to claims of conspiracy theorists that Marilyn had been under surveillance by the Kennedys and/or the Mafia. The new owners spent $100,000 to remove the bugging devices from the house.
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