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Joanna Virginia Caskey 2 August 1945, Haddonfield, New Jersey, USA Lovely, vivacious, smart-looking Joanna Cassidy was born in Camden, New Jersey and raised in Haddonfield, a borough located in Camden County. Joanna grew up in a creative environment as the daughter and granddaughter of artists. At an early age she engaged in painting and sculpture and went on to major in art at Syracuse University in New York. During her time there she married Kennard C. Kobrin in 1964, a doctor in residency, and found work as a fashion model to help work his way to a degree. The couple moved to San Francisco where her husband set up a psychiatric practice; Joanna continued modeling and eventually giving birth to a son and daughter. Following their divorce ten years later, she decided to move to Los Angeles in a bid for an acting career.In between modeling chores and occasional commercial bites, the reddish-haired beauty found minor, decorative work as an actress in such action fare as Steve McQueen's thriller Bullitt (1968), the Jason Robards drama Fools (1970), The Laughing Policeman (1973) starring Walter Matthau and The Outfit (1973) with Robert Duvall. Her first co-starring role came opposite George C. Scott in the offbeat comedy caper Bank Shot (1974).Television became an important medium for her in the late 70s with guest parts on all the popular shows of the time, both comedic and dramatic, including "Dallas," "Trapper John, M.D., "Taxi, "Starsky & Hutch," "Charlie's Angels," "Lou Grant" and a recurring role on "Falcon Crest". A regular on the sketch/variety show "Shields and Yarnell" (1977), which showcased the popular mime couple, Joanne languished in three failed series attempts "The Roller Girls" (1978), "240-Robert" (1979), and "The Family Tree" (1983) before hitting the bull's eye with the sitcom "Buffalo Bill" (1983) opposite Dabney Coleman, where Joanna finally had the opportunity to demonstrate her flair for offbeat comedy. The show became that's season's critical darling with Coleman playing a vain, sexist, obnoxious talk show host (a variation of his popular "9 to 5" film character) and Joanna received a Golden Globe for her resourceful portrayal of Jo Jo White, the director of his show and romantic foil for Coleman, who stood toe-to-toe with his antics.The 1980s also brought about positive, critical reception for Joanna on film as well, especially in a number of showy portrayals, notably her snake-dancing replicant in the futuristic sci-fi thriller Blade Runner (1982), her radio journalist involved with Nick Nolte and Ed Harris in the political drama Under Fire (1983), and her co-starring role in a wacky triangle with Bob Hoskins and a hyperkinetic hare in the highly ambitious part toon/part fantasy film Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988). Back on the TV front she was seen in recurring roles on "L.A. Law," "Diagnosis Murder," "The District" and "Boston Legal".Since then Joanna has juggled a number of quality film and TV assignments, a definitive highlight being her Emmy-nominated recurring role as a quirky, capricious mother/psychiatrist in the cult cable series "Six Feet Under" (2001). More recently she has taken part in more controversial film work that contain stronger social themes such as Anthrax (2001), a Canadian political thriller whose storyline feeds on the fear of terrorism; The Virgin of Juarez (2006), which chronicled the murders of hundreds of Mexican women; and the gay-themed pictures Anderson's Cross (2007) and Kiss the Bride (2007).Off-camera Joanna is devoted to her art (painting, sculpting) and is a dedicated animal activist as well as golfer and antique collector. She presently resides in the Los Angeles area with her dogs.
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Six Feet Under
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Boston Legal
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Who Framed Roger Rabbit
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Ghosts of Mars
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Bullitt
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'Inbetweeners' star for new BBC comedy
added by newsBotInbetweeners star James Buckley will appear in a new BBC comedy later this year, it has been announced. The seven-part series, titled Fresh, is set on a fictional UK university campus and follows a group of students as they embark on a new life away from home. Buckley, who played Jay Cartwright in the E4 teen comedy, is joined in the cast by Jonathan Bailey, Danny Morgan and Joanna Cassidy. The show originally launched online last year in five-minute episodes. The television version will continue where the internet series left off
By Dan French
Read the full article on digitalspy.co.uk -
2009 Tribeca Film Festival Focus - "Stay Cool" - Images added to the gallery.
added by newsBotSee images from the Michael Polish-helmed comedy "Stay Cool" written by Mark Polish. The cast includes Mark Polish, Hilary Duff, Winona Ryder, Jon Cryer, Josh Holloway, Sean Astin, Chevy Chase, Marc Blucas and Joanna Cassidy. The film is produced by the Polish brothers along with Jonathan Sheldon and Janet Dubois. Mild-mannered Henry McCarthy (Mark Polish), an accomplished author, returns home to give the commencement speech at his high school. But even after 20 years, it feels like he never left. Henry stays in his old room, perfectly preserved with '80s artifacts, and a luggage mishap leaves him no choice but to squeeze into clothes still hanging in his closet
Read the full article on moviejungle.net -
2009 Tribeca Film Festival Focus - "Stay Cool" - Images added to the gallery.
added by newsBotSee images from the Michael Polish-helmed comedy "Stay Cool" written by Mark Polish. The cast includes Mark Polish, Hilary Duff, Winona Ryder, Jon Cryer, Josh Holloway, Sean Astin, Chevy Chase, Marc Blucas and Joanna Cassidy. The film is produced by the Polish brothers along with Jonathan Sheldon and Janet Dubois. Mild-mannered Henry McCarthy (Mark Polish), an accomplished author, returns home to give the commencement speech at his high school. But even after 20 years, it feels like he never left. Henry stays in his old room, perfectly preserved with '80s artifacts, and a luggage mishap leaves him no choice but to squeeze into clothes still hanging in his closet
Read the full article on moviejungle.com
