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  1. 2 giorni fa · A point Kramer and Berger develop between them about Jill Clayburgh’s insecure Marilyn essentially being Liza Minnelli’s kooky “Pookie”, only a decade later, from Pakula’s first directorial film The Sterile Cuckoo (1969), had me personally thinking how the era’s searching, sometimes lonely, but always plucky “modern woman” came to be defined on James L. Brooks succeeding ...

  2. 21 ore fa · Jill Clayburgh (Semi-Tough) plays the wacky nursery school teacher who tries to help him surmount the emotional hurdles, but it’ll be rough going: he’s still hung up on his ex-wife. Starting Over is sprinkled with charming comedy, from Bergen’s nails-on-a-chalkboard singing style to Reynolds’ near-nervous breakdown right in the middle of Bloomingdale’s department store.

  3. 1 giorno fa · In films, she was a stalker in scenes for Jessica Walter in “Play Misty for Me” (1971), rode the rails as a double for Jill Clayburgh in the comedy “Silver Streak” (1976) and battled ...

  4. 3 giorni fa · In Alice and Unmarried Woman, the heroines’ (Ellen Burstyn and Jill Clayburgh) independence is tempered by the presence of two gorgeous, really nice guys (Kris Kristofferson and Alan Bates, each at the height of his appeal) who, it is implied, will remain in the women’s lives, providing support and great sex while the heroines pursue their careers.

  5. 1 giorno fa · As Phil re-enters the dating scene, he encounters Marilyn (Jill Clayburgh), a whimsical nursery school teacher representing a new chapter of love and life. Their romance, filled with its ups and downs, mirrors the uncertain yet hopeful steps one takes on the road to recovery and emotional connection.

  6. 5 giorni fa · Pippin stars Irene Ryan, Jill Clayburgh and John Rubenstein during a rehearsal break in August 1972 Jack Mitchell/Getty Images. In 1972, she had created the Irene Ryan Acting Scholarship, ...

  7. 5 giorni fa · Jill Clayburgh starred as a wealthy New Yorker who adjusts to single life after her husband (Michael Murphy) leaves her for another woman. Mazursky’s script was unsparing and well observed, and Alan Bates was a standout as the lover of Clayburgh’s character.