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June 11, 2009

Elvis' Women Sorted by Movie [SORT THEM BITCHES OUT, PIMP-FAN LADY]

ELVIS' WOMEN: SORTED BY MOVIE

AN ALMOST COMPLETE LIST OF ALL OF THE
ACTRESSES THAT APPEARED IN ELVIS' FILMS



1956 Love Me Tender Debra Paget, Mildred Dunnock
1957 Loving You Dolores Hart, Lizabeth Scott, Jana Lund, Yvonne Lime, Donna Jo Gribble, Victoria King, Karen Scott, Steffi Sidney, Florine Carlan, Nancy Kilgas, Myrna Fahey, Joan Bradshaw, Melinda Byron, Carole Dulaine, Elaine Dupont, Heather Hopper, Carla Merey, Joy Reynolds, Joy A. Stoner, Jeanette Taylor, Brenda Lomas, Audrey Lowell, Linda Rivera, Gwen Caldwell, Sue England, Cecile Rogers, Barbara Hearn
Jailhouse Rock Judy Tyler, Jennifer Holden, Anne Neyland, Robin Raymond, Elizabeth Slifer, Gloria Pall, Katherine Warren, Alyn Lockwood, Jo Gilbert, Paula Trent, Joan Dupuis, Tracy Morgan, Linda Williams
1958 King Creole Dolores Hart, Carolyn Jones, Jan Shepard, Liliane Montevecchi, Helen Hatch, Lilyn Chauvin, Ziva Rodann, Rita Green, Kay Haydn, Barbara Gayle, Susanne Sydney, Jacqueline Park, Jackie Joseph, Nina Vaughn, Hazel Boyne, Blanche Thomas, Kitty White
1960 G.I. Blues Juliet Prowse, Leticia Roman, Sigrid Maier, Erika Peters, Edit Angold, Karen Mann, Hannerl Melcher, Judith Rawlins, Britta Ekman, Marianne Gaba, Sally Todd, Trude Wyler, , Marlyn Gladstone, Liz Dubrock,
Flaming Star Barbara Eden, Dolores Del Rio, Anne Benton, Marian Goldina, Barbara Beaird, Virginia Christine, Sharon Bercutt
1961 Wild In The Country Hope Lange, Tuesday Weld, Millie Perkins, Christina Crawford, Robin Raymond, Doreen Lang, Ruby Goodwin
Blue Hawaii Joan Blackman, Angela Lansbury, Nancy Walters, Iris Adrian, Hilo Hattie, Jenny Maxwell, Pamela Kirk (Austin), Darlene Tompkins, Christian Kay, Lillian Culver, Sharon Lee Connors, Veronica Reed, Kate-Ellen Murtagh, Irene H. Mizushima, Ngarua, Flora K. Hayes, Yolanda Hughes, Debra M. Kawamura, Bella Richards, Elsie Russell
1962 Follow That Dream Anne Helm, Joanna Moore, Pam Ogles
Kid Galahad Joan Blackman, Lola Albright
Girls! Girls! Girls! Laurel Goodwin, Stella Stevens, Lili Valenty, Beulah Quo, Ginny Tiu, Elizabeth Tiu, Ann McCrea, Mary Treen, Marjorie Bennett, Pamela Duncan, June Jocelyn, Barbara Beall, Betty Beall, Anna Wai Hong Lin, Linda Rand, Masako Yoshimoto
1963 It Happened At The World's Fair Joan O'Brien, Vicky Tiu, Edith Atwater, Dorothy Green, Yvonne Craig, Jacqueline Dewit, Sandra Giles, Evelyn Dutton, Linda Humble, Erna Tanler, Jong Ok Kim, Kathryn MacGuinness, Paula Lane
Fun In Acapulco Ursula Andress, Elsa Cardenas, Teri Hope, Mary Treen, Stella Garcia, Linda Rivera, Adele Palacios, Darlene Tomkins, Linda Rand, Teri Garr
1964 Kissin' Cousins Glenda Farrell, Yvonne Craig, Pamela Austin, Cynthia Pepper, Beverly Powers, Beverly Hills, Maureen Reagan, Hortense Petra, Joan Staley, Teri Garr
Viva Las Vegas Ann-Margret, Teri Garr
Roustabout Barbara Stanwyck, Joan Freeman, Sue Ane Langdon, Joan Staley, Jane Dulo, Wilda Taylor, Mariana Hill , Beverly Adams, Mercedes G. Ford, Barbara Hemingway, Dianne Simpson, Raquel Welch, Teri Hope, Lynn Borden, Linda Foster, Dianne Libby, Maugene H. Gannon, Katie Sweet, Teri Garr
1965 Girl Happy Shelley Fabares, Mary Ann Mobley, Nita Talbot, Chris Noel, Lyn Edgington, Gale Gilmore, Pamela Curran, Rusty Allen, Nancy Czar, Theresa Cooper, Julie Payne, Beverly Adams, Stassa Damascus
Tickle Me Jocelyn Lane, Julie Adams, Merry Anders, Connie Gilchrist, Barbara Werle, Allison Hayes, Inez Pedroza, Lilyan Chauvin, Angela Greene, Laurie Burton, Linda Rogers, Ann Morell, Jean Ingram, Francine York, Eve Bruce, Jackie Russell, Peggy Ward, Dorian Brown, Dorothy Conrad
Harum Scarum Mary Ann Mobley, Fran Jeffries, Barbara Werle, Brenda Benet, Gail Gilmore, Wilda Taylor, Vicki Malkin, Suzanna Covington, Carolyn Carter, Maja Stewart, Judy Durell
1966 Frankie And Johnny Donna Douglas, Sue Ane Langdon, Nancy Kovack, Audrey Christie, Joyce Jameson, Naomi Stevens, Wilda Taylor, Larri Thomas, Dee Jay Mattis, Judy Chapman
Paradise, Hawaiian Style Suzanna Leigh, Donna Butterworth, Mariana Hill, Julie Parrish, Irene Tsu, Linda Wong, Jan Shepard, Doris Packer, Mary Treen, Gigi Verone, Shanon Hale, Anne Morell, China Lee, Miko Mayama, Edy Williams, Arlene Charles, Deanna Lund
Spinout Shelley Fabares, Diane McBain, Deborah Walley, Dodie Marshall, Una Merkel, Jo Ann Medley, Deanna Lund, Inga Jacklin, Virginia Wood, Nancy Czar, Victoria Carroll, Rita Wilson, Arlene Charles, Jeanmarie, Gay Gordon, Phyllis Davis, Thordis Brandy, Fredda Lee, Sheryl Ullman, Judy Durell
1967 Easy Come, Easy Go Dodie Marshall, Pat Priest, Elsa Lanchester, Elaine Beckett, Shari Nims, Kay York
Double Trouble Annette Day, Yvonne Romain, Helene Winston, Monique LeMaire, Marilyn Keymer, Melody Keymer, Laurie Lambert, Jan Reddin, Mary Hughes, Audrey Sanders, Sheryl Ullman
Clambake Shelley Fabares, Suzie Kaye, Amanda Harley, Angelique Pettyjohn, Olga Kaya, Arlene Charles, Sue England, Lisa Slagle, Marj Dusay, Frances Humphrey HowardTeri Garr (bit part)
1968 Stay Away, Joe Katy Jurado, Quentin Dean, Joan Blondell, Susan Trustman, Anne Seymour, Maurishka, Caitlin Wyles, Marya Christen, Jennifer Peak
Speedway Nancy Sinatra, Victoria Meyerink, Christopher West, Beverly Hills, Michele Newman, Courtney Brown, Dana Brown, Patti Jean Keith, Gari Hardy, Charlotte Considine, Sally Mills, Barbro Hedstrom, Dianne Stanley, Dee Carroll, Karen Hamilton, Kathy Nelson, Jamie Michaels, Sheryl Ullman, Rita Rogers, Sharon Garrett, Arlene Charles, Cassandra Lawton, Marilyn Jones
Live A Little, Love A Little Michele Carey, Celeste Yarnall, Joan Shawlee, Mary Grover, Emily Banks, Merri Ashley, Phyllis Davis, Ursula Menzel, Susan Shute, Edie Baskin, Gabrielle, Ginny Kaneen, Susan Henning, Ann Doran, Heidi Jensen, Myrna Ross, Marcia Mae Jones, Veronica Erickson, Thordis Brandt, Gayle Rogers, Mari Aldon
1969 Charro! Ina Balin, Lynn Kellogg, Barbara Werle, Christa Lang, Kathleen Darc, Jacqui Brandt, Megan Timothy
The Trouble With Girls Marlyn Mason, Sheree North, Nicole Jaffe, Anissa Jones, Joyce Van Patten, Helene Winston, Patsy Garrett, Linda Sue Risk, Kathleen Rainey
Change Of Habit Mary Tyler Moore, Barbara McNair, Jane Elliot, Leora Dana, Doro Merande, Ruth McDevitt, Laura Figueroa, Lorena Kirk, Virginia Vincent, Lilith Miles, Caitlin Wyles, Linda Garay, Stella Garcia, Rita Conde, Araceli Rey

Ann-Margret Trivia + Elvis and Ann-Margret Tic-Tac-Toe!





Ann-Margret Trivia

ElvisAnn-Margret
Tic-Tac-Toe!
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Ann-Margret

To get the right answer to a question just move the cursor over the button:
AM
The answer will then be displayed in the status row at the bottom of the page.
If you click on the button you will get the answers to all questions in the quiz.

Ann-Margret

Film Bar

1. When was she born?

2. Where was she born?

3. What is her real name?

4. How old was she when she came to America?

5. What university did she attend?

6. She made her film debut in what movie?

7. Who played her mother in the answer to Question 6?

8. She vamped what singer in "State Fair?"

9. What comedian gave her a big break?

10. She played Kim McAfee in what film?

11. Who was her co-star in "Viva Las Vegas?"

12. She appeared in a remake of "Three Coins in the Fountain" titled?

13. She portrayed a character named Dallas in what 1966 film?

14. What is her husband's name?

15. What is her character's name on the "Flintstones?"

16. She received her first Academy Award nomination for her role in what movie?

17. What year did she have a horrible 22-foot fall from a platform during her stage act?

18. She was nominated for an Oscar for a second time for her role in what film?

19. She played opposite Anthony Hopkins in what 1978 movie?

20. She portrayed a dying mother in what 1983 telefilm?

21. What actress surprised A-M at the Emmy Awards with a tribute to her performance in the answer to Question 20?

22. Who played Stanley opposite her Blanche Dubois?

23. Who portrayed the elder Mrs. Grenville in "The Two Mrs. Grenvilles?"

24. What character did she play in "Scarlett?"

25. Her first TV series premiered February 24, 1998. What was the show's title?

Ann-Margret | Modern Screen, July, 1975 "IS ANN-MARGRET IN LOVE WITH ELTON JOHN?


Is Ann-Margret in Love With Elton John?

Many people who saw them together that night in New York may have found the picture a little unsettling. There was Ann-Margret (long considered to be almost on a par with the most popular teenage-type doll), glittering and shimmering in her pale green, Bob Mackie beaded gown, make-up perfect after hours spent in front of a brightly lit mirror, long red hair carefully coiffed and combed, eyes sparkling with excitement. And next to her (at least for part of the evening) lounged the current king of rock, the guy who's been collecting more gold records than anyone of late, whose public appearances are sold out even before they are announced, whose presence elicits familiar, but long-thought vanished shrieks of joy from an astonishing number of otherwise ordinary-appearing teenage girls. Neatly clad in black velvet, stars and sequins, with a cunning derby tilted toward one oversized, rosy, glitter-framed eyeglass, the dubious beginning of a beard clearly visible on his cheeks, he was, in short, Elton John.

And what he and Ann-Margret Olsson were doing on a specially reserved and decorated New York City subway platform (yes, truly!) was co-hosting what was undoubtedly the publicity party of the year, so far; to celebrate the smash opening of the film rock opera, Tommy.

It doesn't take much to bring people out to parties these days, but even so, this one was jammed - not just with show-biz personalities but with society types as well.

More than 700 guests competed for the 600 available seats, which led Elton John to mutter, "I've never been so frightened in my life," while Tommy composer and Who guitarist, Pete Townshend just stood around and said woefully, "I just hope none of these people turn up at any Who concerts."

Despite the funkiness of the scene, however, Ann-Margret was the undisputed queen of the evening - and in the old-fashioned Hollywood sense. And, compounding the schism still more, the role Ann plays in Tommy - Iustful, gross, walloing, in one scene, in the assorted gook and garbage spewed forth from a malefic TV - is very far from the image she has worked so hard to create and to live - solid, square, happily married and definitely unfreaky .

"I live quietly with my husband and, sometimes' his children," she says in her small, littlegirl voice. "We have a nice family life and at night usually the most exciting thing we do is screen movies."

It would sound almost cozy if you didn't know that the simple family life the lady is talking about takes place in one of Hollywood's legendary mansions that has been reconditioned and rehabilitated to A-M's taste - including a whole room that has been converted into a huge closet to house part of her wardrobe. She needs the space, I'm a very female person," she explains. "I do love the glamour. The little girl in me has never grown up and I love soft and sensuous things like feathers and things that sparkle." Like five or ten carat diamond rings. She's got a few of those, too.

Ann-Margret is not just a vacuous, self-indulgent creature, however. She is tough, spunky, determined and disciplined and she is known as one of the hardest, bordering on compulsive, workers in Hollywood "I'm in this business for the love of it, not the money primarily," she says. "I really dig performing for a live audience. I just love those people out there and I love the feedback they give me. The greatest charge for me is feeling those waves of love coming across from the audience. I can't get enough of it. That's what keeps me going.

That's on the one hand.

On the other hand, there is the domestic A-M, who sighs, "I want to have a baby more than anything in the world, but I can't find the time to stay home and take care of it. When will that be? Why, last year I was hardly home at all. We have this beautiful home and we're really not there to enjoy it."

She gets tired of working at times, that's cIear. She also gets tired of defending husband Roger Smith against the charges that he makes her work. "He has taken so much abuse," she declares. "The thing is, he protects me, he helps me, I couldn't survive without him".

How will Ann-Margret's latest triumph - her venture into Elton John's world of glitter rock affect her? Particularly since she is known as especially sensitive in reacting to the roles she plays.

When she did Bobby in Carnal Knowledge, for instance, she found it a thoroughly traumatic experience which, years later, still can bring remnants of depression to her. The more serious the work, the more lasting the impression. Her earlier, poorly received pictures don't seem to bother her at all, even though she was often wounded at the time by the cutting comments about them.

"I've never known who that girl is up there on that screen and probably never will. l don't see rushes and I only see my films once. An actor or actress sees some merit in any project they are involved in... No one ever makes bad film intentionally... But you make three or four dogs in a row and people start saying that girl is a real ding-a-ling. She only how to move her hips!"

She doesn't have to worry about being accused of being only a hip mover anymore. But the question still remains - where does she move next?

As we've said, she was never really comfortable till now in Elton John's world of rock - either professionally or personally. And while they share a mutual liking and respect for each other, there was, despite speculation, nothing deeper or longer lasting that happened between them. Ann-Margret as a kid knew the fright and insecurity of poverty, of having to sleep in the parlor of a funeral home her mother was the caretaker for. And Elton John was a former fat kid, lonely and unsure, whose parents were divorced and who never felt really wanted or loved. Undoubtedly they felt a recognition when they met, an affection that perhaps contributed tributed to the "phantasmagorical nightmare" energy that was brought to Tommy. The truth is they were never able to get much closer than that.

But Ann's friends are now wondering if the huge success of Tommy will almost force her into a personally looser, funkier lifestyle than the one she and Roger have shared till now. Annie, they know, is very susceptible to change, almost plastic, at times, in the way she can be molded They fear that the hard, tough, drug-oriented, loose world of glitter rock is the last thing in the world she needs.

If her life should move in this direction, however, Elton John could prove - in the long run to have more of an influence over her than was even hinted at now.

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By Peter Palmer

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