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Post by lisa on May 28, 2008 9:23:39 GMT -5
Here is a little info on Rose and what she has played in:
2008 - Black Oasis - Susan Cabot 2007 - Grindhouse: Death Proof - Pam 2007 - Grindhouse: Planet Terror - Cherry Darling 2006 - The Black Dahlia - Sheryl Saddon 2005 - Elvis - Ann Margret 2002 - Vacuums - Debbie Dinsdale 2001-2005: Charmed - Paige Matthews 2001 - Strange Hearts - Moira 2001 - The Killing Yard - Linda Borus 2001 - Monkeybone - Kitty 2000 - The Last Stop - Nancy 2000 - Ready to Rumble - Sasha 1999 - God is in the T.V. - Jackie-O 1999 - Sleeping Beauties - Sno Blo 1999 - Jawbreaker - Courtney Alice Shayne 1998 - Devil in the Flesh - Debbie Strand 1998 - Southie - Kathy Quinn 1998 - Phantoms - Lisa Pailey 1997 - Seed - Miriam 1997 - Lewis & Clark & George - George 1997 - Nowhere - Valley Chick #3 1997 - Going all the way - Gail Ann Thayer 1996 - Scream - Tatum Riley 1996 - Kiss & Tell - Jasmine 1996 - Bio-Dome - Denise 1995 - The Doom Generation - Amy Blue 1992 - Encino Man - Nora
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Post by lisa on Jul 30, 2008 6:38:46 GMT -5
Here is alittle more about Rose.
A rising ingénue with raw talent and bursting sexuality, Rose McGowan won praise for her breakthrough role as the speed demon in Gregg Araki's "The Doom Generation" (1995) and had a commercial hit playing the blonde teen bombshell Tatum in "Scream" (1996). Smart, hip and attractive, McGowan has a background just begging for talk show exploitation. Born in Florence, Italy, where her father headed the local Children of God cult (the same one in which River and Joaquin Phoenix were raised), she is the oldest daughter and second born of six. McGowan began modeling in Italian magazines as a child but her world was turned upside down when her father ran off with her nanny. McGowan's mother brought the brood to the USA where they were often on public assistance and McGowan did not always mesh with her mother's men friends. In a 1997 article in Interview, she claimed that when she was 14 years old, her mother's then-current beau—a 28-year old surfer dude—convinced her mother that McGowan was on drugs. She was locked up in a drug rehab clinic, although she has insisted she never had a problem. Released, McGowan tried living with her father in Montreal, Canada, modeled a bit, then hit the scene in the Pacific Northwest, even attending art school in Seattle for a short period. McGowan had some isolated acting appearances in the early 1990s, including small roles in a 1990 episode of the Fox TV series "True Colors" and the 1992 teen comedy "Encino Man". But her breakthrough came when Araki cast her as Amy Blue, the nihilistic speed freak of "The Doom Generation." In 1996, she had a supporting role in "Bio-Dome", was a mute femme fatale who hooks up with two escaped cons in "Lewis & Clark & George" and was involved in murder in L.A.'s underground scene in "Kiss & Tell." The petite actress also appeared in the 17-minute short "Seed,” as a hooker who was molested by her own mother.
After the phenomenal success of "Scream," one might expect McGowan to 'go Hollywood'; instead she continued to appear in independent films. She offered a cameo as one of a trio of Valley girls (alongside Shannen Doherty and Traci Lords) who are vaporized by a space alien in Araki's nihilistic look at Beverly Hills teenagers, "Nowhere" (1997). In "Phantoms" (1997), she and Joanna Going played sisters who return to their hometown only to find no one living there. McGowan won particular praise for her turn as a sexy young woman clad in a red strapless gown who romances Jeremy Davies in "Going All the Way" (also 1997).
In 1998 she played the self-destructive party girl sister of a young Boston man who has escaped his rough upbringing but finds himself being drawn back into a dangerous existence, and that year she played the orphaned high school student who, after an abusive upbringing by her grandmother and rejection from the teacher whom she seduces, turns homicidal in the uneven but bizarrely entertaining "Devil In the Flesh," which would become a stable of late-night pay cable programming. Next—as McGowan was building a niche portraying sexy, snarky bad/good girl teenagers—was another high school black comedy, "Jawbreaker" (1999), as the dictatorial leader of a tight-knit trio of high school hotties who unravel after accidentally killing a fellow student with the titular candy in a kidnapping scheme gone awry.
A string of more forgettable films followed, and for a period McGowan became more famous for her relationship with Goth rocker Marilyn Manson than her acting career, especially notorious was a red carpet appearance at the 1998 MTV Music Video Awards in which she came on Manson's arm wearing nothing but a completely see-thru fishnet sheath, a thong and heels that left very little to the imagination ("It was very photographed—hee-hee-hee," McGowan told E! Online. "I thought it was a hoot. I actually expected other people to be more crazy or flamboyant that night, and I wound up being kind of the only one."). The couple split in 2001, with McGowan citing his rock star lifestyle—including drug use—as the source of the relationship's demise.
After a turn in the oddball fantasy "Monkeybone" (2001), the actress shifted from features to television when she was cast in 2001 as lost sister Paige Matthews on The WB's popular witchcraft-themed series "Charmed" when one of the original actresses, Shannen Doherty, left the series after some behind-the-scenes squabbling. Though McGowan and her character were well-integrated into the popular but not-so-creatively-ambitious show, the actress always somehow gave the appearance that she was slumming. Meanwhile, she studied Ann-Margaret's moves in "Viva Las Vegas" when she signed on to play the actress opposite Jonathan Rhys Myers as the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll in the highly rated CBS miniseries "Elvis" (2005).
She returned to the big screen to costar in “The Black Dahlia” (2006), Brian De Palma’s take on James Ellroy’s complicated and richly-textured noir thriller about two hard-edged cops (Josh Hartnett and Aaron Eckhart) who descend into obsession, corruption and sexual degeneracy as they investigate the brutal murder of would-be actress Elizabeth Short (Mia Kirshner), who was found tortured and vivisected in a vacant lot in Los Angeles. Meanwhile, McGowan was cast in “Grind House” (2007), a pair of 90-minute horror films written and directed Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino. Rodriguez shot his segment, “Planet Terror,” in the first half of 2006, while Tarantino’s, “Death Proof,” began production that August. McGowan starred in both shorts.
credit: film.com
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Post by jeanie on Aug 8, 2008 6:27:16 GMT -5
There is some things that I did not know. THanks for posting info. I am glad to find out more about Rose.
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