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Ann-Margret

Ann-Margret

Born Ann-Margaret Olsson in Stockholm, Sweden the redhead who would one day be known simply as Ann-Margret spent the first five years of her life in her native country before her electrician father was offered a job in stateside. The family settled near Chicago, IL; first in Fox Lake, then in Wilmette where they lived in the funeral home where her mother worked as a receptionist. As a vivacious pre-teen, Ann-Margret began entering talent contests, taking her singing and dancing to national television at age 16 on "The Amateur Hour" (DuMont Network, 1946-49; NBC, 1949-1954; ABC, 1955-57). She joined a number of professional bands while still in school, but in 1960, George Burns discovered the cabaret performer singing and playing the maracas in the lounge of the Dunes Hotel in Las Vegas. Impressed with her presence, the comedian hired her for $100 per night to perform in his Christmas show at the Sahara Hotel. After landing a recording contract with RCA and releasing the first of many albums in 1961, she made her feature debut as Bette Davis' daughter in Frank Capra's remake, "A Pocketful of Miracles" (1961). The effort earned the actress a Golden Globe Award for Best Newcomer, and though her follow-up, a remake of "State Fair" (1962), bombed, she became the "It girl" of the moment when she sang the Oscar-nominated song "Bachelor in Paradise" at the 34th annual Academy Awards.With her youthful, high-energy dancing style and breathy vocals, Ann-Margret helped resuscitate the nearly comatose Hollywood musical with her role as the small-town girl chosen to kiss a rock star in "Bye Bye Birdie" (1963). She also played a key role in making "Viva Las Vegas" (1964) Elvis Presley's best musical, matching the King step-for-step in the talent and sex appeal departments. The project also sparked a romance between the pair, who parted as friends and remained close confidantes throughout Elvis' tumultuous life. However "Bye Bye Birdie" and "Viva Las Vegas" were the high points of a flurry of films cranked out to capitalize on Ann-Margret's sex bomb image. She tackled her first serious role in "Kitten with a Whip" (1964), playing a tough, conniving escapee from a reformatory; though some noticed the beginnings of a dramatic actress, most refused to take her seriously. A steady diet of fluff ensued until her 1967 marriage to Roger Smith, the former star of "77 Sunset Strip" (ABC, 1958-1964) who took over her management in partnership with Allan Carr. Smith and Carr groomed Ann-Margret as a variety artist, which begat a decade-long series of highly enjoyable musical-comedy TV specials, beginning with "The Ann-Margret Show" (CBS, 1968). She further survived the death of the Hollywood musical by becoming a staple of the Las Vegas scene where such productions still thrived, selling out shows weeks in advance.During the 1970s, the cultural icon that had inspired and voiced Ann-Margrock on an episode of "The Flintstones" (ABC, 1960-66) finally won respect as a dramatic actress. Her powerful supporting performance as Jack Nicholson's neglected wife in Mike Nichols' "Carnal Knowledge" (1971) brought, in the words of one critic, "the only sign of humanity" to the picture. She would go on to win a Golden Globe and earn an Oscar nomination for the role. A life-threatening, 22-foot fall from a stage in 1972 temporarily disrupted her career and put the entertainer in a coma for three days, but she made a triumphant Las Vegas comeback an astonishing 10 weeks later. The high-profile accident brought in a staggering 51 million viewers to watch her "comeback" TV variety special, "Ann-Margret: When You're Smiling" (NBC, 1973), the following year. She went on to realize her dream of playing opposite John Wayne by landing role in the relaxed Western "The Train Robbers" (1973), following it up with a surprising and intense performance as deaf, dumb, and blind kid Roger Daltrey's mother in the rock musical "Tommy" (1975), for which she earned an Oscar nomination for Best Actress. Though Ann-Margret remained busy during the late-1970s, few good roles and films presented themselves, with her acclaimed performance opposite Anthony Hopkins in Richard Attenborough's "Magic" (1978) outnumbered by comedies like "Middle Age Crazy" (1980). Since meaty feature fare was at a minimum for aging actresses, Ann-Margret turned to television during the '80s as an outlet for her dramatic talent. Her TV movie debut, "Who Will Love My Children?" (ABC, 1983), was a stunner that earned her a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television. Encouraged by director John Erman to shed her glamour image to play the part of a cancer-stricken single mother who tries to place her 10 children with new families before she succumbs, Ann-Margret garnered the first of her many forthcoming Emmy nominations. The following year, she offered a Golden Globe-winning interpretation of Blanche DuBois alongside Treat Williams and Beverly D'Angelo in a TV adaptation of "A Streetcar Named Desire" (ABC, 1984). She gave another excellent performance as a complicating member of a trio in the feature film "Twice in a Lifetime" (1985), as "the other woman" who comes between married couple Gene Hackman and Ellen Burstyn. Ann-Margret's TV career continued steadily with the actress bringing some class to the enjoyably trashy Dominick Dunne-adapted miniseries, "The Two Mrs. Grenvilles" (NBC, 1987), and holding her own opposite Julie Andrews in the touching AIDS drama "Our Sons" (ABC, 1991). These two TV films plus the follow-up miniseries, "Queen" (CBS, 1993) and the misbegotten "Gone with the Wind" (1939) sequel "Scarlett" (CBS, 1994), were all helmed by Erman, whose partnership with Ann-Margret yielded the actress four Emmy nominations altogether.As she reached the half-century mark, the multi-faceted entertainer returned to the stage, starring in the biggest production ever staged by a single performer at Radio City Music Hall in 1991. Her profile boost continued with her biggest feature film success in years, as the attractive bone of contention between famous screen team Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau in "Grumpy Old Men" (1993). Hot on the heels of that major box office success, she released the bestselling memoir, Ann-Margret: My Story for a reported $1 million publishing deal. She re-teamed with her co-stars for the equally popular sequel "Grumpier Old Men" in 1995. At this time, the actress kicked off a producing career through Ann-Margret Productions, creating vehicles for herself like "Following Her Heart" (NBC, 1994) and "Seduced By Madness: The Diane Borchardt Story" (NBC, 1996). Her first foray into series TV came with her role as the matriarch of a large New Mexican ranching family in "Four Corners" (CBS, 1998), which unfortunately fizzled after only three episodes. An Emmy- and Golden Globe-nominated leading role in the Lifetime biopic, "Life of the Party: The Pamela Harriman Story" (1998), about the storied socialite; an almost unrecognizable turn as a wily grandmother in "Happy Face Murders" (Showtime, 1999); and a featured role as a 200-year-old Cinderella in the NBC fantasy miniseries, "The 10th Kingdom" (2000) continued her run as queen of dramatic TV movies.Returning to feature films to kick off a new era of big screen "mother" roles, Ann-Margret played the estranged mom of a football team owner (Cameron Diaz) in Oliver Stone's "Any Given Sunday" (1999). The following year, she portrayed the wife of nearly washed-up movie mogul Burt Reynolds in "The Last Producer" (2000), also directed by Reynolds. On the small screen she excelled in the "ripped from the headlines" television movie, "Perfect Murder, Perfect Town: JonBenét and the City of Boulder" (2000), and she appeared in the CBS miniseries "Blonde" (2001), based on the Joyce Carol Oates book, as one of the influential women in the life of Marilyn Monroe. In "A Woman is a Hell of a Thing" (2001), she was not used to best effect as the New Age-y stepmother of a men's magazine publisher, but that same year, she hit a music milestone when her Gospel album, God is Love: The Gospel Sessions, was nominated for a Grammy Award in the Southern, Bluegrass or Country Gospel category. The tireless worker hit the road in a touring production of "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" before giving a dazzling performance in the telepic, "A Place Called Home" (2004), as an aging, reclusive Southern belle whose feistiness is pitted against a pair of con artists.In a new century career swing towards light comedy features, Ann-Margret had a supporting role as the mother of Jimmy Fallon's rookie cop in the action-buddy film, "Taxi" (2004), and supported Jennifer Aniston and Vince Vaughn in the romantic comedy hit, "The Break-Up" (2006). She played Santa's mother-in-law in the holiday family offering "The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause" (2006) and appeared in the comedy "Old Dogs" (2009) and a film based on a long-lost Tennessee Williams script, "The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond" (2010), She returned to the small screen in 2010 for an Emmy-winning guest appearance on an episode of "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" (NBC, 1999-) and appeared in two episodes of Hollywood drama "Ray Donovan" (Showtime 2013-). Her next big-screen appearances came in the crime comedies "Lucky" (2011) and "Going In Style" (2017).
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