|
STOP! READ THIS! THIS SITE CONTAINS ADULT MATERIAL. THAT IS NOT SUITED FOR MINORS. IF YOU ARE NOT OF LEGAL AGE, YOU MUST LEAVE NOW. Warning and Disclosure: The materials contained within Amanda Plummer Nude Pic site contain graphic visual depictions and descriptions of Amanda Plummer Nude Pic and Amanda Plummer Nude Pic activity and should NOT be accessed by anyone who is younger than 18 years old or who does not wish to be exposed to such materials. By entering this website you are making the following statements: 1. Under penalty of perjury, I swear/affirm that as of this moment, I am an adult, at least 18 years of age. 2. I promise that I will not permit any person(s) under 18 years of age to have access to this site. 3. I am an adult and wish to view visual images, verbal descriptions and audio sounds of Amanda Plummer Nude Pic oriented. |
![]() |
Amanda Plummer Nude Pic Amanda graduated from Middlebury College after 3 years and went full time into acting. She studied at New York's famed Neighborhood Playhouse drama school briefly, where one of her instructors was George C. Scott. During her first years in learning about stage acting, she worked as a telephone operator, usher, and property mistress. She remembers hanging lights at Williamsburg- "going up tall, tall ladders and hanging these big mothers, setting up a stage and making costumes". She worked as a company actor at the Williamstown, Mass. Theatre Festival, with stage credits which included A Midsummer Night's Dream, Gossip and The Overcoat. She made her off Broadway debut at the age of 21 in Lily Agnes's Artichoke, and was likened by critic John Simon to "Shirley Temple doing Boris Karloff". However, Lamont Johnson was so impressed by her acting in that play, that he asked her to audition for his film Cattle Annie and Little Britches. She debuted as Annie in this 1980 Universal Studio film, starring Burt Lancaster. Unfortunately, this film is currently not on video, and plays very rarely on television. The famous film critic, Pauline Kael wrote about her in that film "The only other actress I've seen making a movie debut so excitingly, weirdly lyrical was Katharine Hepburn.." In 1979, she appeared with her mother, Tammy Grimes in A Month in the Country, and in 1980, she acted with Michael Jeter in "The Rabbit's House", part of Alice in Concert. The following year, 1981, Amanda appeared in a revival of the play "A Taste of Honey" as Jo, on Broadway and she won a Tony nomination, and Drama Critics Award for the part. The next year she won the Tony Award, Outer Critics Circle and Theater World Award for her portrayal of the nun Agnes in the Broadway play "Agnes of God". In a major loss to filmgoers, she was passed over for the film role of Agnes in favor of Meg Tilly, who received a Best Supporting Oscar nomination for the role. In 1983 she played Laura Wingfield in The Glass Menagerie, and that same year, she was directed by Sidney Lumet in the film Daniel, in which he compared her to the young Marlon Brando. In 1985 she appeared in Beth Henley's Life Under Water, and in A Lie of the Mind as Beth. In 1986 she played Dolly Clandon in You Can Never Tell, and in 1987 she appeared in The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore, and in Pygmalion as Eliza Doolittle, receiving another Tony nomination. She starred with Peter O'Toole, as Professor Higgins. In 1990 she appeared as a mail order bride on stage with Tess Harper in Beth Henley's Abundance. |