Colleen Dunn

Colleen Dunn


in Forrest Hills, Pennsylvania, USA

Movies for Colleen Dunn...

The Stepford Wives
Title: The Stepford Wives
Character: Marianne Stevens
Released: June 10, 2004
Type: Movie
What does it take to become a Stepford wife, a woman perfect beyond belief? Ask the Stepford husbands, who've created this high-tech, terrifying little town.
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Contact
Title: Contact
Character: Girl in Yellow Dress
Released: September 1, 2002
Type: Movie
Director-choreographer Susan Stroman and librettist John Weidman construct an evening of three dance plays. The first deals with a "swinger" couple and their servant, whose sexual games suddenly change; the second finds an unhappy 1950s wife imagining herself the belle of a restaurant she attends with her abusive husband; and the final piece allows a suicidal executive to find life again chasing after a mysterious girl in a dance bar.
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Title: Law & Order: Criminal Intent
Character: Ashley Heaton
Released: September 30, 2001
Type: TV
The third installment of the “Law & Order” franchise takes viewers deep into the minds of its criminals while following the intense psychological approaches the Major Case Squad uses to solve its crimes.
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Everyone Says I Love You
Title: Everyone Says I Love You
Character: Harry Winston Dancer
Released: December 6, 1996
Type: Movie
A New York girl sets her father up with a beautiful woman in a shaky marriage while her half sister gets engaged.
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The Will Rogers Follies: A Life In Revue
Title: The Will Rogers Follies: A Life In Revue
Character: New Ziegfeld Girl
Released: November 26, 1993
Type: Movie
The Will Rogers Follies is a musical with a book by Peter Stone, lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green, and music by Cy Coleman. It focuses on the life and career of famed humorist and performer Will Rogers, using as a backdrop the Ziegfeld Follies, which he often headlined, and describes every episode in his life in the form of a big production number. The Rogers character also performs rope tricks in between scenes. The revue contains snippets of Rogers' famous homespun style of wisdom and common sense and tries to convey the personality of this quintessentially American figure whose most famous quote was "I never met a man I didn't like."