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Actors - Christina Crawford


Christina Crawford (born June 11, 1939) is an American actress and writer.

She was born in Los Angeles, California, to an unwed teenage mother, her father was in the Navy at the time, and she was adopted out-of-state in 1940 by actress and star Joan Crawford
. Christina attended Carnegie Mellon School of Drama and studied at The Neighborhood Playhouse in New York. She has received a B.A. degree from UCLA and a Master's Degree in communications management from USC.

She appeared in summer stock, including a production of Splendor in the Grass
, where she met her first husband. They were married for only a short time. She also did some Off-Broadway productions.

In 1961
, Christina appeared in a small role as Monica George in the 20th Century Fox movie Wild in the Country
starring Elvis Presley
, Hope Lange
, and Tuesday Weld
. That same year, she played Ann in Force of Impulse starring Robert Alda
. Christina was also in Faces
(1968
), which was directed by John Cassavetes
and starred John Marley
and Gena Rowlands
.

In 1962, she appeared in the play The Complaisant Lover starring Reginald Gardiner
in Santa Barbara, and the review read, "Christina Crawford makes an attractive self-possessed 19-year-old, eager to learn about life."

She played five character parts in Ben Hecht's controversial play Winkelberg, based on the life of the late Bohemian poet, Maxwell Bodenheim, at the Stage Society Theatre on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles, where it had its West Coast premiere September 17, 1963.

Christina created quite a stir in Chicago in October 1965 with her sensational hit in Neil Simon's Barefoot in the Park
. She then mystified her Chicago friends when, in November, she left the play after getting all the notices.

She played Joan Borman Kane on the TV soap opera The Secret Storm in New York from 1968 to 1969. She blamed losing her job on the show on her mother, Joan, who at age 62 was a temporary replacement in the role of the 28 year old Kane for four episodes while Christina was in the hospital for emergency surgery in October 1968.

When Joan Crawford was asked about Christina by a reporter in 1970, she said, "On that soap opera, she played the best bitch I ever saw except for me in Queen Bee."

Christina has had three husbands: Harvey Medlinsky (divorced); David Koontz (married 1976-divorced 1982); and Michael Brazzel (divorced).

After leaving The Secret Storm, Christina moved back to California. She appeared in guest spots on the TV series' Medical Center, Marcus Welby, M.D. and The Sixth Sense.

When she went back to school, she met her second husband, David Koontz.

Joan Crawford died in 1977 and Christina, along with her younger adoptive brother, Christopher Crawford, was disinherited. The will had the phrase "...for reasons which should be well known to them." The two youngest of Joan's children, Cindy and Cathy, received $77,500 each.

Christina wrote the best-selling non-fiction book Mommie Dearest (1978), telling of life and abuse growing up with a cruel, overbearing, alcoholic adoptive mother, who was more interested in her career than in her children. In 1981
, a movie version
of the same title was released.

She has also written Black Widow: A Novel (1981), the non-fiction Survivor (1988), which she said was a sequel to Mommie Dearest, the non-fiction books Fundamentals for Decision Making (1991) and No Safe Place: The Legacy of Family Violence (1994), and the novel Daughters Of The Inquisition: Medieval Madness: Origin and Aftermath (2003).

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Christina Crawford ]



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