They are not the sort of crude insults you'd ever expect to hear leveled at Audrey Hepburn. But Hollywood costume designer Jean-Pierre Dorléac, 82, says the late movie icon famed for her graceful ...
Suzanne Pleshette (January 31, 1937 – January 19, 2008) was an American actress, on stage, screen and television. After beginning her career in theatre, she began appearing in films in the early 1960s ...
Suzanne Pleshette (January 31, 1937 – January 19, 2008) was an American actress known for her roles in theatre, film, and television. She was nominated for three Emmy Awards and two Golden Globe ...
Erielle Sudario is a Collider News and Feature Author from Australia and has worked in the journalism industry since 2018. She has a passion for entertainment and pop culture news and has interviewed ...
Suzanne Grant McCarthy, 75, of Louisville passed away unexpectedly on December 1, 2025, at University of Louisville Hospital surrounded by her family. Suzanne was born on April 4, 1950, in New York ...
Fate Is the Hunter. Consolidated Airlines’ Flight 22 lifts off the runway on a routine hop to Seattle. Pilot Rod Taylor takes a cup of coffee from Stewardess Suzanne Pleshette, trades a quip or two.
Famed Canadian entertainer and TV host Alan Hamel has announced that he’s created an AI clone of his late wife, actress Suzanne Somers, who passed away from breast cancer at the age of 76 in 2023.
Two years after Suzanne Somers died following a decades-long battle with breast cancer, her widower is preparing to publicly release of a clone of the beloved “Three’s Company” star. Alan Hamel, who ...
Alan Hamel, who married the "Three's Company" star in 1977, says the couple discussed creating an "AI twin" before her death. Shania Russell is a news writer at Entertainment Weekly, with five years ...
“When you look at the finished one next to the real Suzanne, you can’t tell the difference,” he adds Alan Hamel has created an AI clone of his late wife Suzanne Somers two years after her death – ...
When The Bob Newhart Show premiered on CBS in 1972, it quickly became one of the most innovative and most beloved sitcoms of the decade. The series followed psychologist Dr. Robert Hartley, played by ...