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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Chelse_SwainChelse Swain - Wikipedia

    Chelse Elizabeth Ashley Swain (born May 25, 1983) is an American actress, best known for playing Bonnie Lisbon in the 1999 American film The Virgin Suicides. Her sister is the actress Dominique Swain.

    Year
    Title
    Role
    Notes
    2012
    Southern dysComfort
    Michael's Daughter Mary Catherine
    Short film
    2008
    Abigail
    Episode: "Animal Control"
    2008
    Unrequited
    Nikki
    Short film
    2007
    Carrie
    TV movie
  2. The Virgin Suicides: Directed by Sofia Coppola. With James Woods, Kathleen Turner, Kirsten Dunst, Josh Hartnett. A group of male friends become obsessed with five mysterious sisters who are sheltered by their strict, religious parents in suburban Detroit in the mid 1970s.

    • Sofia Coppola
    • 1 min
  3. Oct 2, 2018 · Chelse Swain, Hanna Hall, Leslie Hayman, Kirsten Dunst, and A. J. Cook in Sofia Coppola’s film adaptation of “The Virgin Suicides,” by Jeffrey Eugenides.

  4. Chelse Swain, who played Bonnie in Sofia Coppola's 2000 film The Virgin Suicides, joins the cast for a 20th anniversary video chat. She shares her memories of the shoot, the wig, and the legacy of the film.

  5. For a study in memory, it's curiously unmemorable. The Lisbon sisters and the boys who love them fade into indistinctness -- all except Lux. Ms. Dunst, who speaks very little, nonetheless projects...

  6. Jul 26, 2023 · Sisterly mass: (clockwise from left) Kirsten Dunst as Lux, Leslie Hayman as Therese, Chelse Swain as Bonnie and AJ Cook as Mary. Photo by Maximum Film / Alamy T he Virgin Suicides has become a shorthand for a kind of girlhood, one which is warmly lit, observed voyeuristically, and deceptively brutal.

  7. Sep 9, 2020 · Framed primarily through the eyes, ears and mouths of adolescent neighborhood boys, the pervasive, inescapable memory of the five deceased Lisbon girls — Cecilia (Hanna R. Hall), Lux (Kirsten Dunst), Bonnie (Chelse Swain), Mary (A.J. Cook) and Therese (Leslie Hayman) — is less of a rediscovery and more of a haunting involuntary memory.

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