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  1. Jeanne Tripplehorn

    Jeanne Tripplehorn

    American actress

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  1. Born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on June 10, 1963, Jeanne Marie Tripplehorn developed an interest in performing through her father, guitarist Tom Tripplehorn, who at one time recorded with the pop group Gary Lewis & The Playboys on such hits as "This Diamond Ring".

  2. May 31, 2024 · Uncover 24 astonishing facts about Jeanne Tripplehorn, from her early life to her successful acting career and personal achievements. Delve into the life of this talented celebrity.

  3. Mar 4, 2021 · EXCLUSIVE: Jeanne Tripplehorn is set as a lead opposite Chris Pratt, Constance Wu and Taylor Kitsch in Amazon’s conspiracy-thriller series The Terminal List, based on Jack Carr’s bestselling...

    • George W. Bush Inspired The Creation of The Show.
    • Bill Henrickson Represented An “Everyman.”
    • The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Was Unhappy with The Show.
    • Nicki Was More Than Just A Person People Loved to Hate.
    • Paxton Didn’T See Having Three Wives as A “Male fantasy.”
    • It Was A Pro-Female Show.
    • Aaron Paul Was Supposed to Be A “Possible Recurring” character.
    • Matt Ross Didn’T Know Alby’s Sexuality Until later.
    • The Show Ended with Bill Becoming A Hero.
    • Paxton Wanted Bill to Live.

    Olsen and Scheffer told NPRthey got the idea to explore polygamy after George W. Bush got elected for a second time, because of the “campaign-season rhetoric about what makes a family.” To them, family—especially marriage—meant different things. “Every time there’s a whiff of discord in the family, [people think] ‘they’re going to bail. This one’s ...

    Olsen explainedto Deadline that when they pitched the show to HBO, they described Bill as an “Everyman” who was “a good husband and father who was overwhelmed by the escalating demands of modern life ... Bill H. was a man of faith and integrity who lived with many secrets and moral uncertainties, who actively struggled with ‘right’ and ‘wrong,’ and...

    The Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints—which has more than 15 million members—outlawed polygamy in 1890 yet between 50,000 and 100,000 Mormons (mainly the fundamentalist sector) still practice polygamous relationships. When the show premiered, the church issued a statement asking HBO to place a disclaimer at the beginning of epi...

    Although Sevigny's Nicki at times seemed like a villain, she was the glue that held the Henricksons together. “The family had to swim through a lot of shit with Nicki, but she provided the family something unconditional,” Ginnifer Goodwin told Vulture. “Nicki reminded them all the time about what was so important about faith. The pros outweighed th...

    Paxton told the Los Angeles Timesthat a man married to three women wasn’t “some male fantasy thing” but a “male nightmare.” “You put a kid in the candy store and you say to the kid: eat as much candy as you want,” he said. “Go on, eat as much candy as you want. And then you ask the kid the next day, ‘Hey you want some candy?’ And the kid’s going to...

    “The big secret of the show is that it’s always been a feminist show,” Olsen told NPR. “And even though it was dramatizing this very patriarchal system in some ways, the opportunities that women found—particularly in this very abusive system—to support each other was what drew us to the material in the first place, and gave us reason to want to exp...

    Before Breaking Bad made Aaron Paul a household name, the up-and-coming actor played Sarah’s boyfriend-turned-husband Scott Quittman, from 2007 to 2010. He told Fade Inthe part was listed as “possible recurring.” “It’s weird,” Paul said. “They just kept having me back.” Despite Breaking Bad taking off in 2008, Paul found time to star in six more Bi...

    Ross played the sinister cult leader Alby Grant, Nicki’s brother, for five seasons. In the beginning, Alby’s sexual orientation was ambiguous. “I think the first scene where I was wondering about his sexuality was when he picks up a drifter or a hustler in a convenience store and he takes him home,” Ross told NPR. “And that was just obviously a str...

    The series ends with a neighbor shooting and killing Bill—yet the sister wives decide to stay together. “We wanted to give him a Gary Cooper exit from the show, but it went much deeper than that,” Olsen said to NPR. “We didn’t want Bill to go out a loser or a failure or an unrepentant fundamentalist. And we wanted to find that thing that would rend...

    The actor toldThe Huffington Post that he wished Bill hadn’t been killed off in the series finale, but he understood why. “The guy was really a revolutionary like Jesus Christ was in some ways,” Paxton said. “I don’t know, I guess society can’t reward that guy, because he is really living outside of society … I guess I was just really fond of the g...

  4. Mini Bio. Born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on June 10, 1963, Jeanne Marie Tripplehorn developed an interest in performing through her father, guitarist Tom Tripplehorn, who at one time recorded with the pop group Gary Lewis & The Playboys on such hits as "This Diamond Ring".

    • June 10, 1963
  5. Oct 24, 2017 · Born on June 10, 1963, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Jeanne is the daughter of Suzanne Ferguson and Tom Tripplehorn. Ferguson is a published non-fiction author while Tripplehorn was a guitarist once associated with 1960s pop and rock group Gary Lewis & the Playboys.

  6. It follows a womanizing husband who’s fallen back in love with his wife, only because she’s pretending to be another woman over the phone. Jeanne’s three most recent movie roles have been in 2018 in the drama “We Only Know So Much” and the musical comedy “Gloria Bell”, and the 2020 comedy “Ana”.

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