Karen Akers
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Karen Akers | |
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Born | Karen Orth-Pallavicini October 13, 1945 New York, New York U.S. |
Spouse(s) | Kevin Power (1993-present) Jim Akers (?-?) |
Karen Akers (born October 13, 1945) is an American actress and singer, who has appeared on Broadway, cabaret and film.
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[edit] Background
She was born Karen Orth-Pallavicini in New York City on October 13, 1945. Her ancestry was a mixture of European stock: her immigrant father, Heinrick C. Orth-Pallavicini (reportedly a member of the European nobility who dropped his title when he came to America) was of Austrian and Swiss/Italian heritage, and her American-born mother, Mary, had Russian, Norwegian, and French forebears on one side of her family and Scots-Irish ones on the other. Her younger sister, Nicole Orth-Pallavicini, is also an actress. Another younger sister, Marie Orth-Pallavicini, is married to David Baker Cadman, a grandson of John Cadman, 1st Baron Cadman[1].
[edit] Education
Karen graduated from Manhattanville College.
[edit] Family
On September 19, 1993, she married Kevin Patrick Power, a vice president of Orion Network Systems, a satellite communications company in a Roman Catholic ceremony at St. Paul's Chapel at Columbia University in New York.[2] It was her second marriage. She has two sons from her first marriage to Jim Akers, which ended in divorce.
[edit] Career
She first appeared on Broadway in the original production of Nine, a musical directed by Tommy Tune and based on the Federico Fellini film 8½, playing the part of Luisa Contini, the wife of promiscuous film director Guido Contini (Raul Julia). The show opened May 9, 1982, and had a successful run of 732 performances, closing February 4, 1984. Akers won a Theatre World Award for her performance and was one of three actresses in the show nominated for the Tony Award for Featured Actress in a Musical, losing to her fellow cast member Liliane Montevecchi.
She appeared again on Broadway in Grand Hotel, a musical adaptation of the novel and film, again directed by Tommy Tune with a score by Robert Wright, George Forrest, and Maury Yeston. The show opened November 12, 1989, for a successful run of 1,018 performances through April 19, 1992.
She appeared in the Woody Allen film The Purple Rose of Cairo as a celluloid chanteuse, and in Heartburn as the mistress of Jack Nicholson's character.
A review in Variety described her as "a contralto with uncommon dramatic depth", and a "sultry chanteuse."[3]
Perhaps a little known fact: She appeared in one episode of "Cheers" as Cliff Clavens' "Ugly Duckling" gal pal. She was very good.
T.O. Parrish
[edit] References
- ^ thepeerage.com Retrieved on July 6, 2007
- ^ http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F0CE5D91131F933A1575AC0A965958260 Query.nytimes.com Retrieved on 05-09-07
- ^ "Karen Akers -- First You Dream: The Songs of Kander & Ebb." Marilyn Stasio. Variety Review Database. New York: Apr 2006. pg. n/a
[edit] External links
- Karen Akers at the Internet Movie Database
- Karen Akers at the Internet Broadway Database
- Karen Akers at Allmovie
- Karen Akers on e-music.com
- Karen Akers article at Playbill