Jennifer O'Neill

Jennifer O'Neill

Birthday: 20 February 1948, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Birth Name: Jennifer Lee O'Neill
Height: 171 cm
Jennifer O'Neill was born in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, on February 20, 1948. Her father Oscar (deceased 2009 at age 91) was of Irish-Spanish descent, and her mother Irene ("Rene") was English. Whereas Elvis Presley was riding high on the fame of his hit record, "Blue Suede Shoes", in 1956, when she was nine-years-old in 1957,... Show more »
Jennifer O'Neill was born in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, on February 20, 1948. Her father Oscar (deceased 2009 at age 91) was of Irish-Spanish descent, and her mother Irene ("Rene") was English. Whereas Elvis Presley was riding high on the fame of his hit record, "Blue Suede Shoes", in 1956, when she was nine-years-old in 1957, schoolmates humiliated her over a pair of pink suede shoes. Things got worse when her parents refused to buy her a horse (she has always loved horses), and got her a cat, instead.At age fourteen, she attempted suicide with her mother's sleeping pills; her parents only saw this as an attempt for attention. She woke up from a two week coma to find that the incident had shocked her body into getting her period. O'Neill continued to ride horses every chance she could. However, at age fifteen, she broke her back and neck in three places, when a horse she was riding fell on her. There would be no more horseback riding, when her family moved from Connecticut to New York City soon after.O'Neill started her highly-successful modeling career in New York City and later in Paris, also when she was only fifteen, as a means to make money to buy her own horse. By age fifteen, she had also surrendered her virginity to a twenty-year-old boyfriend in college "...so he would love me" and who had given her his fraternity pin. She was a student at Dalton School in Manhattan, and she got into New York's Neighborhood Playhouse for aspiring actors, but dropped out to get married at age seventeen.Her first film was For Love of Ivy (1968). Although it was a small start, she did attract the interest of director Howard Hawks, who cast her to star opposite John Wayne in Rio Lobo (1970). Her agent fought hard to get her an audition for the main role in the surprise sleeper, Summer of '42 (1971). This movie gave her national and international recognition, despite having appeared for only twelve minutes; unfortunately, she would never have such a great role or film again. She continued to appear in profitable, though less-critically acclaimed movies, from Lady Ice (1973) through Scanners (1981). In 1976, she was briefly in Europe, where she appeared in Gente di rispetto (1975) (aka "The Flower in His Mouth), as school teacher "Elena Bardi", her only European film, where where she appeared totally nude. She also worked with Italian director Luchino Visconti, and gave an award-winning performance in his last film L'innocente (1976). At age 49, she appeared in the 1997 Playboy Channel cable TV Movie, The Corporate Ladder (1997).However, she is most remembered for her decades-long "Cover Girl" campaign - in an industry where some models are "over the hill" at age 25, she had a 30-year run with this makeup product. Due to this long standing contract to her credit, she is listed in the Smithsonian Institute's American Museum of History, Center for Commercial Advertising.O'Neill has had her ups and downs, successes and failures, marriages and divorces, and tragedies. She married her first husband, at age seventeen, in 1965 and had a daughter, Aimee Rossitter'. During her first marriage, she checked herself into a mental hospital for treatment for mental stress, and underwent electroshock therapy. O'Neill got her first divorce in 1971 from her first husband and had an abortion before she married her second husband in 1972 and this time to a former advertising executive and novelist and student of Eastern philosophy, Joseph Roster, which also ended in a divorce in 1974. O'Neill relates in her 1999 autobiography that it was only at age twenty four with this second husband that she began to experience orgasms, having had "...no idea of what a woman was capable of experiencing physically until this relationship."O'Neill then married her third husband in 1975, Nick De Noia, her producer and choreographer; he was also the original choreographer for the Chippendale dancers, but divorced him in 1976; he was later found shot to death with a large caliber handgun in April of 1987.O'Neill married husband number four in 1978, Jeff Barry, a British drummer, singer and song writer ('Leader of the Pack'; 'I'm a Believer'; Sugar, Sugar'), but later divorced him in 1979.O'Neill then married her manager, John Lederer, husband number five in 1979, and he gave her a son, Reis. However, he also went through all her money. O'Neill knew at the time of the marriage that he was a convicted felon, but married him anyway; Lederer was subsequently convicted of sexually abusing her daughter Aimee three to four times a week for more than four years. O'Neill divorced Lederer in 1983.She amassed money again and had a son, Cooper, with husband number six, Richard A. Alan, her limo driver with whom she went on a blind date and married him in 1984. Alan was unfaithful to her with prostitutes and she divorced him in 1987 but re-married him in 1993; Alan later divorced her.At age forty-four O'Neill then married husband number seven, Neil L. Bonin in December of 1992 in Travis, Texas during a cross country car trip, O'Neill's five year old son serving as the best man. O'Neill had met Bonin in a New York restaurant and he was eleven years her junior; O'Neill had the marriage annulled in May of 1993 after just five months due to fraud which induced her into the marriage.O'Neill then married Mervin Sidney Louque a music producer (her 8th husband, 9th marriage) in 1996 and she's still married to him.In a 2008 interview, O'Neill stated that she had four grandchildren.At age thirty four, O'Neill also suffered a gunshot wound. Police officers in Bedford, New York, who interviewed the actress in the mansion of her twenty-five room thirty-acre French style estate, report that on October 23, 1982, O'Neill said that had she shot herself accidentally in the navel with her then-husband John Lederer's .38 caliber revolver in the bedroom, while she was trying to determine if it was loaded.O'Neill reports that at age thirty-eight in 1986, she became a born-again Christian. She also describes many of her life experiences, including her marriages and career, getting shot, her guilt over her abortion and her depression, the sexual abuse of her daughter, and the drug abuse of one of her children, to her move to her Tennessee farm in 1996 and her arrest for driving while intoxicated, in her 1999 autobiography, ''Surviving Myself''.O'Neill has served as chairperson for the American Cancer Society, being a breast cancer survivor herself (benign tumor), and has worked for other charitable causes, such as the March of Dimes, the National Right to Life, the Retinitis Pigmetosa Foundation and the Arthritis Foundation and the Silent No More national campaign. She is a tireless and ardent pro-life advocate for healing for post-abortion women, having experienced an abortion and nine miscarriages during the course of having her own three children.She wrote her first book, an autobiography "Surviving Myself", in 1999, is the author of 8 books and remains active as a motivational speaker to groups of Christian women.O'Neill and her husband live in Nashville, Tennessee, where her two sons also reside and where she can, at last, ride horses to her heart's content at her horse ranch called Hillenglade. Show less «
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