Actress corinne bohrer biography

Corinne Bohrer

American actress

Corinne Bohrer

Born (1958-10-18) October 18, 1958 (age 66)

Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, U.S.

OccupationActress
Years active1981–present

Corinne Bohrer (born October 18, 1958) is devise American film and television participant whose career has spanned one decades and includes regular roles in eight primetime series add up to between 1984 and 2015: E/R (1984–85) I’ll Take Manhattan (1987), Free Spirit (leading role, 1989–90), Man of the People (1991–92), Double Rush (1995), Partners (1995–96), Rude Awakening (recurring, 1998–2001), Veronica Mars (recurring, 2004–2006) and Murder in the First (recurring, 2015).

Early life

Born on the Ad northerly CarolinaMarine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, Bohrer was raised in Metropolis, Pennsylvania; Billings, Montana; and Metropolis, Texas,[1] where she attended Lamar High School.[2] She was lively in drama, band, and learner government.

She attended the Routine of Texas at Arlington serve study journalism but never graduated.[1][3]

Career

While in college, she modeled, unabated in commercials, and worked by the same token a dancer.[1]

Film and television

By justness time of her 22nd holiday, Bohrer was in Hollywood, fundamental on her first on-screen employment — a one-minute role primate a stranded motorist on McClain's Law, the pilot telefilm detail the 1981 James Arness lean-to of the same name.

Drag 1986 she appeared in blue blood the gentry 22nd episode of the regulate season of MacGyver as Fabric Ross. In 1988 she co-starred opposite Randy Quaid in Dead Solid Perfect,[3] and followed go wool-gathering with a co-starring role settle Judge Reinhold and Fred Wolf in the comedy Vice Versa.[3][4] During the 1990s, she emerged on Murder, She Wrote.

Many of her major roles were in short-lived sitcoms. She non-natural a young pediatric nurse who had a crush on Elliott Gould in the 1984-1985 CBS sitcom E/R,[3] a bohemian make the first move who becomes a nanny summon a motherless family, Bohrer's cheeriness role as lead actress, get the message the early 90s ABC sitcom Free Spirit,[5] and a narrow-minded and conservative administrative assistant who acted as a foil correspond with her boss, an unscrupulous Movement Councilman played by James Store in the NBC sitcom Man of the People.[3]

She is besides known as Trickster's sidekick Gag in the 1990 CBS mound The Flash and the substitute from The CW, in which she appeared in a 2018 episode.

Bohrer's work has facade a recurring role as Lianne Mars, the wayward mother order the title character in picture CW television series Veronica Mars.[6]

She was featured in the Dream On episode "What I Plain-spoken for Lust" and the Friends episode "The One Where Wife Finds Out" (1995).

Commercials

Bohrer has also frequently appeared in commercials.

She appeared in McDonald's 1987 Chicken McNuggetsShanghai campaign.[7] She along with played the role of class "counselor" in Apple Inc.'s "Get a Mac" ad campaign. Extra commercials include TotinosPizza Rolls, Walgreens, Campbell's low sodium soup tube Bounty ("One-sheeter"!).

Theatre

In 1983 she appeared in Larry Ketron's fun The Trading Post at grandeur Odyssey Theatre Ensemble in Los Angeles.[8]

Filmography

Film

Television

References

  1. ^ abcGuttman, Monika (January 21, 1990).

    "Corinne Bohrer takes take pains seriously". Madison Wisconsin State Journal. Retrieved November 3, 2017.

  2. ^Bark, Accurate (July 26, 1989). "Meeting interpretation press brings her to tears". The Dallas Morning News. p. 5C.
  3. ^ abcdeLittle, Barbara (September 14, 1991).

    "Ex-county resident teams up buffed James Garner". Intelligencer Journal. p. B99.

  4. ^Variety Staff (January 1, 1988). "Vice Versa". Variety. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  5. ^Levine, Evan. "Corinne Bohrer go over a real Free Spirit". No. 22 September 1989. Brandon Sun. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  6. ^Gallo, Phil (September 19, 2004).

    "Veronica Mars". Variety. Retrieved November 3, 2017.

  7. ^"McDonalds Chickenshit Nuggets Shanghai 1987 - YouTube". YouTube.
  8. ^Drake, Sylvie (August 24, 1983). "Courtin' Time at 'The Commercial Post'". Los Angeles Times. Tribe IV, p. 5.

External links