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Model   - Project ID # 11556
Project Type   Print Submission Type   SRN
Location   New York City NY Union   Non-union
Rate/Pay   $200.00 per day Release Date   05-16-05
Audition Date   05-18-05 Submission Deadline   05-16-05
Shoot Date   05-23-05    
Casting Category   Modeling - Print
Market(s)   New York City, NY

Note: This is a self submission notification. If you fit the role criteria and are interested by this project, see the submission infos below the role description.

Role # 1 - Females Submit yourself for this role
Seeking 0 talent(s) for this role
This is an opportunity for photogenic women of varying ages and ethnicities to participate in an energetic, offbeat, and unusual photo shoot for a well-established clothing designer. If you meet the following requirements, please respond by e-mailing a descriptive photograph or two of yourself with your measurements, height, and age: - 5'8" or above - Size 2-4 - Enigmatic and fun with lots of energy - Attractive face and toned body - Must be available for a casting this Wednesday or Thursday, May 18th or 19th - Must be available May 23rd and 24th for the photo shoot

Searchable talent specs:
Gender: Female
Age: from 18 to 35
Height: from 5' 8" to Any


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"Look at Fred Astaire, who was a darn good actor " The "Francis" comedies, which featured a bumbling O'Connor and a talking mule, began in 1949 Among O'Connor's other '50s musicals were "Call Me Madam," "Anything Goes" and "There's No Business Like Show Business He won an Emmy for "The Colgate Comedy Hour" in 1954 and appeared in "The Donald O'Connor Texaco Show" from 1954 to 1955 10 He and his wife had moved to Arizona after their California home was damaged in the 1994 Northridge earthquake " The American Film Institute's list of the top 100 American movies ever made ranked "Singin' in the Rain" at No Songs in movie musicals are often touching or exciting, but O'Connor performed a rare feat with a number that were laugh-out-loud funny Ed" TV series He was 78 "Revivals are so popular now But doing one would mean being out in cold, cold New York for a year, a year and a half," he said Get it done and come back home He made his film debut at age 11 in a dancing scene with two of his brothers in "Melody for Two Born in Chicago to circus performers who went into vaudeville, O'Connor joined his family's act when he was an infant He was Bing Crosby's kid brother in "Sing You Sinners" (1938), which he later ranked among his favorite roles " As a contract actor for Paramount, he played adolescent roles in several films, including Huckleberry Finn in "Tom Sawyer â€â€? Detective" (1938) "I'd rather do something where I go in and work a week, maybe three days Entertainer Donald O'Connor Dies at 78 Sep 27, 6:23 PM EST Entertainer Donald O'Connor, who combined comedy and acrobatics in the show-stopping "Make 'Em Laugh" number in the classic movie "Singin' in the Rain," died Saturday, his daughter said O'Connor, who had been in declining health in recent years, died of heart failure at a retirement home in Calabasas, his daughter, Alicia O'Connor, told The Associated Press When he grew too big for child roles, he briefly returned to vaudeville, but was soon back in Hollywood playing high-energy juvenile leads opposite such actresses as Gloria Jean and Susanna Foster "Someone handed me a dummy that was on the stage," he recalled in a 1995 Associated Press interview " He said it was a fluke that he landed in so many musicals, noting he started out as a "straight" actor " In a brief statement, the family said that among O'Connor's last words was the following quip: "I'd like to thank the Academy for my lifetime achievement award that I will eventually get " But he said he had little desire to leave home for long stretches As he sings "Make 'Em Laugh," O'Connor dances with a prop dummy and performs all manner of amusing acrobatics O'Connor quit the "Francis" series in 1955, saying, "When you've made six pictures and the mule still gets more fan mail than you do He also said his song-and-dance image came with a downside " O'Connor won an Emmy, but never an Oscar In recent years, he continued working when he found a project he liked, such as appearing in an episode of "Tales From the Crypt The best, 1952's "Singin' in the Rain," also starred Gene Kelly and Debbie Reynolds and took a satirical look at Hollywood during the transition from silent to sound pictures He was best known for films he made in the 1950s â€â€? a series of highly successful "Francis the Talking Mule" comedies and movie musicals that put his song and dance talents to good use A few years later, the man who directed them created the "Mr I did a pratfall and we wrote that down "That was the only prop I used "Back then, when you were typecast that way, it was very difficult to get dramatic parts," he recalled " O'Connor also had some success in television Every time I did something that got a laugh, we wrote it down to keep in the number