Jill clayburgh net worth

It came as no surprise to film aficionados when, in 1999, Entertainment Weekly named Jill Clayburgh on its list of Hollywood's 25 Greatest Actresses. For decades, she delivered stellar performances in a wide variety of roles.

Jill Clayburgh was born in 1944 in New York City, into a wealthy family, the daughter of Julia Louise (Dorr), an actress and secretary, and Albert Henry Clayburgh, a manufacturing executive. Her father was from a Jewish family that has lived in the United States since the 1700s, and her mother had English ancestry, also with deep American roots. Jill was educated at the finest schools, including the Brearley School and Sarah Lawrence College. It was while at Sarah Lawrence that she decided on a career in acting, and joined the famous Charles Street Repetory Theater in Boston. She moved to New York in the late 1960s and had featured roles in a number of Broadway productions, including "The Rothschilds" and "Pippin". She began her career in films in 1970 and got her first major role in Portnoy's Complaint (1972) in 1972. In 1978,

Liz Claiborne

American fashion designer (1929–2007)

For the company once named after the designer, see Kate Spade & Company.

Liz Claiborne

Claiborne in 1982

Born

Anne Elisabeth Jane Claiborne


(1929-03-31)March 31, 1929[citation needed]

Brussels, Belgium

DiedJune 26, 2007(2007-06-26) (aged 78)

New York City, U.S.

NationalityAmerican
EducationFine Arts School and Painters Studio, Belgium (1947)
Nice Academy (1948)
LabelLiz Claiborne
Spouses
  • Ben Shultz (m. 1950; div. 1954)
  • Arthur Ortenberg (m. 1957)
RelativesJennifer Farber (niece)

Anne Elisabeth Jane Claiborne (March 31, 1929 – June 26, 2007) was an American fashion designer and businesswoman. Her success was built upon stylish yet affordable apparel for career women featuring colorfully tailored separates that could be mixed and matched. Claiborne co-founded Liz Claiborne Inc., which in 1986 became the first company founded by a woman to make the Fortune 500 list.[1] Claiborne was the first woman to become chair and CEO of a Fortu

Jill Clayburgh

Twice nominated for an Oscar, actress Jill Clayburgh personified the joys and pitfalls of the newly liberated woman of the 1970s in films like "An Unmarried Woman" (1978), "Starting Over" (1979) and "I'm Dancing As Fast as I Can" (1982). Stage-trained and equally adept at high comedy, as seen by her turns in "Silver Streak" (1976) and "Semi-Tough" (1977), Clayburgh's forte was intense, personal drama, to which she brought uncommon grace and grit. She took a hiatus from features in the 1980s but returned to television and stage in the 1990s and 2000s, most notably as the brittle matriarch of the wealthy Darling family on "Dirty Sexy Money" (ABC, 2007-09). Her death in 2010 robbed the acting world of one of its most versatile performers.

Born in New York City, NY on April 30, 1944, Clayburgh's mother was the production secretary to theatre impresario David Merrick, while her father, Albert Henry "Bill" Clayburgh, was a manufacturing executive. Clayburgh's childhood was a wealthy and privileged one; she attended the exclusive Brearley School and later Sarah Lawrence

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