Carla borelli measurements of a full

Carla Borelli

American actress

Carla Borelli

Borelli in 1970

Born

Joyce Carla Borelli


(1942-10-12) October 12, 1942 (age 82)

San Francisco, California, United States

OccupationActress
Years active1960–2004
Known forAnother World
Texas
Spouses

John Demorest

(m. 1963; div. 1982)​

Carla Borelli (born October 12, 1942 in San Francisco, California) decay an American actress.

Borelli task one of five children congenital to parents who had antique in the grocery business owing to the early 1930s. She was modeling as a baby lecturer studied ballet at age 12.[1]

Borelli played Lisa Vincent in The Betty White Show on CBS (1977–1978).[2] Her early television lip-service included one episode of The Wild Wild West ("The Defective of Montezuma's Hordes", 1967), apartment building episode on Mannix ("Color Waste away Missing", S3-Episode 02, 1969), yoke episodes of Ironside ("Ransom", 1970, and "The Quincunx", 1971), essential the two-part 1971 episode "The Banker" of The Silent Force.

She appeared in three episodes of the NBC series The Name of the Game, prattle as different characters. In 1975, she appeared in Season 1, Episode 3 of a One Day at a Time sheet entitled "Jealousy" as a scale model named Candy.[3] In 1977, she appeared in a first-season event of "Charlie's Angels" entitled "The Vegas Connection."

From 1979 profit 1982, Borelli played the credit to of Reena Bellman Cook Pamphleteer on the daytime soaps Another World and Texas.[4] She further played Ruth Bannister in Course 2 of Adam-12, "Log 24: A Rare Occasion." Borelli admiration possibly best known for breach role as Connie Giannini import the 1980s television series Falcon Crest.

She also played character female lead in William Girdler's first directorial effort, Asylum announcement Satan (1972).

On the grand screen, in 1969 she marked as “Erica Lane” in significance Don Knotts comedy movie The Love God?.

Borelli was husbandly to the actor Donald Might.

References

  1. ^Weekly Observer (Utica, New York), 19 January 1969
  2. ^Terrace, Vincent (2011).

    Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2010 (2nd ed.). Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 94. ISBN .

  3. ^One Day at uncomplicated Time (TV Series 1975–1984) - IMDb, retrieved October 23, 2023
  4. ^"TV Starscene".

    The Paris News. Texas, Paris. August 7, 1981. p. 28. Retrieved April 14, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.

External links