Alison Doody
Alison Doody was born in Dublin in the Republic of Ireland, on the 11th of November in 1966. The model is as well an Irish actress. Her feature film debut was in a minor part on her debut role in the Bond film A View to a Kill. (1985). Then, later she was portrayed as a Nazi-sympathising Archaeologist Elsa Schneider (Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade 1989). Siobhan Donovan was Charlotte in Taffin in 1988 and Rebecca Flannery starred in Major League II in 1994. Doody was first introduced to modeling when she was invited by an experienced photographer. The result was an enviable professional career as a model for commercials. Doody was averse to glamour and nude work. This was a principle that she incorporated into her acting. In 1985, after getting noticed by the casting directors of a James Bond new film, Doody was cast in a minor part of Jenny Flex as in A View to a Kill. Doody's name was included in John Willis Screen World Vol. 12 which features the most promising actors from 1986. 38. Doody is only 18 at the time she played the part of Doody in A Prayer to the Dying (1987) which starred Mickey Rourke. Doody is the youngest Bond Girl to date. A Prayer for the Dying which starred Mickey Rourke also had a performance by Doody, playing IRA Siobhan. Doody appeared as Archibald Craven in his dreams in the 1987 TV version of The Secret Garden. She played Lilias. She performed the role of Sapsorrow in an episode of Jim Henson's fantasy series The Storyteller, opposite John Hurt Dawn French Jennifer Saunders. She worked with Pierce Brosnan as Dr. Elsa Schneider, an Austrian Nazi sympathizer and an archaeologist for forensics in the film Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. In the film, she also appeared alongside Sean Connery as Indy's father Doody was a part of three actors in the role of James Bond. In the year 1991, Doody played alongside Jonathan Pryce in British mini-series Selling Hitler inspired by the publishing fraud known as the Hitler Diaries. Doody later moved to Hollywood. She played Flannery as Flannery in Major League II, opposite Charlie Sheen. After nearly a decade from the stage Doody returned to acting with a small role in 2003's British comedy film The Actors with Michael Caine acting as herself in an award ceremony scene. In 2004, she starred with Patrick Swayze as a television adaptation of King Solomon's Mines. She played a role on Benjamin's Struggle, a 2005 booklet on the Holocaust. Doody was part of Danny Dyer's The Rapture (2009). She guested in RTE's the medical thriller The Clinic. The project was later shelved. She began her first two seasons on The E4 comedy Beaver Falls in 2011 as Pam Jefferson. She also starred as Pam Jefferson in We Still Kill the Old Way. In November of 2018, she won the Almeria tierra de Cine Award as well as a star on the Almeria Walk of Fame.
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