my new girls : rachel leigh Cook

rachel_leigh2_thumbrachel leigh Cook Biography

Born in Minneapolis, Minnesota on October 4, 1979, Rachael Leigh Cook was shy as a child. She knew early on that she wanted to become an actress, to use acting as a means of expressing herself. Before jumping on to the big screen, Rachael began acting in commercials and school musicals by the time she was 7, and modeling at age 10.

rachael appears in psas

Rather than being a fashion model (probably difficult, standing at 5'2"), Rachael used her beautiful face and talent in more beneficial ways: in public service announcements. She appeared in a non-speaking part in a PSA about adopting foster children, while her most notable work was in the famous anti-drug PSA that simulated how the brain is affected by drugs, by smashing eggs with a frying pan and then destroying the kitchen.
Although Rachael was receiving work as a print model during her
rachel_leigh_thumb 4-year modeling stint (her face appears in a Milk-Bone ad and on the Milk-Bone box), Minnesota was not the hub of acting. So Rachael headed to the West Coast, to pursue an acting career.

rachael stars on dawson's creek

Television audiences must have been accustomed to seeing Rachael on the television screen by then, as she also made an appearance on The Outer Limits, had a guest-starring recurring role in the high school series Dawson's Creek (1998), as well as roles in made-for-TV movies such as True Women, Country Justice and The Defenders: Payback (all in 1997)).

rachael leigh in tom and huck

Once in Los Angeles, Rachael didn't have much trouble landing roles. In 1995, she made her feature film debut in the film adaptation of the popular children's book series, The Baby-Sitters Club. Remaining true to her younger fans, she followed up that performance with a role in the film Tom and Huck, co-starring Home Improvement's Jonathan Taylor Thomas.

The rest of the '90s were marked by independent films such as Carpool (1996), the short feature 26 Summer Street (1996), The House of Yes (1997), which earned recognition at the 1997 Sundance Film Festival, and The Eighteenth Angel (1998).
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she`s beatifull right ?

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