Marisa Tomei is a simply gorgeous actress who comes across as being unchanged by the passing of time. People who haven’t been keeping tabs on her professionally over time wouldn’t remember that she’s now 55, let alone that she started in As the World Turns.
Jealous folks are convinced that plastic surgery or at least a host of beauty procedures are responsible for this. However, we can’t believe this is true. We maintain that Marisa is a natural celebrity beauty.
Ellen Burstyn
Ellen Burstyn got her to break as a dancer on The Jackie Gleason Show during the mid-1950s. Soon after, various acting jobs began falling her way. One of those opportunities was starring as Dr. Kate Bartok in The Doctors. She later landed the lead in The Last Picture Show (1971 and her performance brought showbiz attention plus Oscar and Golden Globe award nominations.
For her role in Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore directed by Martin Scorsese, Burstyn won the Best Actress Oscar. Three years later, in 1978, she received the Best Actress nomination for Same Time, Next Year, and in 1980 and in 2000 she received it for Resurrection and Requiem of a Dream, respectively. What a busy lady!
David Hasselhoff
Blue eyes, perpetually tanned skin, and shoulders broad enough to land a helicopter on — David Hasselhoff has got it all. And when you have it all, you are bound to get snatched by a soap opera at some point.
"The Hoff" was indeed snatched by the soap opera The Young and the Restless. He put his assets to work and played Dr. William Foster (AKA Snapper) for several years.
James Earl Jones
Those who don't recognize James Earl Jones's face are sure to recognize his voice. He has used his unmistakable basso profundo to voice the characters of Darth Vader in the Star Wars films and Mufasa in The Lion King.
In 1966, however, the man was busy playing doctor. Literally. He was cast as two separate doctor characters in the soap operas As the World Turns and Guiding Light. That authoritative voice must sound incredible telling you to take your new pills twice a day on a full stomach.
Laurence Fishburne
Some people seem to have been born fully grown adults. It would simply be too weird to think they were ever children. Can you imagine Meryl Streep as a two-year-old playing in the sand? How about Sir Ian McKellen’s first day of preschool? We didn’t think so.
Laurence Fishburne is also one of those people. But in his case, we have TV archives to prove he was, indeed, a child once. As a child actor, Fishburn played Josh West Hall in One Life to Live from 1974 to 1976.