|
WARNING! DO NOT ENTER THIS SITE. You must be 21 or older to Access this site! WARNING: Candy Clark Age contains Candy Clark Age explicit material! You may enter Candy Clark Age only if the following statements are true: You are an adult 18 years of age or older. You are requesting the Candy Clark Age materials on Candy Clark Age for your own personal use, and you do not intend to share or trade Candy Clark Age material with others. You will not exhibit this material to minors or anyone else who might be offended by it. You personally warrant that Candy Clark Age materials you are requesting, to the best of your knowledge and belief, contain descriptions or depictions of Candy Clark Age activity which are acceptable for adults in your community based on the average adult person applying current community standards. You agree to respect the copyrights on the requested material by not redistributing it anywhere else online or in print. You subscribe to the principles of the First Amendment, which holds that free adult Americans have the right to decide for themselves what they will read and view without governmental interference. You agree that this site is not acting in any way to send you this material; you are choosing to receive it. Pressing the enter button below means that you understand and accept responsibility for your own actions, thus releasing the creators of Candy Clark Age home page from all liability. |
![]() |
Candy Clark Age Model-turned-actress Candy Clark first came to filmgoers' attention with a secondary role in John Huston's Fat City. Then Clark really went to town as gum-chewing, dumb-like-a-fox Debbie Dunham in American Graffiti (1974); for her portrayal of the girl who reminds Charles Martin Smith of Connie Stevens (well, it sounded like a good pick-up line, anyway), she was nominated for an Academy Award. Equally worthwhile roles followed in The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976), which included the scene wherein a sympathetic Clark lifted and carried ailing alien David Bowie, and the 1978 remake of The Big Sleep, which featured the actress as the deviant, thumb-sucking Carmilla Sternwood. Then, inexplicably, the actress endured a cinematic dry spell, though she was seen (and her Oklahoma accent heard) to good advantage in the made-for-TV movies Amateur Night at the Dixie Bar and Grill (1979) and Rodeo Girl (1980). In 1981, she made her first off-Broadway appearance in A Coupla White Chicks Sitting Around Talking. Candy Clark has been consigned to maternal roles in such films as Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Radioland Murders (1994). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide ENTER HERE |