|
PLEASE READ! THIS PAGE CONTAINS ADULT MATERIAL. If you are under 21 years of age LEAVE NOW! WARNING! Welcome to Colleen Camp Nude Picture. If you are under 21 years of age, or if it is illegal to view Colleen Camp Nude Picture material in your community, please leave now. Continuing past this point means that you understand and accept the responsibility for your own actions, thus releasing the creators of Colleen Camp Nude Picture homepage, as well as our service provider from any and all liability. By continuing, you are certifying that you are of legal adult age and are entering Colleen Camp Nude Picture Web site with full knowledge that it contains Adult Colleen Camp Nude Picture material. Furthermore, you are certifying that you are aware of local laws and the viewing, reading, and downloading of the images in this Web site do not violate the community standards of your street, village, city, town, county, state, province or country. Ignorance is not a defense. Finally, you swear that this material is for your eyes only, and it will not be shown or distributed in any manner whatsoever to minors. If you agree with all of the above statement. |
![]() |
Colleen Camp Nude Picture By any stretch of the imagination, Colleen Camp has enjoyed a diverse film career since her big-screen debut in one of the Planet of the Apes sequels in 1973. She has worked as an actress, dancer, singer, and producer; she was directed by Francis Ford Coppola, Nicolas Roeg, Jack Hill, and Hal Needham; and she was often cast as either a sex symbol or stuffy prude. Born in San Francisco on June 7, 1953, Camp precociously began her acting career in regional theater at the age of three, although her first big break didn't come until more than a decade later, when she was cast as one of the dancing Gold Diggers on The Dean Martin Show. In 1973, the actress landed her first film role with a bit part as a human slave in Battle for the Planet of the Apes; larger roles in The Swinging Cheerleaders and The Last Porno Flick followed, but, in 1975 Camp had the chance to show off her considerable comic talent in Michael Ritchie's satiric comedy Smile. Despite her strong performance, however, her career still failed to catch fire; while she found steady work, she tended to land larger roles in undistinguished films such as The Gumball Rally or Ebony, Ivory and Jade, and smaller parts in more ambitious pictures, such as Apocalypse Now and They All Laughed. (Camp also sang "One Day Since Yesterday" in the latter, a song which briefly grazed the Billboard singles charts.) In time, Camp began to develop something of a cult following, and, while she was still a long way from film stardom, she worked often and landed supporting roles in such hits as Wayne's World, Sliver, Die Hard With a Vengeance, and Election. Married to Paramount executive John Goldwyn, she began working more behind the camera in the '80s, serving as a producer of The City Girl in 1984, and was a part of the production team of a number of other films, including Teenage Caveman, Earth vs. The Spider, and The Day The World Ended. ENTER HERE |