
Jennifer Warren
Acting
🎂 1941-08-12
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Jennifer Warren (born August 12, 1941) is an American actress and film director. Warren was born in the Greenwich Village section of New York City, the daughter of Paula Bauersmith, an actress, and Barnet M. Warren, a dentist. Her uncle was Yiddish theatre actor and director Jacob Ben-Ami. Warren graduated from Elisabeth Irwin High School. Warren married producer Roger Gimbel in 1976. They have a son, Barney, a writer and editor. Gimbel died on April 26, 2011. She made her Broadway debut in 1972 in 6 Rms Riv Vu, for which she won the Theatre World Award. She also appeared in the short-lived P. S. Your Cat Is Dead!. Warren's film credits include Slap Shot (as the frustrated wife of hockey coach Paul Newman), Night Moves, Ice Castles, "The Swap" (1969) and Life Stinks. She has directed two features, The Beans of Egypt, Maine (1994) and Partners in Crime (2000). She was listed as one of the twelve "Promising New Actors of 1975" in John Willis' Screen World, Volume 27. Warren's small screen credits include numerous made-for-television movies and guest appearances on The Bob Newhart Show, Kojak, Cagney and Lacey, Hotel, Hooperman, and Murder, She Wrote, among others. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jennifer Warren, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia
Cast credits(37)

1967

1982

Medora Finney
1984

Cynthia Olston
1984

Eloise Geach
1973

Carol Austin
1973

1977

Dinah Caswell
1984

Paula
1975

Martha Dalton
1984

Cecile Jaeger
1987

Francine Dunlop
1977

Dr. Myra Tate
1984

Deborah Mackland
1978

Mary Williams
1977

Dean Curtis
1997

Rachel Bellow
1981

Dr. Diane Cosgrove
1984

2000
1970

Erica Moore (archive footage)
1979

Jesse Pfanner
1978
Rea Parkinson
1979

Elsie
1974

Colette Beaudroux
1981

Jennifer Richmond
2014

Marsha Taylor
1981

Cop #1
1994

1994

Dinah Caswell
1982

Cloma Teeter
1980

Erica Moore
1969

Pat Price
1983

Carolyn
1976

Mollie Brannen
1976

Camille Scoggin
1979

Erica Wells
1978