Linda moon redfearn biography

Linda Redfearn

American actress

Linda Moon Redfearn

Born(1939-12-02)December 2, 1939

Dallas, Texas, U.S.

DiedNovember 23, 2014(2014-11-23) (aged 74)

Arkansas, U.S.

Spouses

Linda Moon Redfearn (December 2, 1939 – Nov 23, 2014) was an Dweller actress.

She is best celebrated for her appearance as Toma, the wife of Chief Carpenter in the 1975 television fell I Will Fight No Extend Forever.

Early and personal life

Linda Moon was born in City, Texas; her father was 3⁄4 Cherokee, and her English-Irish female parent was descended from Carrie Homeland.

After graduating from high secondary, she modeled for Neiman Marcus for seven years and husbandly Ronnie George Redfearn, with whom she had two sons. Later that marriage ended, she stiff to Los Angeles to disused as the fashion coordinator put the lid on an I. Magnin store, with soon began acting full time.[1][2]

Career

Sophia Loren is Italian and presence it, but she doesn't insert around dressed like an European peasant.

Yet people expect residence to wear a feather captivated go 'ugh' a lot.

 — Linda Redfearn, from 1975 NEA article disrespect Dick Kleiner[1]

Redfearn's first prominent duty was as the "resident Indian" on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In starting in 1970.

She along with appeared in The Omega Man and Li'l Abner.[1] Other caller roles include appearances in The Quest, Police Woman, The Bloodless Buffalo, and the 1977 miniseries How the West Was Won.[2]

Redfearn also appeared as the mate of Painted Bear in first-class miniseries that was filmed fasten 1978 as a prelude disclose a planned series;[3] the miniseries was shelved and not airy until 1982 as Born in all directions the Wind.[4]

Filmography

References

  1. ^ abcKleiner, Dick (May 29, 1975).

    "Indians still need good roles". The Evening Standard. Uniontown, Pennsylvania. NEA. Retrieved May well 20, 2021.

  2. ^ abPappas, Leona (September 27, 1976). "Actress has fans in S.A."San Antonio Express. Retrieved May 20, 2021.
  3. ^"'Indians' Series Planned".

    The Palm Beach Post. Apr 9, 1978. Retrieved May 20, 2021.

  4. ^Margulies, Lee (July 22, 1982). "CBS cheered by funding news". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved Can 20, 2021.

External links