Jamie Lee Curtis made her movie debut in the original
Halloween (1978). The second child of movie star parents
Tony Curtis and
Janet Leigh, she had TV jobs as a teen, including one season of
Operation Petticoat (1977-78). The success of
Halloween led to an early career as a plucky heroine in horror films, including
The Fog,
Terror Train and
Prom Night (all 1980). She showed her comedy talent and her bosom in the
Eddie Murphy comedy
Trading Places (1983), then was off on her way to a respectable career as a leading lady. A hint of androgyny and a careful strategy of revealing her admired physique made her a sex symbol, especially in comedies like
A Fish Called Wanda (1988) and
True Lies (1994, opposite
Arnold Schwarzenegger). As Curtis matured she made fewer movies, but emerged as an unofficial spokesperson for being proud of an aging body -- in 2002 she appeared in
More magazine without make-up, and as she turned 50
AARP magazine boasted about a "topless" photo (in fact, it was a cropped photo of Curtis in a strapless dress). Since 1995 she's been publishing children's books with illustrator Laura Cornell, including
Tell Me Again About the Night I Was Born (2000) and
Is There Really a Human Race? (2006). Her other films include
Love Letters (1984),
Drowning Mona (2000, starring
Casey Affleck) and
Freaky Friday (2003, starring
Lindsay Lohan).
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