Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Her Resume Includes Performing Performance and Film Roles


 77 Years Ago Today

Friday 9th of February 1945
Actress and political activist Mia María de Lourdes Villiers Farrow is born in Los Angeles, California, United States. Her father was a military man from France. In 1948 she received three degrees from New York University. Farrow came from an economically weaker part of LA, where there was no housing. She moved to Spain with her three-year-old daughter and their four-year-old granddaughter. In 1955 she won a Golden Globe Award for her work when it was revealed her father was the editor of a local newspaper. Farrow moved with her family to Argentina, and she began her career at a film school; at the age of eight, she attended El Paso High School, which ran on the premise "Tijuana, Arizona." Farrow joined the military at 16 in 1955, and she was assigned to a post-graduate post degree in 1963. Farrow graduated in 1987 and held a position at the Marine Corps in a year. Farrow won two Emmy Awards for this role: for Best Actor in a Supporting Role For the 1957 film "The Man Who Would Be the President." When Farrow moved to Texas in 1998, she moved to Los Angeles County, where she was employed by El Paso City Fire Departures, which operates four fire stations in Los Angeles County, California. Her resume includes performing performance and film roles, and she has performed for such celebrities as Bruce Lee

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