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Quicknation Tracey Ullman
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Tracey Ullman (born December 30, 1959 in Slough, Berkshire, EnglandTracey Ullman is a British comedienne, actress, and singer who is most famous for being the host of a variety television show bearing her name. Ullman has an extraordinary ability to mimic accents, with her numerous characters rarely sounding anything like her normal accent.
Her early appearances were in British TV sketch comedy shows with Rik Mayall in with Lenny Henry and the English comedian David Copperfield. She also appeared with French and Saunders and Ruby Wax in Girls On Top. In 1983, she had great success as a singer on the legendary punk label Stiff Records, although her was more comic romantic than punk. She had six songs in the British Top 100 in less than two years, including her first hit "Breakaway" (famous for her performance with a hairbrush as a microphone); the international hit "They Don't Know" (which got to #2 and was written by label-mate Kirsty MacColl, who also sang backing vocals), and the Madness cover version "My Guy" (whose video featured the British politician Neil Kinnock, at the time the Leader of the Opposition). Her songs were over-the-top evocations of 1960s and 1970s pop music with an 1980s edge, "somewhere between Minnie Mouse and The Supremes" as Britain's put it, or "retro before retro was cool", as a retrospective reviewer wrote in 2002. The video for "They Don't Know" featured a cameo from Paul McCartney; at the time Ullman was filming a minor role in McCartney's film Her final hit was "Sunglasses" at the end of 1984. During this time, she was also a guest VJ on MTV in the United States. A year later, she donned a blonde wig and took the role of a promiscuous gold digger named Candice Valentine in the ITV sitcom , which was featured in very simple cartoon shorts (created by cartoonist Matt Groening at the behest of Ullman Show producer James L. Brooks). In 1992 Ullman filed a lawsuit against Twentieth Century Fox in Los Angeles Superior Court over profits from the later half hour incarnation of for $2.5 million out of the estimated $50 million in profits reaped from merchandising. Years after her show went off the air, she said jokingly in a late night television interview that she hoped to one day have a regular 2-minute spot on . As Ullman has continued her professional relationship with former producer Brooks, only the studio and not Brooks was named in the suit. In fact, Brooks was allowed to videotape his testimony because in an only-in-Hollywood twist he was at that time directing Ullman in his later de-musicalized film . Ullman was unsuccesful and viewed by some as trying to greedily cash in on a project that she could not show in court that she had any hand in creating. However, supporters point out that she only sought a small portion of merchandising from the studios slice that she felt her contract for the cancelled show entitled her to (a 12 page contract that was hastily signed only hours before filming on the first on HBO, which has been nominated and won several Emmy's including Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Series in 1997 for the episode "Vegas." She has featured in many films, including . She was also the modern-day cartoon voice of Little Lulu. She also had a recurring role as Ally's unconventional therapist on the television series . Ullman returned to HBO in the summer of 2005, with a special of her autobiographical one-woman stage show, , starring Michelle Pfeiffer. Ullman is married to producer Allan McKeown. They have two children, Mabel and Johnny. |
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