Lucie Arnaz
began her long career in a recurring role on television
on "The Lucy Show," opposite her mother, Lucille Ball. At
age fifteen, she became a series regular on "Here's Lucy,"
a show which ran for six seasons. She starred in her own
series, "The Lucie Arnaz Show" and later in the critically
acclaimed "Sons & Daughters" on CBS. On the big screen,
Lucie has starred opposite Neil Diamond and Sir Laurence
Olivier in The Jazz Singer (for which she received a Golden
Globe nomination), opposite Tom Laughlin in Billy Jack Goes
to Washington, alongside Ken Howard in Second Thoughts and
opposite Freddie Prinze, Jr. and Henry Winkler in Down to
You. Most recently Lucie costarred with Richard Roundtree,
Robert Loggia and Bob Forster in Wild Seven and in a controversial
new film about second hand smoke from writer/director Alyssa
Bennett entitled, The Pack set to debut at Sundance this
fall. Most recently Lucie spent several months on Broadway
co-starring with Jonathan Pryce, Norbert Leo Butz, Rachel
York and Gregory Jbara, and then Keith Carradine, Brian
d'Arcy James, Sherie Rene Scott and Richard Kind, in the
rib tickling musical Dirty Rotten Scoundrels. |