American actress (born 1950)
Victoria Principal
|
---|
Principal in 1987
|
Born
| Vicki Ree Principal
(
1950-01-03
)
January 3, 1950
(age 74)
|
---|
Occupations
| - Actress
- producer
- entrepreneur
- author
|
---|
Years active
| 1972?2001 (acting)
1987?present (producer and entrepreneur)
|
---|
Spouses
|
Christopher Skinner
(
m.
1978;
div.
1981)
Harry Glassman
(
m.
1985;
div.
2006)
|
---|
Vicki Ree Principal
(born January 3, 1950),
[1]
[2]
[3]
later known as
Victoria Principal
, is an American actress, producer, entrepreneur, and author, best known for her role as
Pamela Barnes Ewing
on the American
primetime
television
soap opera
series
Dallas
. She spent nine years on the long-running series, leaving in 1987. Afterwards, she opened her own
production company
, Victoria Principal Productions, focusing mostly on television films. In the mid-1980s, she became interested in natural beauty therapies, and in 1989, she created an eponymous line of skincare products, Principal Secret.
[4]
Principal became a best-selling author, writing three books about beauty, skincare, fitness, well-being, and health:
The Body Principal
(1983),
The Beauty Principal
(1984), and
The Diet Principal
(1987). In the 2000s, she wrote a fourth book,
Living Principal
(2001). She is also a two-time
Golden Globe Award
nominee.
[5]
[6]
Early life
[
edit
]
Vicki Ree Principal was born on January 3, 1950
[1]
in
Fukuoka
, Japan, the elder daughter of
United States Air Force
sergeant Victor Rocco Principal and Bertha Ree Principal (nee Veal). She spent her first three months of life in Japan.
[7]
Because
her father was in the U.S. military
, the family moved often. She grew up in
London
,
Puerto Rico
,
Florida
,
Massachusetts
, and
Georgia
, among other places. She attended 17 different schools, including the
Royal Ballet School
while her family was stationed in England.
[8]
Principal began her career in TV commercials, appearing in her first at age 5. After graduating from
South Dade Senior High School
in 1968, she enrolled at
Miami?Dade Community College
, intending to study medicine. However, months before completing her first year of studies, she was seriously injured in a car crash while driving home from the library. The other driver was convicted of drunk driving and served jail time. Principal spent months in recovery and was faced with the prospect of having to retake her first year of studies.
[9]
After serious introspection, she drastically changed course by moving to New York City to pursue acting, and shortly thereafter to Europe. She studied privately with Jean Scott (professor at the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
) in London, and in 1971 moved to
Los Angeles
.
[8]
Career
[
edit
]
Early acting
[
edit
]
In 1971, Principal moved to
Los Angeles, California
. She won her first film role as Marie Elena, a Mexican mistress, in
John Huston
's
The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean
(1972) (opposite
Paul Newman
), for which she earned a
Golden Globe
nomination as Most Promising Newcomer.
[6]
On the basis of the positive response to Principal's acting work, her role was enlarged by writer
John Milius
. During this period,
Warren Cowan
flew in, introduced himself to Principal, and offered to represent her free-of-charge for the next year. She went to
Arizona
as an unknown; when she returned to Los Angeles three months later, the commercial flight she was on was greeted by paparazzi. She then had a starring role in the risque comedy film
The Naked Ape
(1973), which was co-financed by
Hugh Hefner
, the founder and publisher of
Playboy
magazine. She appeared nude in the September 1973 issue of
Playboy
to promote the film.
[10]
However, the film failed at the box office, which was a disappointment to her.
[11]
[12]
In 1974, she was cast in the blockbuster
disaster film
Earthquake
. Principal won the supporting role of Rosa Amici, beating out both
Susan Sarandon
and
Kay Lenz
for the part. Prior to her third callback audition, she opted to cut her then waist-length brown hair, dye it black, and have it styled into an
Afro
. Director
Mark Robson
was stunned, but impressed by Principal's risky transformation and dedication to look closer to the character. The film went on to become one of the era's highest-grossing films and received four
Academy Award
nominations and two
Golden Globe
nominations. She continued to act in lesser-known films such as
I Will, I Will... for Now
and
Vigilante Force
. Principal signed a three-picture deal with Brute Productions.
Behind the scenes, transition, and return to acting
[
edit
]
Principal decided to leave acting and became a Hollywood talent agent and booking agent, which was her profession from 1975 to late 1977. She then had ambitions to study at law school and would support herself if needed through small acting roles on television and film, so as to fund her future college tuition. In 1976, she returned to her character in
Earthquake
by shooting additional scenes to expand the running time of the original picture for the broadcast premiere of that film, and in 1977, she made a guest appearance on the pilot of the television series
Fantasy Island
which aired on the
ABC
network, and in the 1977
television film
The Night They Took Miss Beautiful
on the
NBC
network.
[13]
[14]
The urge to return to acting came when television producer
Aaron Spelling
offered Principal a role in the pilot of his television series
Fantasy Island
, which she accepted.
Dallas
TV series
[
edit
]
When Principal obtained the pilot audition script for
Dallas
, her academic career ambitions changed, and she decided to return to the full-time acting profession. As Principal explained to
TV Guide Network
in 2004, "I had left acting to be an agent and was on my way to law school, but when a friend dropped off a
Dallas
script, I read it. When I finished, I knew my life had changed - that part was mine. So I called the [casting] person and said, "I'm sending someone in." She said, "Who?" I said, "Just put down my name. It will be a surprise." And it certainly was a surprise - I showed up with me! I sent myself in for it!"
[13]
Principal landed the role of
Pamela Barnes Ewing
on the long-running
prime time
TV
soap opera
series
Dallas
that aired on the
CBS
network from 1978 to 1991.
[15]
Principal explained to
People
in 2018, "When I went in for the part on
Dallas
, I had already fallen in love with the show and with the part. So my feeling from the moment I read it was that it was incredibly special and that I really, really wanted to be a part of it. I could not imagine not being Pam."
[15]
As Principal told
TV Insider
in 2018, "I believed that
Dallas
would be a hit from the moment I read it. In fact, I turned down a major role that would have conflicted with
Dallas
in the belief that I would be offered the role of Pam. So that happened!"
[16]
Principal was her own manager in contract negotiations with CBS and
Lorimar Productions
, which produced
Dallas
. When Principal signed her
Dallas
contract, she removed the clause that would have given the network the right to consent and profit from her outside endeavors. She explained, "As a result that's why, you can only notice in hindsight, I was the only person in the cast who did commercials, who was doing movies of the week, who wrote books and these all belong to me. I retained the control and ownership of my image. No one owns me."
[17]
Dallas
became a global phenomenon with the 1980 "
Who shot J.R.?
" cliffhanger mystery reveal. At the time, it was the highest-rated aired television episode in American history.
[9]
Titled "
Who Done It
" the episode is the fourth episode in the
fourth season
(1980?1981) of
Dallas
, and remains
the second highest rated prime-time telecast ever
.
[18]
In 1981, Principal appeared on the song "
All I Have to Do Is Dream
" with her then boyfriend singer
Andy Gibb
. The single reached #51 on the US Hot 100 chart.
In 1983, Principal earned her second
Golden Globe
nomination, this time as Best Actress in a Television Series for
Dallas
.
[5]
Principal took to other ways of improving her character, such as taking voice lessons for a better Texas accent.
[19]
Principal's character Pamela Ewing's relationship with Patrick Duffy's character, Bobby Ewing, was one of the major components of the series. Duffy's character, however, was killed off. When Duffy returned to
Dallas
in 1986, after being killed off a year earlier, the entire previous year was written by the show's writers as a dream that Pam had. Being told that the entire previous year was nothing more than a dream that one of the characters had didn't go over very well with some of the show's fans.
[20]
Consequently, that season of
Dallas
is sometimes known as the show's "dream season" as the entire
ninth season
was only Pam's dream.
In 2018, recalling the first days of filming on the
Dallas
set in 1978, Principal told
TV Insider
, "What I remember most about the first day of shooting
Dallas
was an unexpected feeling of
deja vu
. Everything was new to me; I was nervous, and yet I felt strangely sure that I was where I was supposed to be and with the people I was supposed to be with as though this had happened before. I remember looking at Patrick [Duffy] when he did not know it and thinking, 'this is a nice person.' And that made falling into his arms and our love scenes that day so much easier and natural.
[16]
Describing the on-screen relationship between Principal and Duffy, or Bobby and Pam, Duffy stated to
The Huffington Post
in 2017, "We had great chemistry on the show and that just fell into place. It was the luckiest bit of casting, I think, that has occurred in a long time on television. Everybody was absolutely perfect for the parts they played. For a
Romeo and Juliet
basically subject matter for Bobby and Pam, we were absolutely the most comfortable two actors when we were working together. Victoria had a wonderful sense of humor. We could just go crazy between takes and then get right back into the moment.
[21]
Over the course of her nine-year run on
Dallas
, Principal found worldwide fame. Principal left
Dallas
in 1987, after a two-year decision to prepare with the series' producers for the final season of her character's arc.
[22]
However, as an actress, she intentionally worked on separating her own persona from that of her on-screen character, as she explained in 1987 to
The New York Times
in an interview during her final week of shooting on the
Dallas
set, "A lot of work has gone into keeping Victoria Principal separate from Pam Ewing. To stay on the show any longer would really seal my fate in the industry."
[23]
Reflecting on her time at
Dallas
, Principal stated to
People
in 2018, "At year seven, it was time for me to renegotiate my contract and I was very candid about my concern and my disappointment, that we had had such good writing and so many wonderful plots, and that when the time came to renegotiate the writers' contracts, I felt that a number of writers had left because they had not gotten the right deal."
[15]
As she further explained to
Entertainment Weekly
in 2018, "The first five years on
Dallas
were so unbelievably wonderful ? then some key writers departed, and by year seven there was a decline in the writing, which was an enormous part of my decision to leave. I informed the producers during renegotiations in the seventh year that I would only stay for two more. They wanted a longer contract, and I said no. I was completely transparent. I learned a lot from playing Pam. She was someone with such innate goodness and who was courageous in fighting for what she believed in. It was really a privilege to play her."
[24]
1987?present
[
edit
]
Principal went on to star in various television films, some of which she produced through her production company Victoria Principal Productions, before stepping away to focus on her health and wellness projects.
[15]
She has produced and starred in a half dozen major television productions, including
Naked Lie
(1989),
Blind Witness
(1989), and
Sparks: The Price of Passion
(1990).
[25]
In 1994, Principal appeared in an episode of the hit TV sitcom
Home Improvement
. Through the late 1990s and in 2000, she continued to appear as a guest star on several TV sitcoms and primetime drama series, including
Just Shoot Me!
,
Family Guy
,
Providence
, and
The Practice
, as well as appearing as herself on the comedy skit show
Tracey Takes On...
.
[26]
In 1998, Principal co-starred in the French comedy feature film,
Michael Kael vs. the World News Company
, written by and starring
Benoit Delepine
. The cast included
Marine Delterme
,
Mickey Rooney
,
Elliott Gould
,
William Atherton
, and
Feodor Atkine
. The plot centers on a journalist who disrupts the cynical collusion between a CNN-type entity and covert operators in Washington in 1999, at Miami-based international news giant corporation WNC, where star co-anchors Leila Parker (Principal) and James Denit (Atherton) hate each other's guts. Their boss, Coogan (Gould), reminds them they pull in top ratings as a pair.
[27]
Principal returned to primetime soap-opera television in 2000, when she appeared in another Aaron Spelling production, the short-lived NBC television series
Titans
, with co-stars
John Barrowman
,
Perry King
, and
Yasmine Bleeth
. Thirteen episodes were filmed, of which 11 were actually aired. Produced by Spelling, the series was initially marketed as a "
Dynasty
for the new millennium," attempting to emulate the style of Spelling's earlier hit series. However, low ratings led NBC to cancel the series before its first season was completed.
[28]
After appearing in NBC's
Titans
, Principal dedicated her time fully to her skincare company and to philanthropic activities, as she confirmed to
People
in 2018, "By the time I turned 50, I felt that I wanted to make a change in my life" ? she says, of ultimately leaving Hollywood after 2001 ? 'My interest had shifted in such a way that would totally pursue my passion, which more and more really was my skincare company and creating products that could help many people."
[15]
In 2004, Principal featured along with other original
Dallas
cast members in
Dallas Reunion: The Return to Southfork
, a television special celebrating the 1978?1991 primetime series that aired on CBS.
[29]
Music
[
edit
]
Principal recorded a pop single
duet
song
with
English-Australian
singer-songwriter
Andy Gibb
, titled "
All I Have to Do Is Dream
" (1981). The recording is a cover version of the original song by
the Everly Brothers
, written by husband-and-wife songwriting team
Felice and Boudleaux Bryant
(credited solely to Boudleaux),
[30]
The Gibb/Principal 1981 duet song was released on
RSO Records
in August 1981.
[31]
The single peaked at number 51 on the US
Billboard
Hot 100
on September 12, 1981. The song was Gibb's last charting single, and the only single recorded by Principal.
[32]
[33]
Entrepreneur
[
edit
]
When asked about the benefits of her entrepreneurial success ? her skincare empire, best-selling author, television and film producer ? Principal stated to
The Huffington Post
in 2012, that it is "Working for myself and being willing to take all of the blame when things go wrong and happy to take the credit when I get it right."
[9]
Victoria Principal Productions
[
edit
]
After Principal left the
Dallas
TV series in 1987, she began her own production company, Victoria Principal Productions, producing mostly television films. Principal went on to star in various television films, some of which she produced through her production company, before stepping away to focus on her health and wellness projects.
[15]
She has produced and starred in a half dozen major television productions, including
Naked Lie
(1989),
Blind Witness
(1989), and
Sparks: The Price of Passion
(1990).
[25]
Principal Secret Skincare
[
edit
]
In the mid-1980s, Principal became interested in natural-beauty therapies, and in 1989, she created a self-named line of skincare products, Principal Secret. Over the past 25 years, Principal has built her skincare empire.
[9]
In 2000, Principal became a member of the Society of Cosmetic Chemists (SCC).
[34]
The SCC is dedicated to the advancement of cosmetic science, and strives to increase and disseminate scientific information through meetings and publications.
[35]
In January 2011, she launched a line of jewelry called Keys & Hearts available on the same site as her skincare line.
[36]
In August 2013, the CEO of Guthy Renker revealed to
Women's Wear Daily
that Principal's business, Principal Secret Skincare, had revenue of more than $1.5 billion to date, an increase of more than a half-billion dollars over the revenue up to 2007.
[4]
As Principal told
TV Insider
in 2018, "I continue to be passionately dedicated to running my skincare company, Principal Secret. We are about to celebrate 27 years in business. And I have never forgotten that
Dallas
gave me the springboard to achieve so many of my dreams.".
[16]
In April 2019, Principal announced that she was stepping away from Principal Secret with Guthy Renker acquiring the business. Principal announced that she would be focusing on her foundation The Victoria Principal Foundation for Thoughtful Existence.
[37]
Books
[
edit
]
In the 1980s, Principal became a best-selling author, writing three books about beauty, skincare, fitness, well-being and, health:
The Body Principal
(1983);
The Beauty Principal
(1984); and
The Diet Principal
(1987). In the 2000s, she wrote a fourth book
Living Principal
(2001). After 12 weeks on
The New York Times Best Seller list
in the general non-fiction category,
The Body Principal
was the first "Advice, How-To, and Miscellaneous" No. 1 bestseller when that List debuted January 1, 1984.
[38]
[16]
Awards
[
edit
]
Principal is a two-time
Golden Globe Award
nominee: 1973, nominee for Most Promising Newcomer ? Female:
The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean
; and 1983, nominee for Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series ? Drama:
Dallas
.
[5]
[6]
In 1981 and 1982, Principal was the recipient of the "
Bravo Otto
" Award, a
German
accolade honoring excellence of performers in film, television, and music. She was also a nominee for the award in 1983.
[
citation needed
]
In 1993, Principal received an honorary law degree from the
University of West Los Angeles
School of Law.
[39]
In 1995, Principal was named Entertainment Business Woman of the Year by the National Association of Women Business Owners.
[40]
In 1999, Principal became the youngest recipient of the Genii Lifetime Achievement Award for Women in Television.
[41]
In 2003, a Golden Palm Star on the
Palm Springs, California
,
Walk of Stars
was dedicated to Principal's career.
[42]
[43]
In 2004, she received an honorary degree from
Drexel University
's Business School and gave the commencement address.
[44]
On October 2, 2010, Principal was honored at the opening of Legacy Park in Malibu near the Pacific Coast Highway as a founding member of the park back in 2004.
[45]
Over a 12-year period, she served the
Arthritis Foundation
as honorary chairman and ambassador to government.
[8]
Personal life
[
edit
]
Principal has been married and divorced twice, and has no children.
[46]
During the filming of
The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean
(1972), she dated actor
Anthony Perkins
, who said he lost his virginity to her.
[47]
[48]
[49]
Her first marriage was to writer-producer Christopher Skinner, whom she met in 1978 when he played a bit acting part on
Dallas
. The couple wed soon after beginning their relationship; however, they filed for divorce two years later in 1980,
[50]
it was finalized in 1981.
[51]
Principal had a high-profile relationship with English-Australian singer-songwriter
Andy Gibb
. The pair met on
The
John Davidson
Show
in January 1981 and had immediate chemistry.
[52]
They celebrated their love in a duet song, "All I Have to Do Is Dream" (1981), a modest pop-chart hit that peaked at number 51 on the
Billboard
Hot 100
on September 12, 1981. The recording was the last single by Gibb, and is the only single recorded by Principal.
[32]
[33]
The relationship ended in March 1982, due to Gibb's escalating drug addiction problems. After Gibb's death in 1988, Principal explained to
People
, "Our breakup was preceded and precipitated by Andy's use of drugs." She clarified, "I did everything I could to help him, but then I told him he would have to choose between me and his problem."
[53]
Principal met prominent Beverly Hills plastic surgeon Dr. Harry Glassman in 1983.
[51]
They married on June 22, 1985, in
Dallas, Texas
, when Principal was seven years into her role on
Dallas
. The couple lived in Beverly Hills. In May 2006, Principal filed for divorce, citing irreconcilable differences.
[54]
The couple divorced in December 2006, with Principal stating, "We have had a loving relationship for over 20 years."
[50]
Principal later moved to
Malibu, California
. She owns properties in
Big Sur, California
, and Switzerland.
In 2007, Principal showed interest in training for her booked flight on the
Richard Branson
's
commercial space flight venture
, the galactic passage ticket which she purchased in 2009.
[55]
[56]
Principal stated, "Going into space fulfills many desires I have of seeing the planet, going fast, going someplace very few people have been?and hopefully coming back down!"
[57]
[58]
[59]
In 2012, Principal withdrew from the Branson-led program.
[60]
Since 2012, Principal has developed a ranch property outside of Los Angeles, where she rescues and rehabilitates animals.
[15]
[16]
Philanthropy
[
edit
]
Principal told
The Huffington Post
in 2012, "My deepest concern is for the planet and every living thing on it. Without a healthy planet, education won't matter, hunger won't matter, and science won't matter because we will not survive. Unless we rectify the damage we have done to our land and our oceans, then I truly believe, the planet will reclaim itself.
[9]
In 2006, Principal formed a charitable organization, the Victoria Principal Foundation For Thoughtful Existence, to help subsidize the environmental movement, of which she had been an active participant since 1978.
[61]
The impetus of the foundation is to help financially support the planet and life upon it. Principal is particularly involved with ecology, oceans, banning toxic substances, helping children, and rescuing and rehabilitating animals.
[16]
She provided aid those in need after the
2008 California wildfires
. On June 2, 2010, she donated $200,000 to the cleanup effort in the Gulf Coast region. Her donations brought together two huge environmental nonprofits,
Oceana
and
Natural Resources Defense Council
(NRDC), to work together on the cleanup.
[62]
Principal appeared with other celebrities on June 21, 2010, in a
CNN
Larry King
?sponsored telethon to support the
Gulf Coast region
following the
Deepwater Horizon explosion
. Principal was on a panel with King, answered phones, and spoke to donors for the entire two hours. The telethon raised over $1.8 million.
[63]
Principal is a former co-chairman of Victory Over Violence, the LA County Domestic Violence Council Community Advisory Board. The board is a coalition of representatives from the entertainment industry, business, government, and community who have come together with the dual purposes of increasing public awareness of issues surrounding domestic violence and increasing shelter and victim resources.
[64]
On December 13, 2011, Principal donated a substantial sum to the nonprofit marine conservation organization
Oceana
, and to NRDC to stop the expansion of offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico and the Arctic Ocean, fearing such activity could lead to another disastrous oil spill.
[65]
[66]
On December 20, 2011, the Giving Back Fund named Principal as one of the Top 30 Celebrity Charity Donors for 2011.
[67]
In 2012, Principal funded and participated in an online campaign with the NRDC in an effort to stop sonic blasting along the California coastline and prevent the deaths of hundreds of marine mammals and marine life.
[68]
In 2012, she funded, through Tree People, the creation of a mobile emergency fire warning system for the Los Angeles area. In 2013, this system was completed and implemented, the first of its kind in California.
[69]
In 2013, Principal funded an ad bringing awareness to the plight of sea lion pups washing up along the California coastline and provided funds to Wildlife Org. for their rescue and rehabilitation.
[70]
In 2013, after the deadly
Moore, Oklahoma
, EF5 tornado, Principal funded the
American Humane Association
's famous Red Star Rescue Team to help search, rescue, and shelter injured and missing animals with the ultimate goal of reuniting them with their families.
[71]
In August 2013, she funded in collaboration with Tree People a new mobile system that allows citizens to participate in critical wildfire prevention by texting.
[72]
In July 2014, Principal made a substantial contribution to NRDC's campaign for Save the Bees. She stated, "As of yesterday, I've now made a substantial donation and joined in support of the NRDC's campaign for Save the Bees. Without bees, our fruit- and vegetable-bearing plants and trees will cease to be productive."
[73]
In August 2014, she fully funded with, the help of Mission K9 rescue, the return of military working dog Maxi from Japan to the United States to be reunited with her former Marine handler.
[74]
Two months later, she donated $100,000 to support Malibu ballot initiative Measure R, which sought to limit the environmental impact of development in Malibu by requiring a vote on any new developments over 20,000 square feet. In November, the initiative was passed by voters.
[75]
In May 2015, Principal fully funded the Red Star Rescue Team of the American Humane Association for the rescue and rehabilitation of 150 dogs that had been injured and displaced by tornadoes and floods in Oklahoma and Texas.
[76]
The following year, she created the Moki fund to help rescue animals and provide medical care so that they can be adopted into permanent homes.
[77]
In August 2016, Principal worked with the American Red Cross to provide shelter and food for the victims of the
2016 Louisiana floods
, as well as the
American Humane Association
to help rescue and shelter animals that were displaced in Louisiana and attempt to reunite them with their owners.
[78]
In April 2018, Principal announced that she will double the impact of individual gifts by matching donations to Oceana, up to $50,000 to help protect U.S. coasts from the dangers of offshore oil and gas. Explaining her commitment, Principal has stated, "Oceana successfully protected much of the Atlantic and Arctic from new drilling in the past, but now those protections are at risk. Oceana knows how to win victories for our oceans, and I am making this commitment to encourage people across the country to join me in the fight to protect our coasts."
[79]
In September 2018, Principal donated a fleet of rescue boats to help American Humane with animal disaster relief efforts in the Carolinas after
Hurricane Florence
.
[80]
Filmography
[
edit
]
Film
[
edit
]
Television
[
edit
]
Books
[
edit
]
- The Body Principal
. New York: Simon and Schuster. 1983.
ISBN
0-671-46684-4
.
- The Beauty Principal
. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1984;
ISBN
0-671-49643-3
.
- The Diet Principal
. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1987;
ISBN
0-671-53082-8
.
- Living Principal: Looking and Feeling Your Best at Every Age
. New York: Villard, 2001;
ISBN
0-375-50488-5
.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
"UPI Almanac for Thursday, Jan. 3, 2019"
.
United Press International
. January 3, 2019.
Archived
from the original on January 3, 2019
. Retrieved
September 3,
2019
.
actor Victoria Principal in 1950 (age 70)
- ^
Born January 3, 1950 as per travel manifests at ancestry.com, showing Vicki R. Principal and her mother, Ree V. Principal here, departing Southampton, England, on January 20, 1958, for New York (age given for Vicki R. Principal is 8; birthdate is January 3, 1950)
(
registration required
)
- ^
This
travel manifest for Vicki R. Principal and her mother, Ree V. Principal, shows that on April 8, 1950, Principal's age was given as two months on a travel manifest leaving Yokohama, Japan to Seattle, Washington
(
registration required
)
- ^
a
b
Rachel Brown (August 9, 2013).
"Victoria Principal Launches Reclaim Botanical Skin Care"
.
Women's Wear Daily
. Retrieved
December 16,
2014
.
- ^
a
b
c
"Winners & Nominees 1983"
.
Goldenglobes.com
. Retrieved
June 4,
2018
.
- ^
a
b
c
"Golden Globes (USA) 1973"
.
MUBI
. Retrieved
June 4,
2018
.
- ^
"Military Brat Victoria Principal Revisits Her Birthplace to Sell Tokyo on Dallas"
.
People.com
. Retrieved
June 4,
2018
.
- ^
a
b
c
"Victoria Principal"
. Victoriaprincipal.com. Archived from
the original
on August 19, 2012
. Retrieved
December 16,
2014
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
"Victoria Principal On Her Skin Care Empire, Cary Grant And Her Big Regret"
.
Huffingtonpost.com
. March 20, 2012
. Retrieved
June 4,
2018
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