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'''Guinevere Turner''' ([[May 23]], [[1968]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[actor|actress]], writer and director. She was born in [[Boston, Massachusetts]]. She is best known as the screenwriter of such films as ''[[American Psycho]]'' and ''[[The Notorious Bettie Page.]]''
'''Guinevere Turner''' ([[May 23]], [[1968]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[actor|actress]], writer and director. She was born in [[Boston, Massachusetts]]. She is best known as the screenwriter of such films as ''[[American Psycho]]'' and ''[[The Notorious Bettie Page]].''
== Works ==
== Works ==
Guinevere Turner and ''[[I Shot Andy Warhol]]'' director [[Mary Harron]] wrote the screenplay which ended up being selected for the [[American Psycho (film)|film version]] of [[Bret Easton Ellis]]' ''[[American Psycho]]''. She has a brief [[cameo appearance|cameo]] in the film, in which she delivers the in-joke, "I'm not a lesbian!". (Turner has publicly acknowledged her [[lesbianism]].<ref>[http://www.afterellen.com/archive/ellen/People/turner-interview2.html Interview with Guinevere Turner (page 2)]</ref>).
Guinevere Turner and ''[[I Shot Andy Warhol]]'' director [[Mary Harron]] wrote the screenplay which ended up being selected for the [[American Psycho (film)|film version]] of [[Bret Easton Ellis]]' ''[[American Psycho]]''. She has a brief [[cameo appearance|cameo]] in the film, in which she delivers the in-joke, "I'm not a lesbian!". (Turner has publicly acknowledged her [[lesbianism]].<ref>[http://www.afterellen.com/archive/ellen/People/turner-interview2.html Interview with Guinevere Turner (page 2)]</ref>).

Revision as of 08:57, 22 July 2008

Guinevere Turner

Guinevere Turner (May 23, 1968) is an American actress, writer and director. She was born in Boston, Massachusetts. She is best known as the screenwriter of such films as American Psycho and The Notorious Bettie Page.

Works

Guinevere Turner and I Shot Andy Warhol director Mary Harron wrote the screenplay which ended up being selected for the film version of Bret Easton Ellis' American Psycho. She has a brief cameo in the film, in which she delivers the in-joke, "I'm not a lesbian!". (Turner has publicly acknowledged her lesbianism.[1]).

Turner emerged on the scene with the groundbreaking film Go Fish, which she co-wrote and co-produced with her then-girlfriend, Rose Troche. Turner also starred in the film, portraying a young woman whose friends help her find a new girlfriend. Director Kevin Smith was a fan of the movie, particularly a scene in it wherein, in an imagined sequence, some of a character's friends chastise her for "selling out" and sleeping with a guy, and used it as an inspiration for his rather unusual take on a similar theme in his own film Chasing Amy. Turner has cameos in both Chasing Amy and Smith's later film Dogma; her name is used as that of Joey Lauren Adams' character in Smith's Mallrats.

A writer and story editor for the first two seasons of The L Word, Turner also made several memorable guest appearances on the show as Alice Pieszecki's screenwriter ex-girlfriend, Gabby. In 2005 Turner wrote the script for BloodRayne directed by Uwe Boll, and the script for The Notorious Bettie Page, with Mary Harron, who directed it.

Movies

See also

Notes

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