In the late 1960s, she was photographed for American Vogue. Patrick Lichfield captured images of her on location in the United Kingdom, the Bahamas, and Italy during the early 1970s, and included them in his 1981 book The Most Beautiful Women.[4]
Anthology series episode "E-Mail II/Blood Donor/Epitaph/Stiches in Time/Soldier"
Notes
^Although the cited source, Cliff Goodwin's Richard Harris biography, specifies "the Musical Theater Academy" as one of the two schools attended by Turkel, no such institution appears to have existed at this time, whereas the similarly named American Musical and Dramatic Academy was, in fact, co-founded and—until his retirement—directed by one of the two named teachers, Philip Burton.[2] (Similarly, the other named school, the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre, was—aside from one four-year stretch—headed by the other named teacher, Sanford Meisner, for more than half a century.)[3]
^Pulsifer, Gary (7 February 1995). "Obituary: Philip Burton". The Guardian. p. T.017. ProQuest294899457. Philip Burton helped to found the American Musical and Dramatic Academy, and served as its president and director.
^Flint, Peter B. (February 4, 1997). "Sanford Meisner, a Mentor Who Guided Actors and Directors Toward Truth, Dies at 91". The New York Times. p. 21. ProQuest430748883. In later years, Mr. Meisner acted occasionally and also won plaudits for directing a 1955 revival of William Saroyan's Time of Your Life, but he concentrated on teaching, as the director of the Neighborhood Playhouse school from 1936 until 1959 and from 1964 through the 1980's.
^"People". Star Tribune. Minnesota, Minneapolis. June 8, 1974. p. 3. Retrieved September 25, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
^Grant, Hank (December 8, 1982). "Rambling Reporter". The Hollywood Reporter. p. 3. ProQuest2587823561. And though the marriage was a failure, the divorce is proving a big success for Richard Harris and Ann Turkel. She's joined him in London for the West End bow of his "Camelot" and proving that two can live as cheaply as one in the same Savoy Hotel suite.
^Gritten, David (August 12, 1990). "RICHARD HARRIS RESURFACES". Los Angeles Times. p. 3. ProQuest281260811. He now cast off from his life those elements that were hard to handle. Marriage went first: He divorced his second wife, actress Ann Turkel, in 1981. They remain friendly, but their marriage had been no more successful than his first.