American actress and model
Kimberly Beck
Other names Kimberly Beck-Hilton Occupations Years active 1958–2009 Known for Spouses
William Barron Hilton, Jr.
(
m. 1978;
div. 1985)
Relatives Cindy Robbins (mother)
Kimberly Beck is a former American actress and model. She is best known for her role as Trish Jarvis in Joseph Zito 's Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter (1984). Her other film roles include Alfred Hitchcock 's Marnie (1964), Luc Besson 's The Big Blue (1988), George T. Miller 's Frozen Assets (1992), and Roland Emmerich 's Independence Day (1996).
Life and career
Beck was born to the actress Cindy Robbins .[ 1]
She starred in such movies as Massacre at Central High , Roller Boogie , and Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter .[ 2] Among her notable television credits are General Hospital , Capitol (billed as Kimberly Beck-Hilton), Fantasy Island , Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (as one side of a Jekyll-and-Hyde character, whose counterpart was played by Trisha Noble ), Westwind , The Brady Bunch , Dynasty , Lucas Tanner and Peyton Place (as the character Kim Schuster ).[ 3] As a child, she appeared in Alfred Hitchcock 's Marnie and television commercials for such products as Mattel Toymakers Barbie and Chatty dolls. She had a very brief appearance on The Munsters as a transformed Eddie Munster after Eddie drank the rest of Grandpa's Texas Playgirl Potion in season 1, episode 33 entitled "Lily Munster, Girl Model". She starred on the pilot episode of Eight Is Enough as Nancy Bradford, the role that, in the series, went to Dianne Kay . She also had the role of Diane Porter in Rich Man, Poor Man Book II with Peter Strauss and appeared in a host of other well-received television miniseries productions. In 1968, she and her stepfather Tommy Leonetti , then working in Australia, recorded the single "Let's Take a Walk", released under the name of "Tommy Leonetti and his daughter Kim".[ 4] It charted at #4 on the Melbourne charts.[ 5]
In 1988, Beck married producer Jason Clark and they had two sons.[ 6]
Filmography
Film
Television
References
^ Kleiner, Dick (February 16, 1977). " 'Roots II' may be in making" . Abilene Reporter-News . Texas, Abilene. Newspaper Enterprise Association. p. 12. Retrieved November 2, 2016 – via Newspapers.com .
^ Dread Central’s Final Girls: Kimberly Beck
^ "An In Depth Interview With Kimberly Beck" Archived January 23, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
^ Label shot at rateyourmuisc.com , retrieved May 24, 2012
^ Ryan, Gavin (2003) Melbourne Chart Book 1956-2002 , Golden Square: Moonlight Publishing, no ISBN
^ "Kimberly Beck Clark" . Old HRF Website . October 9, 2019. Retrieved June 10, 2024 .
^ Crystal Lake Memories: The Complete History of Friday the 13th (2013) . Retrieved December 15, 2024 – via www.blu-ray.com.
External links
International National Other