Cynthia Gibb
- Actress
- Director
- Producer
Cynthia Gibb was born in Bennington, Vermont, USA on December 14, 1963
to a ballet dancer and teacher. Gibb's early dance training lent grace
to her fresh-faced beauty, qualities which won her a modeling contract
with New York's Eileen Ford Agency at age 14. Within a year she was on
the cover of "Vogue" and "Young Miss." Spotted in a magazine by
Woody Allen, Gibb was cast in a minor role
as an autograph seeker in the filmmaker's
Stardust Memories (1980) and
promptly switched to an acting career. Cynthia Gibb graduated high
school with honors, but with a sister at Yale and no financial aid
available to her, she decided on an acting career. After appearing
off-Broadway in "Nathaniel," she landed the recurring part of
scatterbrained Suzi Wyatt Carter of daytime television's
Search for Tomorrow (1951)
right after high school graduation in 1981 at the age of 19. She
joined the cast of Fame (1982) and spent
three seasons as drama major Holly Laird on the popular series. Between
the show's first and second seasons, she starred as a hockey coach's
daughter, with whom Rob Lowe fell in
love, in Youngblood (1986). Between
the second and third seasons, she starred in the much praised
Salvador (1986), as a lay worker (based
on the real life Jean Donovan) who, along with four nuns, was murdered
by an El Salvador death squad. Just before filming
Malone (1987), Gibb finished
Modern Girls (1986), in which she
played, not surprisingly, a young actress. She appeared in the
television movies, "Mary Christmas" (2002) (TV) played Mary Maloney
opposite actor John Schneider. Cynthia has also appeared in many movies
including "A Crime of Passion" (2003) (TV), "A Family Lost" (2007)
(TV), "An Accidental Christmas" (2007) (TV) and "A Nanny For Christmas"
(2010) with Emmanuelle Vaugier,
'Dean Cain (I)' and
Sarah Thompson. She also starred
in "Cinnamon" aka "My Dog's Christmas Miracle" (2011) (V) with
Greg Evigan and
Ashley Leggat.