Lola Glaudini was born on November 24, 1971 in New York City, New York, USA. She is an actress and producer, known for Criminal Minds (2005), Invincible (2006) and That Awkward Moment (2014). She has been married to Stuart England since 2005. They have two children.
Lola Grace Combs is an actress, known for Monstrous (2022).
Lola Hartstone-Kolovich is an actress, known for Birds Like Us (2017).
Lola Hazim is an actress and art director, known for DeadZone (2018), Repost (2017) and ONION SKIN: PART ONE (2017).
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Lola Ikudiasi is an actress, known for Love and a Tragedy (2019).
Lola Kelly is a classically trained, gender fluid multi-hyphenate raised between Ireland and Los Angeles by two film loving academics. They are a RADA and LMU graduate with Groundlings training, fluent in Spanish and a professional silent clown. They have been working as an actor, writer and director for over fifteen years. On top of their work on screen Lola works frequently in professional theatre with a specialty in directing and developing immersive work. They have also played leads at REDCAT, the Chance, South Coast Rep, ATA NY, Circle X as well as the Hollywood and Edinburgh Fringe.
Kirke was born in London, and raised in New York City from the age of five. Her father, Simon Kirke, is the former drummer of the rock bands Bad Company and Free. Her mother, Lorraine (née Dellal) Kirke, owns Geminola, a vintage boutique in New York City that supplied a number of outfits for the television series Sex and the City (1998). Her father is of English and Scottish descent. Her maternal grandfather, Jack Dellal, was a British businessman of Iraqi Jewish descent, and Kirke's maternal grandmother was Israeli. Kirke has two sisters, Jemima Kirke and Domino Kirke. She is a cousin of curator Alexander Dellal and model Alice Dellal. Kirke graduated from Bard College in 2012.
Lola Klamroth is known for Früher oder später (2007), Ich Ich Ich (2021) and Capri-Revolution (2018).
Lola Lane, born Dorothy Mullican, grew up Indianola, Iowa. Small-town life was not to her taste and she yearned to be in show business. She was also a bit of a rebel. At one time, in her teens, she 'scandalized' the townsfolk by dancing a particularly suggestive Charleston right in front of the church--which was emptying after Sunday service. She secured her first job playing piano accompaniment to silent films in the local movie theater for seven dollars a week. She then worked briefly in an ice cream factory, but soon had enough and quit, leaving for Des Moines (in accordance with her mother's dictates) to study music. She spent two years at the local conservatory, Simpson College, but--still the rebel--cut classes and was expelled, much to her joy. There are several versions as to what happened next: according to one, her sister Leota Lane was "discovered" by vaudevillian Gus Edwards (who was always scouting for talented youngsters) singing in an Iowa theater. Dorothy then chaperoned Leota on her trip to New York and both girls subsequently appeared in "Greenwich Village Follies" on Broadway. According to the New York Times obit of Lola Lane (June 25, 1981), Edwards discovered her "singing in a flower shop in Des Moines". Dorothy herself claimed that she wrote Edwards in New York, borrowed $200 and went to his house for an audition. Whichever story is true, Dorothy ended up with a $450-a-week vaudeville contract. Around this time, she and her other sisters (Leota, Martha, Rosemary and Priscilla) changed their surname. Dorothy Mullican became Lola Lane. She toured with Gus Edwards in "Ritz Carlton Nights" and in 1928 appeared in "The War Song" on Broadway. During one of her performances, she was spotted by Benjamin Stoloff who was conducting auditions for a part in his movie Speakeasy (1929). Needless to say, she got the part. While never becoming as big a star as her sister Priscilla Lane, Lola had a fairly successful career in the movies. She won critical acclaim for her performance in Marked Woman (1937) as a hard-boiled night club hostess and was rewarded with a contract at Warner Brothers. She continued to play similar characters in films like Gangs of Chicago (1940), as well as appearing in occasional "potboilers" like Zanzibar (1940). Lola also played female reporter Torchy Blane (Torchy Blane in Panama (1938)), which served as inspiration for Superman's girlfriend Lois Lane. Lola retired from the screen in 1946.