Stacey Nelkin | |
Education: | Stuyvesant High School |
Spouse: |
|
Children: | 3 |
Years Active: | 1978–present |
Occupation: | Actress |
Stacey Nelkin is an American film and television actress.
Nelkin starred as Bonnie Sue Chisholm in four episodes of the CBS western miniseries The Chisholms (1979).[1] When the miniseries resumed in 1980, she was up for the role in the miniseries but turned it down to take a role as Candy on Up the Academy. Delta Burke starred in the role of Bonnie Sue instead of Stacey.
She appeared in the horror film (1982) as Ellie Grimbridge.[2] Around the same time, Nelkin was scheduled to appear in the film Blade Runner. She had been cast as Mary, a sixth Nexus-6 replicant that escapes from "off-world" and comes to Earth, but budget constraints resulted in her part being cut from the film early in the period of principal photography. Before being cast as Mary, she had done a screen test for the role of Pris but the role ultimately went to Daryl Hannah. Nelkin's screen test appears on Disc 4 of the collector's edition DVD set. Nelkin has made guest appearances in several TV series, including The Paper Chase, The Waltons, CHiPs, The A-Team, Eight Is Enough, 1st & Ten and Hunter.
Her best-known TV role was on the soap opera Generations (1990) as Christy Russell.
She starred in the 2022 horror film, The Shed after responding to a posting about a movie that was going to be shot locally, and calling the number on the poster.
Nelkin is a self-styled "relationship expert" and has her own YouTube channel and a website.[3] She wrote a book called You Can't Afford to Break Up: How an Empty Wallet and a Dirty Mind Can Save Your Relationship.[4] For a time, she was a frequent guest on the program Fox & Friends.
In 2008, Nelkin began a career in drama therapy and today is a substance abuse professional and Certified Alcohol and Substance Abuse Counselor (CASAC).[5]
In February 2016, Nelkin began treating dually diagnosed individuals with mental health and substance abuse issues through the Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services Program (OASAS), since serving as an intake and CASAC counselor at The Bridge,[5] a New York-based $65 million agency that provides housing and behavioral health services to 4,000 New Yorkers annually.[6]
According to Nelkin, Woody Allen's film Manhattan (1979) was based on her romantic relationship with the director, whom she met when she was 16 on the set of Annie Hall. Her bit part in that film ended up being cut, and their relationship began when she was 17 years old and a student at New York's Stuyvesant High School, and Allen was 42.[7] Allen has said that they dated for a time, but that Nelkin was not underage.[8]
As of 2014, Nelkin is married to Marco Greenberg,[9] having two children together and adopting a third.[5] She was married to actor Barry Bostwick from 1987 to 1991. She has been married three times. Nelkin is Jewish.[10]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1979 | California Dreaming | Marsha | ||
1980 | Serial | Marlene | ||
1980 | Up the Academy | Candy | ||
1981 | Going Ape! | Cynthia | ||
1982 | Ellie Grimbridge | |||
1983 | Yellowbeard | Triola | ||
1983 | Get Crazy | Susie Allen | ||
1993 | Desperate Motive | Bank Teller | ||
1994 | Bullets Over Broadway | Rita | ||
1996 | Everything Relative | Katie Kessler | ||
2008 | Breaking Pattern | Joanie | Short | |
2010 | 12 Floors Up | Margot Reese | Short | |
2015 | Dante and Beatrice: A Family Film | Theresa Portinari | Short | |
2022 | The Shed | Barbara | Short |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | CHiPs | Marge | Episode: "Hitch-Hiking Hitch" | |
1978 | Eight Is Enough | Linda | Episode: "The Lost Weekend" | |
1978 | Fish | Adrian | Episode: "For the Love of Mike" | |
1978 | Tracy Ford | Episode: "The Man Who Would Be King"[14] | ||
1978 | Mary Frances Conover | Episode: "The Calling" | ||
1978 | Like Mom, Like Me | Tao Wolf | TV film | |
1979 | Gina | TV film | ||
1979 | Bonnie Sue Chisholm | TV miniseries | ||
1979 | Sheila Garrigan | TV miniseries | ||
1980 | Children of Divorce | Andrea Hoffman | TV film | |
1981 | Trapper John, M.D. | Kim | Episode: "A Family Affair" | |
1982 | Cora Spencer | TV film | ||
1984 | Marie Van Buren | TV film | ||
1984 | Simon & Simon | Linda Sanborn | Episode: "Deep Cover" | |
1985 | Finder of Lost Loves | Donna Sinclair | Episode: "Aftershocks" | |
1985 | Lisa Perry | Episode: "Waste 'Em!" | ||
1985 | Rhonda Payne | Episode: "Femme Fatale" | ||
1985 | Murder, She Wrote | Cheryl Lodge | Episode: "Reflections of the Mind" | |
1985 | Episode: "After the Fox" | |||
1986 | Crazy Like a Fox | Dianne | Episode: "Just Another Fox in the Crowd" | |
1986 | Faith Carlson | Episode: "A Day in Beaumont" | ||
1989 | 1st & Ten | Dr. Death's Girlfriend | Episode: "Mind Games" | |
1990 | (voice) | TV special | ||
1990 | Generations | Christy Russell #2 | TV series (28 episodes) | |
1990 | The Adventures of Don Coyote and Sancho Panda | Additional voices | Episode: "Pity the Poor Pirate" | |
1991 | Hunter | Barbara | Episode: "Ex Marks the Spot" | |
1993 | Basic Values: Sex, Shock & Censorship in the 90's | Patty Turner | TV film | |
1994 | Ride with the Wind | Steph | TV film | |
2009 | Fringe | Reporter | Episode: "Midnight" |