Jacqueline Buckingham | |
|---|---|
| Born | JJacqueline Elaine Buckingham-Bodin |
| Education | Emory University University of Toronto (B.A.) |
| Occupation(s) | Actress, entrepreneur |
| Years active | 1995–present |
| Spouse | Maxwell L. Anderson (married 1995-2013, 2013-2016) |
| Children | 2 |
| Website | msbuckingham |
Jacqueline Buckingham (born Jacqueline Elaine Buckingham-Bodin) is an American actress and entrepreneur. She is best known for her supporting roles in Half-Baked , Intimate affairs , and A Touch of Fate, and her lead role in the movie Sleepless Nights.[ citation needed ] A society fixture in New York, she has also lived in Houston, Atlanta, Toronto, and Indianapolis.
Jacqueline Elaine Buckingham-Bodin is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John Eric Bodin. [1] She was raised in Houston, Texas. She graduated from Kingwood High School in 1993 [2] and was crowned Miss Houston Teen USA in 1992. [3] She attended Emory University. [2]
Buckingham began her acting career at the Equity Showcase Theatre in Toronto. Since then, she has had numerous roles in films, such as Half-Baked , The Gypsy Years, and *Corpus Callosum . She played the supporting role of "Linda" in the Alan Rudolph film Intimate affairs , starring Nick Nolte and Tuesday Weld; and she was "Betsy Kline" in the movie A Touch of Fate, starring Teri Hatcher.
Buckingham appeared as a special guest star, "Sherry," in the NBC's Ed (a hit TV series) and, in the role of "Marie," on the CBS series Hack (American TV series) . She also made regular, but uncredited, appearances carrying in the mailbag on the Late Show with David Letterman . In As the World Turns on CBS, she played "Glenda Corcoran" and, in the "Ill-Conceived" episode of Law & Order on NBC, she guest-starred in the lead role of "Helene Zachary."[ citation needed ]
Buckingham hosted a documentary for OLN (now "Bravo") and played the role of Tiffany in Jesus, Mary and Joey with Olympia Dukakis and Jennifer Esposito, and appeared opposite Minnie Driver in Portrait, a short feature that aired on amazon.com.
In Los Angeles in 2004, Buckingham founded Design & Style Consulting LLC, a business focused on the art and fashion needs of various corporate and individual clients.
After relocating with her family to Indianapolis, Indiana, she undertook large-scale photography installations at serial spaces[ clarification needed ] belonging to Clarian Health. With some 2,000,000 square feet (190,000 m2) of programmable space , she created photosforhealth.com, [4] a company that puts photographs on hospital walls. [5] Her efforts initially provoked some controversy, as some members of the local art community claimed she was displacing the work of professional artists. [6]
She launched Style Meets Life in 2008, a column and website assisting women with choices regarding personal presentation and fashion. [7]
In 1995, Buckingham married museum director Maxwell L. Anderson. They were briefly divorced in 2013 before announcing their re-marriage three months later. [8] They are now no longer married. She and Anderson have two children, Chase and Devon. As the first lady of several art museums, she made a name for herself in the New York Society circuit, culminating in 2003 in a two-page profile in W . [9] A year after the attack on the World Trade Center, her fashion sense was cited in the pages of The New York Times as embodying glamour's return. [10]
The New York Times subsequently reported about her to illustrate the challenges of recruiting spouses as part of professional recruitment for museum jobs. [11] While living in Indiana, she undertook an expensive interior redesign of the 13,000 sq ft (1,200 m2) official residence of the Indianapolis Museum of Art. [9]