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Louise Robey

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Nationality
  
Canadian

Education
  
Role
  
Singer-songwriter


Name
  
Louise Robey

Years active
  
1979–present

Children
  
James Beauclerk

Louise Robey i78photobucketcomalbumsj107malsirrahsslrobeyjpg

Full Name
  
Louise Ann Robey

Born
  
14 March 1960 (age 64) (
1960-03-14
)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Other names
  
RobeyLady BurfordLouise BurfordLouise, Countess of Burford

Occupation
  
Singer-songwriter, actress, model

Spouse
  
Stan Shaffer (m. 2008–2010), Charles Beauclerk, Earl of Burford (m. 1994–2001)

Parents
  
Malcolm Robey, Dallas Robey

Movies and TV shows
  
Friday the 13th: The, Play Nice, Raw Deal

Similar People
  
John D LeMay, Frank Mancuso - Jr, Stan Shaffer, Charles Beauclerk - Earl of Bu, Blanche Baker

I surrender by louise robey


Louise Anne Beatrice Fiona Robey (born 14 March 1960), styled Louise, Countess of Burford during her marriage to Charles Beauclerk, Earl of Burford, is a Canadian singer-songwriter, former model, and actress. During much of her career, she used only her last name Robey as a stage name. She is best known for her role as Micki Foster in the Emmy nominated television series Friday the 13th: The Series (1987-1990).

Contents

Early life and education

Louise Robey the hattingh amalgamation tomboy style

Robey was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, the daughter of Malcolm, a pilot in the Royal Canadian Air Force, and his wife Dallas, who was an English actress. In a 1987 interview with People, Robey stated that her family are descendants of Scottish poet Robert Burns.

Louise Robey Louise Robey Listen and Stream Free Music Albums New

Robey was raised and educated throughout Canada, France, Italy, and West Germany. She attended St Leonards School in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland and took college preparatory courses for Oxford and Cambridge.

Modeling and singing

Louise Robey info Louise Robey

After graduating from St Leonards, Robey returned to her parents' home in Canada. She then began a romance with a Canadian student whom she followed to France. After the couple broke up, Robey remained in France. She later won a scholarship to the Royal Ballet School but, after being spotted sunbathing in the French Riviera by French photographer Jacques Henri Lartigue, decided to forgo school for a modeling career. Lartigue set about making Robey into a model. One of her first professional photos was a nude taken by Lartigue which appeared in Paris Match. At the age of 19, she appeared in Vogue Paris, and later was signed to a cosmetics contract with Maybelline. Robey then moved to New York City where she worked as a catwalk model earning $5,000 a day.

Louise Robey Louise Robey Autographed 8x10 Photo at Amazon39s

In the early 1980s, Robey moved to Los Angeles where she fronted the group Louise and the Creeps. Though the group was signed to a record deal, they broke up before recording an album. In 1984, Robey landed a solo record deal with Silver Blue Records and recorded a self-titled album (she decided to simply use her last name as her professional name as she felt "it had a nice ring"). Six singles from the album were released. One single, a cover of the song "One Night in Bangkok" from the musical Chess, became a hit. Robey's version of the song spent three weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 in March 1985, peaking at #77. It fared much better on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart, peaking at #5.

Acting and current work

Louise Robey Valley of the Shadow October 2012 Tip Jar And a Gothy Muse

While working as a musician, Robey continued to model and also became involved in improvisational comedy. She also appeared in stage roles in dinner theater. In 1986, Robey had small roles in the films The Money Pit and Raw Deal. The following year, she beat out 300 other actresses for the role of Michelle "Micki" Foster, niece of antiques dealer Lewis Vendredi, on the syndicated horror series Friday the 13th: The Series, which Frank Mancuso Jr. produced. Robey's character, Micki Foster, was a young woman who had inherited an antique shop from Lewis Vendredi (R. G. Armstrong), her estranged uncle. When the antiques in the shop proved to have been cursed by the devil, Micki, Ryan Dallion (John D. LeMay), her cousin by marriage, and family friend Jack Marshak (Chris Wiggins) begin to hunt down and recover the antiques before they could kill, or cause the damnations of the souls of, anyone else. The show, which was filmed in Toronto, was a hit with audiences and became one of the top three syndicated dramas airing at the time. After the series was canceled in 1990, Robey starred in the independent thriller Play Nice alongside fellow Friday the 13th star Amy Steel.

In a post on her now-defunct website dated 17 August 2008, Robey announced that she would be appearing on the DVD release of the first season of Friday the 13th: The Series, and that she also continued to work on music and photography projects.

In December 2013, Robey released a new single, "Take It To The Top", a collaboration with recording artist Lovari. The single debuted at #87 on the iTunes U.S. Dance Chart.

Personal life

In 1993, Robey began dating Charles Beauclerk, Earl of Burford. The two met after Beauclerk gave a lecture about one of his relatives, Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, who is one of several authors named in the Shakespeare authorship question. The couple married on 29 December 1994 at St. Winifreds Church in Manaton. At the time of the marriage, Robey was pregnant with the couple's child. Their son James was born in Boston in 1995. The couple lived in Ipswich and Hadleigh, Suffolk before divorcing in 2001.

Robey subsequently moved to The Dordogne, France, with her fiance, photographer Stan Shaffer. Robey and Shaffer married in France on 22 March 2008. Shaffer died in France on 10 June 2010.

References

Louise Robey Wikipedia