Nicolette goulet biography
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Goulet
Goulet may refer to:
- Alfred Goulet (1875−1961), Canadian businessman and political figure
- Bertrand Goulet (born 1944), Member of the National Assembly of Quebec
- Brent Goulet (born 1964), American soccer player
- Catherine Goulet, Canadian author and publishing entrepreneur
- Danis Goulet (born 1977), Canadian Cree-Métis film director and screenwriter
- Denis Goulet (1931–2006), scholar of human development and development ethics
- Elzéar Goulet (1836−1870), Metis martyr
- Émilius Goulet (born 1933), Roman Catholic Archbishop of St. Boniface in Manitoba, Canada
- Florence Goulet (born 1961), French politician
- George R. D. Goulet (born 1933), Canadian author and lawyer
- Genny Goulet (born 1980), French-Canadian professional wrestler who uses the ring name LuFisto
- Jacques Goulet (1615−1688), Canadian pioneer and miller
- Jason Goulet (born 1983), Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman
- Jonathan Goulet (born 1979),
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Nicolette Goulet
Canadian-American actress
Nicolette Goulet
Born (1956-06-05)June 5, 1956 Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Died April 17, 2008(2008-04-17) (aged 51) Las Vegas, Nevada, US
Occupation Actress Years active 1979–1993 Spouse Tim Fowlar (m. 1992; div.) Children 3 Nicolette Goulet (June 5, 1956 – April 17, 2008)[1] was a Canadian-American film, television and musical theatre actress.
Biography
[edit]Goulet was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, the only child of singer-actor Robert Goulet and his first wife, Louise Longmore.[2] She had two half-brothers, Christopher and Michael, from her father's second marriage, to singer-actress Carol Lawrence.[2] Goulet was educated in New York at Marymount College, where she starred in several plays.[citation needed] At age 18, she landed the role of Corey in a production of Barefoot in the Park.[citation needed]
From there she went
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What a difference time can make. Nineteen years ago, Robert Goulet was at the 21 Club in New York with Carol Lawrence, his second wife, at the start of a celebrated marriage that produced considerable newspaper coverage.
In 1968, both were on a high. Goulet, after his auspicious ”Camelot”
role that introduced him to Broadway, won a Tony Award that year for his starring role in ”The Happy Time.” He was on top.
This week at the Fairmont Hotel in San Jose, Goulet arrived in the lobby with his third wife, Vera Novak, a 40-year-old Yugoslavian writer and model. They`ve been married five years.
Goulet, who often has expressed himself to the media on his explosive divorce from Lawrence (in 1981 after separating in 1975), was less expressive this time: ”It`s no one`s damn business” he said.
What Goulet wanted to talk about was ”South Pacific,” the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic that he has taken on tour in two productions last year and t