Posted on 11/19/2014 4:29:27 PM PST by Morgana
I have always been fascinated with the actress, model, spokeswoman, and author Brooke Shields. She has always seemed a compelling mix of wholesomeness and glamour, forthrightness and mystery.
An 80s icon, she defined beauty and elegance. She socialized with living legends such as pop star Michael Jackson and tennis great Andre Agassi. I even worked with a TV producer who, during his time as a piano accompanist, had worked with Shields on a musical number.
He said she was the most beautiful woman he had ever met.
From an outsiders point of view, she seemed to live a charmed life. But it was not Cover Girl perfecther marriage to Agassi ended in divorce and she battled post-partum depression, a struggle she courageously and, in her own inspiring way, revealed in her book Down Came the Rain.
Now the super celebrity is out with a new missive, There Was a Little Girl. In the interest of full disclosure, I have only read a sample so far, but I was especially struck by a passage about the drama that surrounded her life pre-birth.
Shields writes in her book that, when her mother became pregnant, her boyfriend did not appear ready to assume the role of father. She surmises that he told his own Dad, who in turn, decided to convince her mother to terminate the pregnancy. Her grandfather explained to her mother how an out-of-wedlock birth could jeopardize her fathers standing on the Social Registry. Her granddad even went so far as to give her mother money for the abortion (This was pre-Roe v. Wade).
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Instead of visiting an abortionist, her mother went to an antique store and used the money to buy a coffee table.
Shields remarks that the table ironically became a favorite of hers, which she used to pull herself up from the floor as a toddler.
She writes, The table saved my life and helped me to stand.
It is hard to imagine the pop culture landscape without Brooke Shields. To think someone of such beauty and grace could have had her life ended before birth is so mind-boggling. Shields is a mother herself, so an entire family could easily have been swept away if her mother had chosen to cave into pressure and abort.
How many stars have been lost to abortion? You might think its impossible to count, but actually the number is more than 56 million. For every child who is aborted is a star in Gods galaxyevery single life has value and dignity.
We now just have one more beautiful face to remember as we contemplate the thin line between life and death in our world today.
“Ive been waiting for someone famous and accomplished who could have very well been aborted.”
There are lots of famous people like that.
Robert Merrill (sp?) a great opera singer is on record against abortion because of his own life experience.
And Jack Nicholson was actually raised by his grandparents and was told that his mother was his sister. I believe he is on record as saying had abortion been legal at that time he probably wouldn’t be around.
Those are the two I know off the top of my head, and sorry if I’m a little sketchy on the details, but those people and their stories are out there.
If the MSM hadn’t become just an organ of the LEFT we might now more of them better.
I agree eyebrows should be natural (except unibrows).
Brooke’s are coming in below the radar, they’re down on the deck in that photo. They make her look angry if she’s not smiling.
Obama could have been an abortion ....
Andrea Bocelli and Nick Cannon are a couple more.
What an utterly bizarre thing to say on this thread. Did you even read the article? Do you actually think it's about coffee tables? Check your med dosage.
The whole thread is bizarre — here we are told this compelling pro-life story and all anyone can do is comment on her jeans or her eyebrows.
The woman is a fashion icon! Girls like me held her up as our standard ....
Jack Nicholson is very anti-abortion, and was for a time, very vocal about it.
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But starring in it was enough to preclude the word "wholesome" coming to mind when I think of her. The same with Blue Lagoon. She may be wholesome in real life. So what? That's not the public image she created by her films.
Hum..isn't that the idea...?
Do you have an issue with Anthony Hopkins being unsavory....
After all he was a psycho deranged cannibal in a couple of his movies..
She was a regular at Studio 54. Do you define that as wholesome too?
It appears she was a regular at Studio 54. I’ll take back the part about her personal life possibly being wholesome. That place was a cesspool.
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