Home NET WORTH Bo Derek Net Worth 2023, Age, Husband, Children, Height, Family, Parents, Movies

Bo Derek Net Worth 2023, Age, Husband, Children, Height, Family, Parents, Movies

Bo Derek

Read about Bo Derek net worth, age, husband, children, height, family, parents, salary, movies and tv shows as well as other information you need to know.

Biography

Bo Derek is an American actress and model. Her breakthrough film role was in the romantic comedy 10 (1979). Her first husband John Derek directed her in Fantasies; Tarzan, the Ape Man (both 1981); Bolero (1984) and Ghosts Can’t Do It (1989), all of which received negative reviews. Widowed in 1998, she married ac tor John Corbett in 2020.

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Early life

NameBo Derek
Net Worth$40 million
OccupationActress, Model
Age66 years
Height1.68m
Bo Derek net worth

Bo Derek whose real name is Mary Cathleen Collins was born on November 20, 1956 (age 66 years) in Long Beach, California, United States. Her father, Paul Collins, was a Hobie Cat executive, and her mother, Norma (née White), was a make-up artist and hairdresser to Ann-Margret. Collins’s parents divorced, and her mother remarried, stunt performer Bobby Bass. She has two sisters and a brother. Collins attended Narbonne High School and George S. Patton Continuation School, both in Harbor City, California.

She remarked in a 1985 interview on Late Night with David Letterman: I was 16 when I quit high school. I didn’t really mean to quit. I spent about a month going to the beach surfing and sunbathing while I was supposed to be in school: when I got caught, my mom was furious. I started to go back to school, and I was really enjoying it, and then I went to go do this film with John in Greece.

Career

Bo Derek auditioned for the female lead in John Derek’s Fantasies, a low-budget romantic drama set in Greece while attending Narbonne High School in Los Angeles at age 16 in 1973. Although Derek had been considering Collins for the part, he felt that her naturally blonde hair was ill-suited to the character, whom he saw as a brunette. He nevertheless offered Collins the role on the condition that she dye her hair darker. Collins agreed and was added to the cast. Containing several risqué scenes, including brief nudity, Fantasies was twice re-edited by Derek in an effort to sell it to major studios. The film remained unreleased until 1981, at which time it received negative notices.

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She became sexually involved with John Derek, who was 30 years her senior and still married to actress Linda Evans. Upon his divorce from Evans, Derek moved to Germany with Collins, where he would not be subject to prosecution under California statutory rape laws because Collins was under the age of consent. In 1976, the then-19-year-old Collins married John Derek. By this time, she had come to be known professionally as Bo Derek: an amalgam of her former stage name Bo Shane and married name Derek. In 1977, director Michael Anderson cast Derek in a small role in his horror film Orca – The Killer Whale (1977), in which Derek’s character has her leg bitten off by the title character.

In 1979, Bo Derek was selected over Melanie Griffith, Heather Thomas, Tanya Roberts, and several others for the role of Jenny Hanley in the romantic comedy film 10. Directed by Blake Edwards, the film starred Dudley Moore as a middle-aged man who finds Derek’s character to be the ideal woman; i.e., a perfect 10. Derek’s appearance in a dream sequence, running towards Moore in a tight-fitting, nude-colored one-piece swimsuit, launched her status as a mainstream sex symbol. Highlighted by Derek’s cornrow hairstyle, the sequence has often been parodied. 10 was a critical and financial success.

After 10, she was cast in A Change of Seasons (1980), a dramatic-comedy film that featured Shirley MacLaine and Anthony Hopkins. Derek played a college student who has an affair with her older, married professor. A Change of Seasons was only a moderate box-office success, with critics reviewing it and Derek’s performance unfavorably (“The only appealing performance is Miss MacLaine’s”).

In 1980 she photographed Bo twice for Playboy magazine; she was featured again in the magazine in 1981, 1984, and 1994. Derek appeared in MGM’s R-rated Tarzan, the Ape Man (1981), her first leading role in a mainstream Hollywood film. Directed by her husband, the film dealt little with Tarzan and instead focused on Derek’s character of Jane Parker, and specifically on Derek’s physical attributes. Several scenes of Derek wearing revealing outfits were featured, along with nude scenes of Derek being bathed and body-painted.

Prior to the film’s release, MGM and the film’s distributor, United Artists, were sued by the Edgar Rice Burroughs estate over the name of the film, as Bo Derek’s role and body overshadowed the story of Tarzan. Although the film received negative reviews from many critics, Tarzan, the Ape Man became a box-office success, making over $35 million in ticket sales and becoming the 15th highest-grossing film of 1981. For her performance, Derek shared the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actress with Faye Dunaway, the latter for her starring role as Joan Crawford in Mommie Dearest.

Bo Derek starred in Bolero (1984). Again directed by John Derek, the film explored the female protagonist’s sexual awakening, and her journey around the world to find an ideal first lover to take her virginity. Its sexual nature, along with its substantial use of nudity, resulted in the film receiving an X rating, usually reserved for pornographic or extremely violent horror films. Critical reviews for Bolero, including Derek’s performance, were negative (“[Bo Derek] would be a lot more appealing if she tried less assiduously to please”), and the film failed to recoup its production costs.

For her performance in Bolero Derek won her second Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actress. The film received other Golden Raspberry Awards: Worst Picture, Worst Director (John Derek), Worst Screenplay (John Derek), Worst New Star (Olivia d’Abo), and Worst Musical Score (Peter Bernstein and Elmer Bernstein). In 1987, Bo Derek teamed up with Steven Paul of the firm sales agency Paul Entertainment to sell the unreleased feature film, A Knight of Love, which was set to star Bo Derek for screening, but it never came to fruition.

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After a five-year hiatus, Derek returned to feature films with the drama/comedy/fantasy Ghosts Can’t Do It (1989). The final collaboration of Derek with her husband as director, Ghosts Can’t Do It was a failure both critically (a “cinematic abomination”) and financially. For her performance in Ghosts Can’t Do It, during which she delivered such lines as “You have my heart…how can I live without my heart,” Derek won her third Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actress. The film also won Golden Raspberry Awards for Worst Picture, Worst Director (John Derek), and Worst Supporting Actor (Donald Trump).

Following Ghosts Can’t Do It Bo Derek returned to acting in the television movies Hot Chocolate (1992) and Shattered Image (1994), and the straight-to-video film Woman of Desire (1994). For her performance in the 1995 comedy film Tommy Boy, Derek was nominated for a Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Supporting Actress but ultimately lost to Madonna for the latter’s performance in Four Rooms.

In 1998, she guest-starred on four episodes of Wind on Water. In 1999, she appeared on The Drew Carey Show, and in the early 2000s, she had guest roles on the shows Family Law, Queen of Swords, Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place, Lucky, Still Standing, and 7th Heaven. At the 20th Golden Raspberry Awards in 2000, Derek was nominated for Worst Actress of the Century, sharing the nomination with Madonna (the eventual winner), Brooke Shields, Elizabeth Berkley, and Pia Zadora.

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Bo Derek appeared in several more feature films during the 2000s, including Frozen with Fear (2000), The Master of Disguise (2002), for which she received her second Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Supporting Actress nomination, and Malibu’s Most Wanted (2003). In 2006 Derek starred in 40 episodes of the 65-episode telenovela series Fashion House. Derek made an appearance in CSI Miami in 2012. Derek had a featured role in the 2015 made-for-TV campy horror film Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No!. Derek was reported to have participated in the 2016 Comedy Central roast of Rob Lowe but is absent from the eventual cast list.

Politics

Bo Derek, who describes herself as independent, supported George H. W. Bush in 1988 and 1992 and campaigned for his son George W. Bush in 2000 and 2004, and she appeared at both Republican conventions. She voted for Barack Obama in 2008. She has appeared at events with Republican Congressman David Dreier of Southern California. When White House Chief of Staff Josh Bolten was asked about his relationship with Derek on the edition of April 30, 2006, of Fox News Sunday with Chris Wallace, Bolten said she was a friend and a “strong supporter of the President”.

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In 2006, she was appointed to the board of trustees of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts by President George W. Bush, on the operations committee. In 2012 Derek endorsed Mitt Romney for president. In a 2020 interview with Variety, when asked who she was supporting in the election, Derek explained “I don’t talk about who I vote for anymore. I supported Bush 43 and I became one of the poster girls for the Republicans. But I’m independent. I don’t want to be pigeonholed and labeled as one thing or another.” In the same interview, Derek also spoke highly of President Donald Trump, recounting his cameo in 1989’s Ghosts Can’t Do It, indicating that a scene featuring Trump was written specifically for him and “he was great.”

Other works

Bo Derek is a horse lover and riding enthusiast since childhood. She owns Andalusian horses and is a spokesperson for the Animal Welfare Institute’s campaign to end horse slaughter through the passage of federal and state legislation. On February 5, 2002, she published her autobiography entitled Riding Lessons: Everything That Matters in Life I Learned from Horses (ISBN 0-06-039437-4). She serves on the California Horse Racing Board.

She is a national honorary chairperson for Veterans Affairs’ National Rehabilitation Special Events. She attended the 17th annual Disabled Veterans Winter Sports Clinic in Snowmass Village, Colorado. In 2003, she received the VA’s highest honor from the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Anthony Principi. Derek makes appearances on United Service Organizations tours. The Special Forces Association named her an honorary Green Beret.

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Her father, Paul Collins, was a radio operator during the Korean War. Her stepfather Bobby Bass, and her late husband, John Derek, were military veterans. Derek has been active for 18 years with the environmental agency WildAid which provides funds to protect sharks and dissuade people from purchasing wildlife products. On August 13, 2020, she was a guest on the Discovery Channel’s Shark Week.

Husband

Bo Derek is currently married to John Corbett, they had their wedding in December 2020. Her husband is an actor and they have no children together. However, after she began a relationship with John Derek when she was 16, they moved to Germany, where John would not be subject to prosecution under California statutory rape laws. They returned to the United States soon after Bo’s 18th birthday. They wed in 1976 and remained married until his death from heart failure in 1998. In 2002, she began a relationship with actor John Corbett, with whom she lives on a ranch in Santa Barbara, California. As of 2022, Bo Derek and her husband John Corbett are still married.

Bo Derek net worth

How much is Bo Derek worth? Bo Derek net worth is estimated at around $40 million. Her main source of income is from her primary work as an actress. and model. Bo Derek’s salary per month and other career earnings are over $3 million dollars annually. Her remarkable achievements have earned her some luxurious lifestyles and some fancy car trips. She is one of the richest and most influential actresses in the United States. When it comes to the actress’s weight and height, she stands at an appealing height of 1.68m and has a good body weight which suits her personality.

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