Ali Larter Biography:
Ali Larter, the hot beauty, seductive, headstrong, smart babe with beautiful hair is an American actress and a former model and she was born in Cherry Hill, New Jersey on February 28, 1976 to her parents Margaret, a realtor, and Danforth Larter, a trucking executive. Her original full name is Alison Elizabeth "Ali" Larter; but she is commonly known as Ali Larter, and her nick name is Allegra Coleman. She has an older sister named Kirsten, who is a teacher. After her birth their famely have moved to Allentown, Pennsylvania. She attended Carusi Middle School and later graduated from Cherry Hill High School West. She started her carrier as a model, Larter soon transitioned into acting after appearing in several guest roles on television shows in the 1990s.
Ali Larter started her carrier as a model only at the age of 13. Her life comes in track after she was discovered on the street by a modeling scout. She was asked to star in a Phillies commercial and later signed a modeling contract with the prestigious Ford Modeling Agency in New York. From this point she never has look back. Larter subsequently skipped her senior year to model in Japan, Australia and Italy. At the age of 17, Ali Larter settled temporarily in Japan. In 1995, Later has moved to Los Angeles, California with her boyfriend.
As I already told that Ali Larter has started out as a model before getting her big acting break in an unlikely place: Esquire magazine hoax. As the magazine's fake cover girl (a fictional, up-and-coming) Ali Larter portrayed fictional model Allegra Coleman. From this Ali Larter gained lots of real attention, even after she was revealed as a hoax. When speaking about the cover and her subsequent fame, Larter said, "When the door opens for you in Hollywood, you need to run with it. You know?"
In 1997, Ali Larter got her first professional role in acting when she appeared in several television programs. She appeared in an episode of the Brooke Shields television series Suddenly Susan, and the short-lived series Chicago Sons. Not only this two but these roles were followed by a number of other appearances on Dawson's Creek, Chicago Hope, and Just Shoot Me! In 1999 she made an auspicious film debut as an ambitious, whipped-cream-wearing cheerleader in Varsity Blues, which re-united her with Dawson's Creek star Van Der Beek and close friend Amy Smart.In the film Varsity Blues she played the role of Darcy Sears, a love interest for one of the main characters. Her first film Varsity Blues drew a domestic box office gross of $53 million. That year she made appearances in the teen comedies Giving It Up and Drive Me Crazy. Ali Larter, she has also starred in the horror remake of the film House on Haunted Hill. Made for around $20 million, the movie was panned by critics, but surprisingly grossed $15 million on its opening weekend and went on to earn over $40 million.
In 2000, Larter starred as one of the main characters, Clear Rivers, in the teen horror film Final Destination. She also starred in several movies like Legally Blonde with Reese Witherspoon, as Zerelda Mimms American Outlaws, in Kevin Smith's Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, Final Destination 2, Three Way, Confess, A Lot Like Love, Resident Evil: Afterlife. She has also performed in the stage play The Vagina Monologues in New York City. Ali Larter has also appeared on the cover of Maxim magazine. She is very well-known to the world for playing the dual roles of Niki Sanders and Tracy Strauss on the NBC science fiction drama Heroes.
In December 2007, Larter and her boyfriend of three years, Hayes MacArthur, were engaged to marry. They had met on the set of National Lampoon's Homo Erectus. In a interview with Cosmo in 2007, Ali Larter said "I told my boyfriend after three weeks that I wanted to marry him and that we could do it tomorrow". On August 1, 2009, Larter married MacArthur. The couple later purchased a three storey home in the Hollywood Hills for about US $2.9 million.
In June 2010, Larter was one of thousands of delegates from 130 countries who participated in a United Nations conference, 'Women Deliver' in Washington D.C..
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