Lynn Cohen

Lynn Cohen

  • Born: 1933-8-10
  • Birthplace: Kansas City, Missouri, United States
  • Height:
  • Profession: actor
  • Representative Works: Sex and the City: The Movie, The Hunger Games 2
  • Lynn Cohen (August 10, 1933-February 15, 2020), was born in Kansas City, Missouri, USA. He is an actor [1]  . His representative works include " Sex and the City: The Movie ".
    On February 15, 2020, Lynn Cohen passed away at the age of 86. [2] 
    Extended Reading
    • Theresa 2022-03-24 08:01:04

      Amniotic fluid and cartridge casings

      I often find it difficult to restrain myself from raving about a movie at the beginning of a film review. One is that most of the films that make me want to write a review are rare and good films, and the other is that the film itself is emotional, it translates the director’s thoughts, feelings,...

    • Brenda 2022-03-24 08:01:04

      these words.

      I love the lines in this movie. For example, in the queue to watch a movie, D said to M, why should I have a good friend like you. After he finished speaking, he leaned on her shoulder gently. Just lost love, lost a child, shed a lot of blood, and in the end there is only cat TIMMY.

        Another...

    • Cameron 2022-04-24 07:01:25

      The heart is the strongest muscle in the body, there are more brain cells than the stars in the Milky Way, and 72% of the human body is made up of water

    • Braxton 2022-03-29 09:01:09

      What's the point of being absurd?

    The Life Before Her Eyes quotes

    • Young Diana: Maureen, what did I do to deserve a friend like you?

      Maureen: Um, something in a past life?

    • Paul McFee: William James, that most American philosopher, once advised: "begin to be now what you will be hereafter". One might ask how? Our deepest guide in our beginning to be, is our imagination. Our ability to project, and mold our future selves from the myriad possibilities before us. And to imagine takes courage and effort. But it gives us hope too, hope that we can author our own destinies, hope that rightness of the decisions we make now will be borne out in the future. As much as we can be overwhelmed by the world, we can also draw hope from it. From beauty, from promise, from the simple fact that we have the talent to imagine our future selves from all the possible lives that pass before our eyes. We must imagine our lives well. We must engage our conscience. Conscience is the voice of God in the nature and heart of man.