Julianne Michelle (also known as Julianne Michelle Di Palma and Julianne Michelle Reeves; born September 5, 1987) is an American film and television actress.[3]
In 2015, socialite squatter Melissa Berkelhammer and her mother were kicked out of the Fifth AvenueUpper East Side one-bedroom apartment of Julianne Michelle where they had been squatting without permission for more than a year.[1][9][10]
Marriage and divorce
On November 21, 2015, less than a year after they met, Julianne Michelle married Karl Christian Reeves, the CEO of a New York City based elevator installation and maintenance business in Manhattan that is an offshoot of his father Karl Revesz’s company, Consolidated Elevator Industries of Queens, named Consolidated Elevator (C.E.I. New York).[2][5] They were wed at St. Ignatius Loyola church by a Roman Catholic priest. They had a daughter together shortly after.[11]
As of 2019, Michelle and Reeves were divorcing, and Michelle had retained 10 different divorce attorneys.[2]
Career
Julianne Michelle began her acting career when she was discovered by a producer at the age of six. In 1991 she was nominated for her guest appearance on the television series Who's The Boss?;[12] and in 1993 for "Best Actress Under Age 10" for the movie Family Prayers.[13] In 1996, she voiced the character Dot Hugson from the direct-to-video series The Oz Kids. In 1998, she was nominated for "Best performance in a TV movie/pilot/made for video young ensemble" along with three other actors in the 1998 pilot Bus No. 9.[14] In its 2001 WB TV special, Teen People magazine named Michelle "One of 20 Teens Who Would Change the World".[7][15][16]
She was host committee chair for a Children at Heart Celebrity Auction and Dinner to benefit the children of Chernobyl.[18] Michelle has been featured in Teen People and Metropolitan Magazine.[19][citation needed]
^"14th Annual Awards". Archived from the original on February 17, 2011. Retrieved 2012-12-11., "Fourteenth Annual Youth in Film Awards 1991–1992" Retrieved December 29, 2008
^"15th Annual Awards". Archived from the original on April 3, 2011. Retrieved 2007-07-04., "Fifteenth Annual Youth in Film Awards 1992–1993" Retrieved December 29, 2008
^"20th Annual Awards". Archived from the original on September 7, 2013. Retrieved 2013-02-02., "Twentieth Annual Youth in Film Awards 1997–1998" Retrieved December 29, 2008
^TimeWarner Newsroom, February 14, 2001, "Highlight: Top Teen List" Retrieved December 29, 2008
^"20th Annual Youth in Film Awards", "The Community Service Award: The award went to Julianne Michelle for her magnificent achievements in raising funds for charities" Retrieved December 29, 2008