Anjelica Huston’s Body Measurements Including Height, Weight, Dress Size, Shoe Size, Bra Size

Biography

Anjelica Huston’s body measurements are all here! Check out her height, weight, shoe size, dress size, bra size and more!

Anjelica Huston is an American actress, director, and former fashion model. She won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in Prizzi’s Honor (1985). For her role in The Dead (1987), she won an Independent Spirit Award. She also received Academy Award nominations for Enemies, a Love Story and The Grifters. Her other notable works include The Royal Tenenbaums, Buffalo ’66, Daddy Day Care and The Addams Family. Born on July 8, 1951 in Santa Monica, California, to John Huston and Enrica Soma, she is of Scottish, Scotch-Irish, English and Welsh descent on her father’s side, and of Italian descent on her mother’s side. Her half-siblings are actor Danny Huston and writer and editor Allegra Huston. Her nephew is actor Jack Huston. She was married to sculptor Robert Graham, until his death on December 27, 2008. They did not have any children. From 1973 to 1989, she was in a relationship with Hollywood icon Jack Nicholson.

Body Measurements Table

All body measurements you might be interested in can be found in the table below. For example height, weight and dress size.

Body shape:Average
Dress size: 6
Breasts-Waist-Hips: 36-29-35 inches (91.5-74-89 cm)
Shoe size:10
Bra size: 36B
Cup size (US):B
Height: 5′10″ (178 cm)
Weight: 150 pounds (68 kg)
Natural breasts or implants: Unknown

Anjelica Huston Net Worth

The net worth of Anjelica Huston is not available right now.

Quotes

I do like the ocean wave, actually. I’m born under the sign of Cancer – the sign of the crab – so I like coastal areas and sunny beaches and such – although not the wide-open and deep seas.

My father, John Marcellus Huston, was a director renowned for his adventurous style and audacious nature.

You have to have patience and confidence that your things will let you know where they need to go. Particularly artwork. Paintings will tell you where they want to be.

Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’ is such a powerful book, and ‘Love in the Time of Cholera’ is so strangely, brilliantly optimistic.

I don’t see myself ever retiring, unless it’s for something that I like better, and so far I like directing a lot but I don’t see the necessity to retire from anything unless there’s a really great alternative.

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