Lisa Donahue

Lisa Donahue (born February 4, 1976) is a reality tv competitor who was the winner of the third season of the CBS reality series, Big Brother.[1][2] Prior to the show she was a bartender.[3] Lisa was the first female winner of American "Big Brother".

Lisa Donahue
Born (1976-02-04) February 4, 1976
Rochester, New York, United States
TelevisionBig Brother 3 (winner)

Big Brother

Donahue was one of 12 contestants on Big Brother 3. She eventually succeeded in being one of the final two house guests that season, with Danielle Reyes. Some of the evicted house guests later became angered by the comments Reyes had made about them, and Donahue was voted the winner. She received $500,000 for winning the competition by a vote of 91, with Reyes receiving $50,000.[3]

Donahue engaged in a romance with fellow contestant Eric during the show, but she surprised her house guests when in a later game twist, she chose not to bring him back into the house

After Big Brother

After Big Brother, Donahue pursued an acting career. In 2004, she had a small part as Lauren in the film Jekyll. In the same year, she had a repeat guest role on the TV series Entourage. Still in the same year, she had another guest role in Dr. Vegas. In 2006, she was one of 20 finalists vying for a spot on Big Brother: All-Stars, but was not invited back into the house. She also posed for Ramp magazine after BB3, which she talked about on BB4 during the "where are they now?" segment. Lisa now works as a waitress at The Huntley in Santa Monica,CA.

gollark: Presumably "Wolken" is German for "cloud".
gollark: It has exciting NI compatibility features.
gollark: No you don't.
gollark: Technically, training someone else to do a task is "training a neural network"!
gollark: By which I mean either a software neural network or just an underpaid human volunteer.

References

  1. "Profile of Lisa Donahue by CBS for Big Brother 3".
  2. "Profile of Lisa Donahue by CBS for Big Brother 7".
  3. "Donahue wins prize on 'Big Brother'". The Leaf-Chronicle. Tennessee, Clarksville. Associated Press. September 27, 2002. p. 30. Retrieved May 10, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
Preceded by
Will Kirby
Big Brother U.S. winner
Season 3 (2002)
Succeeded by
Jun Song


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.