Sabrina Schaff Schiller is a well-known American actress, lawyer, real estate developer, and activist who has appeared in several television shows.
Born in Delphos, Ohio, she traveled with her mother to Arizona, settling in Tucson. At age 15, she married her math teacher, but the marriage was annulled three years later.
She eventually worked as a theater assistant in New York before becoming a Playboy Bunny in 1962. She appeared in Easy Rider and had a guest appearance in “Paradise Syndrome” Episode from the third season of the original Star Trek.
Schaaf became an anti-pollution activist after leaving show business in the 1970s and ran unsuccessfully for the California State Senate in 1976.
She was married to TV writer Bob Schiller from 1968 until his death in 2017, with whom she had two children.
Scharf graduated from law school in 1989 and practiced real estate law in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles until 2017.
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- Name: Sabrina Scharf Schiller Date of Birth: October 17, 1943
- Birthplace: Ohio
- Occupation: Actress, lawyer and real estate developer
- Country: United States
- Relationship: Married
- Net worth: N/A
early life
Sandra Mae Trentman was born on October 17, 1943 in Delphos, Ohio, and later moved to Tucson, Arizona with her mother.
She married her math teacher when she was 15, but the marriage was annulled three years later.
After a brief stint as a pre-med student at the University of Arizona and a stint as an assistant at an off-Broadway theater company, Scharf came to New York City.
After realizing this was her true calling, she signed up for acting classes at the Neighborhood Theatre.
While visiting her mother in California, a talent scout invited her to Los Angeles to meet with their West Coast agent, thus launching her Hollywood career.
Personal life
She was married to Emmy Award-winning writer Bob Schiller (The Flip Wilson Show, All in the Family) from March 29, 1969 until his death on October 10, 2017; they had two children.
Profession
She is best known for her role as Sarah in the acclaimed 1969 film Easy Rider, in which she co-starred with original series guests Robert Walker and Michael Pataki.
Other films she appeared in included an unnamed role in Death Fever on the Merry-Go-Round (1966, co-starring Michael Strong, Philip Pine, Vic Taybek and George D. Wallace) and a supporting role in Hell’s Angels on Wheels (1967).
In addition to Star Trek, Schaaf guest-starred in more than 20 other television shows. In 1966, she appeared in The Man from UNCLEUNCLE and The Girl from UNCLEUNCLE, the latter directed by Jud Taylor.
She then worked with Jeffrey Hunter on an episode of Daniel Boone that appeared in the first pilot episode of Star Trek. “cage.”
The 1968 episode “A Night of Terror in the Underground” of “The Wild West”.
In this episode, Jeff Corey played the colonel under Persoff’s character. That same year, Schaaf co-starred in an episode of The Danny Thomas Hour with Robert Brown and Ricardo Montalban.
Schaaf later appeared in a number of television shows, including I Dream of Jeannie (with Bill Quinn), Hogan’s Heroes (two episodes, one of which was directed by Mark Daniels and co-starred Barbara Babcock), Wild Wild Bunch (two episodes: one with Richard Derr and Jill Ireland, the other with Charles Dierkop), The Intern (directed by Marvin Chomsky), Banacek (with George Murdoch), and Streets of San Francisco (again with Bill Quinn).
She also appeared in three episodes of Hawaii 6-0, including two with Roger C. Cammell. All three episodes were directed by Michael O’Herlihy, who also directed the 1973 episode of The New Perry Mason starring Byron Morrow and Kenneth Tobey.
She appeared in one TV movie, the 1973 CBSCBS thriller Hunters. Her fellow Star Trekkers Bill Irwin, Steve Inat, John Schuck, Fritz Weaver, and Jason Wingreen also starred in the film.
In 1975, Schaaf appeared in two episodes of the sitcom Harry O, which also featured Anthony Zerbe from Star Trek: Insurrection. The first episode was directed by John Newland, and the second starred original series guest star John Colicos.
She remained a campaigner against pollution until she retired from acting in the mid-1970s, and in 1972 she nearly succeeded in becoming California’s first female state senator, losing by just 700 votes out of more than 250,000.
The encounter inspired several episodes of the fourth season of the hit sitcom Maude, thanks to her screenwriter husband. She became a lawyer in 1989 and has been a real estate developer in Los Angeles since 2007.
Social Media
- Instagram: @_mami_von_hanni_
net worth
Sabrina Scharf’s net worth is $1 million.