One tough cookie who can definitely hold her own next to the boys on
film and TV, lovely, dark-haired Rachel Ticotin has stepped up to the
plate many times in strong-armed femme roles, playing everything from
cops and bodyguards to military corporals.
Born on November 1, 1958, and raised in the Bronx, Rachel is of Puerto Rican, Russian-Jewish descent and learned the fine art of discipline at a young age with ballet training at age 8. She made her first stage appearance at age 10
as a Siamese princess in a production of "The King and I" at NYC's City
Center Theatre. At age twelve she joined the Ballet Hispanico of New
York and went on to work with such famed choreographers as
Alvin Ailey,
Geoffrey Holder and
Anna Sokolow.
Rachel made her film debut at age 20 in a bit role as
a gypsy dancer in the
King of the Gypsies (1978) starring
Eric Roberts. She gained valuable
experience in off-Broadway shows and on the other side of the camera as
a production assistant for such films as
The Wanderers (1979),
Dressed to Kill (1980) and
Raging Bull (1980).
Rachel earned her big break after being handed the top female role
opposite
Paul Newman and
Edward Asner in the brutal police film
Fort Apache the Bronx (1981).
Television became a viable forum with the TV pilot
For Love and Honor (1983) as Corporal
Grace Pavlik. The pilot introduced her to up-and-coming actor
David Caruso.
They married later that year. Rachel went on to appear in the
short-lived series version of
For Love and Honor (1983) without Caruso. Other television
projects included assertive roles in
Prison Stories: Women on the Inside (1991),
Aftershock: Earthquake in New York (1999) and
Warden of Red Rock (2001). On
the big screen she played tough in
Critical Condition (1987),
Where the Day Takes You (1992), and
Falling Down (1993).
Her best known role is probably the
Arnold Schwarzenegger sci-fi blockbuster
Total Recall (1990)
in which the athletic Rachel has a memorable fisticuffs scene with
Sharon Stone. In 1997, Rachel earned an ALMA award for her role as a prison
guard in
Con Air (1997). Divorced from Caruso after six years in 1989, she
later met actor
Peter Strauss on the set of the TV movie
Thicker Than Blood: The Larry McLinden Story (1994). They
married in 1998. In series drama she joined the cast of
Ohara (1987) as a
U.S. attorney and played detective in the police drama
Crime & Punishment (1993).
A proven talent who is as alluring as she is enduring, Rachel's work has included the
popular films
Something's Gotta Give (2003) starring
Jack Nicholson and Oscar-nominated
Diane Keaton,
Man on Fire (2004) with
Denzel Washington, as well as the recent
The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants (2005) and its sequel
The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 (2008). She also was part of the critically acclaimed bi-cultural series
American Family (2002).
Although gracing such recent films as horror opus
The Eye (2008), the romantic crimer
The Burning Plain (2008) and the dramatic thriller
AmƩrica (2011), Rachel has focused on TV as of late with guest roles on the revamped "The Outer Limits," as well as "Lost," "Law & Order: LA," "NCIS: Los Angeles," "Homeland," "Grey's Anatomy" and "The Act."