abstract
| - Phillips and her father shared a Saturn Award nomination for Best Make-Up in 1980 with Ve Neill for their work on Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Phillips also shared an Emmy Award nomination with makeup supervisor Michael Westmore and fellow makeup artist Gerald Quist for Outstanding Achievement in Makeup for a Series for The Next Generation episode "A Matter Of Honor" in 1989 . In addition to her work on the Star Trek franchise, Phillips was a makeup artist on five television movies based on the Alien Nation television series: Dark Horizon (1994), Body and Soul (1995), Millennium (1995), The Enemy Within (1996), and The Udara Legacy (1997). She received Emmy nominations for her work on all five movies, all shared with makeup designer and supervisor Rick Stratton and makeup artists Craig Reardon and Richard Snell. (Edouard F. Henriques shared the nominations for Dark Horizon and The Enemy Within; Ken Myers shared the nominations for Body and Soul and Enemy Within; Steve LaPorte and Jill Rockow shared Body and Soul; and Karen Westerfield shared the nomination for The Enemy Within.) Her other makeup credits include the comedy Back to School (1986, featuring Terry Farrell, Sally Kellerman, Adrienne Barbeau, and Robert Picardo, working with hair stylist Donna Barrett Gilbert), National Lampoon's Class Reunion, the comedy Meet the Applegates (1991, starring Ed Begley, Jr. and Roger Aaron Brown, working with Craig Reardon and Jill Rockow), the fantasy adventure Hook (1991, working with Werner Keppler, and Monty Westmore and with hair stylist Norma Lee), the superhero sequel Batman Forever and Batman and Robin (1995, featuring Rene Auberjonois and Ed Begley, Jr., working with Belinda Bryant, Edouard Henriques, Ve Neill, Jill Rockow, and Rick Stratton), and the horror film Vampires (1998, featuring Gregory Sierra and Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa). She also worked on the popular NBC television series The A-Team (1986-1987, starring [George Peppard, Robert Vaughn and Dwight Schultz]), Pee Wee's Playhouse, Designing Women, and the drama series Falcon Crest (1988, starring Robert Foxworth).
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