Jana Kramer[1]
Jana Kramer at 2012 ACM Awards
Jana Kramer at 2012 ACM Awards
Background information
Born (1983-12-02) December 2, 1983 (age 28)
Detroit, Michigan, USA
Genres Country, Country Pop
Occupations Actress, singer
Instruments Vocals
Years active 2002–present
Labels Elektra

Jana Rae Kramer (born December 2, 1983) is an American actress and country music singer. She is perhaps best known for her role as Alex Dupre on the television series, One Tree Hill.

Contents

Career [link]

Kramer played Noelle Davenport on Friday Night Lights and Portia Ranson on 90210. She played a sorority girl interested in Turtle in Entourage. In 2009, Kramer signed on to become a series regular in The CW's One Tree Hill as Alex, an actress who becomes the new face of Brooke's fashion line, "Clothes Over Bros". In February 2011, Kramer signed with Warner Bros. Nashville Records.[2] A digital single, "I Won't Give Up", was released to iTunes and Amazon.com in February 2011 and was featured on an episode of One Tree Hill.[2] The song reached number 75 on the Billboard Hot 100. Her first official single, "Why Ya Wanna", was released to country radio in late 2011.[3] Kramer's self-titled debut album will be released on June 5, 2012.

Personal life [link]

On December 22, 2009, Kramer got engaged to Johnathon Schaech.[4] The couple met on the set of the movie Prom Night and appeared as a couple in Laid to Rest. They wed on July 4, 2010, in Michigan.[5] On August 9, 2010, it was announced that Kramer and Schaech were divorcing after a little over a month of marriage.[6]

Filmography [link]

Year Title Role Notes
2002 Dead/Undead Alice St. James
2003 All My Children Unknown (Unknown episodes, Uncredited)
The Passage Bartender at Alvin's
Blood Games Mistress Tiamat (as Jana Rae)
2005 Blue Demon Carrie
Return of the Living Dead: Necropolis Katie Williams (Jana got so sick that she could not finish filming to be flown back to the states.) (Filming was in Romania.)
2006 Click Julie
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Unknown (1 episode-"Post Mortem", Uncredited)
CSI: NY Paige Rowand (1 episode-"Sweet 16")
2007 Boxboarders! Victoria
Friday Night Lights Noelle Davenport (6 episodes-"How Did I Get Here", "Pantherama!", "There Goes the Neighborhood", "Jumping the Gun", "Who Do You Think You Are?","Humble Pie")
2008 Prom Night April
Approaching Midnight Aspen
Can You Duet Herself (2 episodes-"Open Auditions", "Workshop Week 1")
Bar Starz Ryann
Grey's Anatomy Lola (1 episode-"Freedom")
The Poker Club Trudy
2008–2009 90210 Portia Ranson (6 episodes-"The Jet Set", "That Which We Destroy", "Hello, Goodbye, Amen", "Love Me or Leave Me", "Between a Sign and a Hard Place", "The Party's Over")
2009 Private Practice Lyla (1 episode-"What Women Want")
Laid to Rest Jamie
Spring Breakdown Seven #2
Entourage Brooke Manning (4 episodes-"Security Briefs", "Berried Alive", "Scared Straight", "Give a little bit")
One Tree Hill Alex Dupre Regular (Season 7.14 - Season 9) Recurring (7.02-7.14)

Discography [link]

Studio albums [link]

Title Details
Jana Kramer

Singles [link]

Year Single Peak chart
positions
Album
US Country US
2012 "Why Ya Wanna"A 18 85 Jana Kramer
  • ACurrent single.

Promotional singles [link]

Year Single Peak positions Album
US
2011 "I Won't Give Up" 75 Jana Kramer
"Whiskey" 99
2012 "What I Love About Your Love"

Music videos [link]

Year Video Director
2012 "Why Ya Wanna"[7] Kristin Barlowe

References [link]

External links [link]



https://wn.com/Jana_Kramer

Love (Angels & Airwaves album)

Love is the third studio album by alternative rock band Angels & Airwaves. It was released on February 12, 2010 on Fuel TV, and on February 14 on Modlife. The album was released free of charge due to "corporate underwriting". A "special edition" hard copy version of the album was scheduled for release on March 22, 2011, along with a second disc containing new music from the band. This was announced at a Q & A for the movie, which stated that it would be pushed back to Fall of 2011.

Production

On January 12, 2010, the band released a promotional video entitled "C:\Transmission_Love", which contained a short preview of The Flight of Apollo.

Release and special editions

In May 2009, it was announced that the album would be released on Christmas Day. However, on July 19, 2009, DeLonge announced via Modlife that the album will not be released on Christmas Day as previously planned, and instead will be released on Valentine's Day. The album was released free of charge through Modlife on Valentine's Day 2010.

Love (disambiguation)

Love is an emotion of strong affection and personal attachment.

Love or Loved may also refer to:

In arts and entertainment

In film and television

  • Love (1919 film), starring Fatty Arbuckle
  • Love (1927 film), an adaptation of Anna Karenina starring Greta Garbo
  • Love (1971 film), directed by Károly Makk
  • Love (1982 film), an anthology of six vignettes written, directed and produced by women, including three by Mai Zetterling
  • Love (1991 film), starring Salman Khan
  • Love (2004 film), a Kannada feature film directed by Rajendra Singh Babu
  • Love (2005 film), directed by Vladan Nikolic
  • Love (2008 Indonesian film), directed by Kabir Bhatia
  • Love (2008 Bengali film), by Indian director Riingo Bannerjee
  • Love, a 2008 short film starring Kristina Klebe
  • Love (2011 film), directed by William Eubank, with music by Angels & Airwaves
  • Love (2012 French film) or Amour, a French-language film directed by Michael Haneke
  • Love (2012 Taiwanese film), a film directed by Doze Niu
  • Love (2015 film), a 2015 French film directed by Gaspar Noé
  • Theme

    Theme or themes may refer to:

  • Theme (Byzantine district), an administrative girth district in the Byzantine Empire governed by a Strategos
  • Theme (computing), a custom graphical appearance for certain software.
  • Theme (linguistics), topic
  • Theme (magazine)
  • Theme Building, a landmark building in the Los Angeles International Airport
  • Theme vowel or thematic vowel, a vowel placed before the word ending in certain Proto-Indo-European words
  • Art

  • Theme (arts), the unifying subject or idea of the type of visual work
  • Theme (narrative), the unifying subject or idea of a story
  • Theme (music), the initial or principal melody in a musical piece
  • Theme music, signature music which recurs in a film, television program or performance
  • See also

  • All pages beginning with "Theme"
  • All pages with titles containing Theme
  • Genre
  • Principle
  • The Family Way (soundtrack)

    The Family Way is a soundtrack recording composed by Paul McCartney, released in January 1967. The album is the soundtrack to the 1966 film of the same name, directed by Roy Boulting and starring Hayley Mills. Produced and arranged by George Martin, the album was credited to "The George Martin Orchestra" and issued under the full title The Family Way (Original Soundtrack Album). A 45rpm single, again credited to the George Martin Orchestra, was issued on 23 December 1966, comprising "Love in the Open Air" backed with "Theme From 'The Family Way'", as United Artists UP1165.

    The Family Way won an Ivor Novello Award in 1967. It was remastered and released on CD in 1996 with new musical compositions not on the original 1967 soundtrack album.

    The recording took place over November and December 1966, before the Beatles began work on their album Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. McCartney's involvement in the project was minimal, according to biographer Howard Sounes, who quotes Martin's recollection that he had to "pester Paul for the briefest scrap of a tune" with which to start writing the score. After McCartney had provided "a sweet little fragment of a waltz tune", Martin continued, "I was able to complete the score."

    Topic and comment

    In linguistics, the topic, or theme, of a sentence is what is being talked about, and the comment (rheme or focus) is what is being said about the topic. That the information structure of a clause is divided in this way is generally agreed on, but the boundary between topic/theme depends on grammatical theory.

    The difference between "topic" and grammatical subject is that topic is used to describe the information structure, or pragmatic structure of a clause and how it coheres with other clauses, whereas the subject is a purely grammatical category. For example, it is possible to have clauses where the subject is not the topic, such as in passive voice. In some languages, word order and other syntactic phenomena are determined largely by the topic–comment (theme–rheme) structure. These languages are sometimes referred to as topic-prominent languages. Chinese and Japanese are often given as examples of this.

    The distinction was probably first suggested by Henri Weil in 1844. Georg von der Gabelentz distinguished psychological subject (roughly topic) and psychological object (roughly focus). In the Prague school, the dichotomy, termed topic–focus articulation, has been studied mainly by Vilém Mathesius, Jan Firbas, František Daneš, Petr Sgall and Eva Hajičová. They have been concerned mainly by its relation to intonation and word-order. The work of Michael Halliday in the 1960s is responsible for developing linguistic science through his systemic functional linguistics model for English (see e.g. Halliday 1967–68, 1970)

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