Amanda Peterson

Actress

Birthday July 8, 1971

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Greeley, Colorado, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2015-7-3, Greeley, Colorado, U.S. (43 years old)

Nationality United States

#7461 Most Popular

1964

The title was later changed to Can't Buy Me Love after producers secured the rights to The Beatles' 1964 song of the same name.

1971

Phyllis Amanda Peterson (July 8, 1971 – July 3, 2015) was an American actress, most known for her role as Cindy Mancini in the 1987 comedy film Can't Buy Me Love.

Peterson was born in Greeley, Colorado, the youngest of three children born to James Peterson, an ear, nose, and throat specialist, and his wife Sylvia.

She had two older siblings: a sister, Anne Marie and a brother, James, Jr. Peterson began acting as a child and used the name "Amanda Peterson" in a professional capacity.

At the beginning of her career, she used the name "Mandy Peterson", which was what friends and family called her.

At age seven, Peterson made her stage debut as Gretl in the University of Northern Colorado's stage production of The Sound of Music.

At 11, she won a role in the musical film Annie as a dancing extra.

Peterson went on to land guest spots on Father Murphy and Silver Spoons.

She also appeared in more than 50 television commercials.

1983

During the 1983–84 television season, she co-starred as Squirt Sawyer on the NBC drama series Boone.

Boone was canceled after one season.

1985

In 1985, Peterson won her first starring role in the feature film Explorers.

The next year, she co-starred as "Sunny Sisk" in the Emmy Award-winning miniseries A Year in the Life.

1986

In 1986, 15-year-old Peterson was cast in the teen comedy Boy Rents Girl, opposite Patrick Dempsey.

The film was shot on location in Tucson, Arizona.

1987

Later it was adapted into a television series of the same name and aired on NBC from 1987 to 1988.

For her work on the series, Peterson won a Young Artist Award for Best Young Actress Starring in a Television Drama Series.

Despite being well received, A Year in the Life was canceled after one season.

Released in the summer of 1987, Can't Buy Me Love received mixed reviews but became the sleeper hit of the summer.

After its release, Peterson and Dempsey achieved teen idol status.

They appeared on the covers of teen magazines such as Tiger Beat and Teen Beat.

1988

In 1988, Peterson co-starred in a Roger Corman production, the post-apocalyptic film The Lawless Land, followed by a role in the 1989 teen drama Listen to Me.

Later that year, she returned to Greeley, where she graduated from University High School (while working in Los Angeles, she was privately tutored).

Shortly after graduating, she starred in the television movie Fatal Charm.

That fall, Peterson enrolled at Middlebury College.

, where she appeared in a black box production of the Sarah Daniels play Masterpieces. While on semester break, she appeared in a guest spot on Doogie Howser, M.D. Later that year, Peterson dropped out of Middlebury College.

1994

In 1994, she returned to acting in the fantasy film WindRunner in a role alongside Jason Wiles.

It was Peterson's final onscreen role.

In 1994, Peterson retired from the entertainment industry and returned to her hometown of Greeley.

According to her father, she left Hollywood to "choose a new path in her life."

After briefly attending Middlebury College, she enrolled at Colorado State University for a year.

Peterson later studied at the University of Northern Colorado.

2000

Between October 2000 and May 2012, Peterson was arrested five times for the offenses of third-degree assault, harassment, DUI, and possession of drug paraphernalia and suspicion of distributing a Schedule 2 controlled substance.

2012

In 2012, she briefly modeled for a Colorado photographer.

Peterson was twice married and had two children.

She was first married to Joseph Robert Skutvik.

After their divorce, she married David Hartley.

Peterson and Hartley were reportedly divorced at the time of her death.

2015

Two months after her death, in a September 2015 interview with talk show The Doctors, Peterson's family revealed that she had been raped at age 15 and had not disclosed it at the time, even to her sister.

2016

The miniseries was highly acclaimed; it was the third-highest-rated miniseries of the 1986–87 U.S. television season with a 16.9/27 rating/share.