Background
Davis was born in London to a French mother and American father. She grew up in England, Scotland, France, Italy and Thailand and moved to New York City as a teenager.
Davis was born in London to a French mother and American father. She grew up in England, Scotland, France, Italy and Thailand and moved to New York City as a teenager.
Carole attended the City University of New York and majored in Chinese studies and political science. After university she attended the two-year programme at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute.
As a singer/song-writer and recording artist, Carole was signed to Warner Brothers Records in 1989. Her record “Heart of Gold” was produced by Nile Rodgers. Her single “Serious Money” (a cover of The O"Jays hit "Foreign the Love of Money") was a Dance hit and the video was number one and became the official theme song to a new hip-hop music video show called Rap City on Black Entertainment Television. She subsequently left Warners" in 1993 and moved to Atlantic Records, where she self-produced and wrote the album “I’m Number Angel.” As a song-writer, Carole made a publishing deal, signing with Master of Computer Applications. She was signed to Sony France for Europe.
Davis also works as an actress.
Her first feature film was in the 1981 horror film Piranha II: The Spawning. Later on in the 1980s, she appeared in the 1984 comedy film The Flamingo Kid, her best known film role came in 1987 as Roxie Shield in the cult comedy film Mannequin.
She later also appeared in films such as the 1990 comedy The Shrimp on the Barbie, the 1991 comedy If Looks Could Kill and The Rapture, in the same year. Carole had guest appearances in television shows such as The A-Team, Angel, Sex & The City & Star Trek: Voyager.
Most recently, Davis appeared in Going the Distance as well as several appearances on 2 Broke Girls.
Apart from singing and acting, Davis is also a writer She wrote a series of articles on anti-Semitism in Europe for the Jewish Journal. She is an investigative journalist for American Dog Magazine for which she has written a series of articles about cruelty in the pet trade.
She has an animal welfare column on Newsvine.com and is the author of the popular “Hollywood Dog Blog” at www.hollywooddog.blogspot.com.
As a novelist, she is the author of The Diary of Jinky, Dog of a Hollywood Wife (Andrews McMeel Publishing), a non-fiction humour book about Hollywood excess and human status anxiety written from the point of view of a death-row dog.