Michelle Pfeiffer
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Pfeiffer at the 62nd Annual Academy Awards, 1990 Born Michelle Marie Pfeiffer
April 29, 1958(1958-04-29) (age 50)
Santa Ana, CaliforniaYears active 1979 - present Spouse(s) Peter Horton(1981-1988)
David E. Kelley(1993-) Awards won BAFTA AwardsBest Actresss in a Supporting Role
1989 Dangerous LiaisonsGolden Globe AwardsBest Actress - Motion Picture Drama
1989 The Fabulous Baker BoysOther Awards NBR Award for Best Actress
1989 The Fabulous Baker Boys
NSFC Award for Best Actress
1989 The Fabulous Baker Boys
NYFCC Award for Best Actress
1989 The Fabulous Baker Boys
Silver Bear for Best Actress
1992 Love Field
Michelle Marie Pfeiffer (IPA: /mɪˈʃɛl ˈfаɪfɜr/;[1] born April 29, 1958) is a Golden Globe- and BAFTA-winning and Academy Award-nominated American actress. In a career spanning more than 25 years, she has starred in films such as Scarface, The Fabulous Baker Boys, Batman Returns, One Fine Day, Dangerous Minds, I Am Sam, What Lies Beneath, Hairspray, Stardust, and Grease 2 .
Contents
- 1 Early life
- 2 Career
- 3 Personal life
- 4 Awards
- 5 Filmography
- 6 TV work
- 7 References
- 8 External links
Early life
Pfeiffer was born in Santa Ana, California, the daughter of Donna (née Taverna), a homemaker, and Richard Pfeiffer, a heating and air conditioning contractor.[2][3] She is of Swiss, Swedish, Dutch and German descent.[4] She was raised in Midway City, Orange County, California, about thirty miles southeast of Los Angeles. Pfeiffer is the second of four siblings: an older brother, Rick Pfeiffer, and two younger sisters, Dedee Pfeiffer (b. 1964, also an actress) and Lori Pfeiffer (b. 1965). Pfeiffer attended Fountain Valley High School, graduating in 1976. She was Alice in Wonderland at Disneyland during her tenure, performing in the Main Street Electrical Parade. She briefly pursued a career as a court reporter at local Golden West Community College before dropping out to pursue a career in acting.[3] In 1978, Pfeiffer entered and won the Miss Orange County beauty pageant, and then entered the statewide competition for Miss California USA. Although unsuccessful in winning the title, Pfeiffer acquired an agent, who helped her secure TV commercial parts and small movie and television roles before making her mark in Hollywood.
Career
1980s: Early success
Her first major screen role was in 1980 in the films The Hollywood Knights and Falling in Love Again. However, both films failed to get her widespead notice. She tried a TV career when she starred in Great Yellow Bird, Fantasy Island, Callie & Son, Splendor in the Grass, and The Children Nobody Wanted. She returned to film in Grease 2; it was weakly received by critics and audiences, despite gaining a cult following.
It was not until 1983, when Pfeiffer co-starred with Al Pacino in Brian De Palma's gangster classic Scarface, that she caught the attention of Hollywood.[3] In 1985, she starred in the fantasy romance Ladyhawke, which gave Pfeiffer good reviews, but failed to become a box office success. In 1987, she starred in The Witches of Eastwick, which was a box office smash and a critical success. Through 1988 and 1989, Pfeiffer earned worldwide critical acclaim in Married to the Mob, Dangerous Liaisons, and The Fabulous Baker Boys; those films also earned her Oscar, BAFTA, and Golden Globe award wins and nominations.[3]
1990s: Continued success
Pfeiffer as Catwoman in Batman Returns, 1992Through the 1990s, she continued her Hollywood stardom: The Russia House, Frankie and Johnny starring Al Pacino, Batman Returns starring Michael Keaton & Danny Devito, The Age of Innocence, Wolf starring Jack Nicholson, Dangerous Minds, and One Fine Day starring George Clooney. She received her third Oscar nomination in 1993 for Love Field.
2000s: Hiatus and renewed success
In 2000, she starred with Harrison Ford in one of the biggest box office hits of the year, Robert Zemeckis's supernatural thriller What Lies Beneath. In 2001, she starred opposite Sean Penn in I Am Sam and in 2002 alongside Renée Zellweger and Robin Wright Penn in White Oleander, which earned her a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress.[3]
She then took a lengthy hiatus from the spotlight but returned to acting in 2006. Her first projects teamed her with director Amy Heckerling in the romantic comedy I Could Never Be Your Woman (2007, opposite Paul Rudd), as well as opposite Robert De Niro, Claire Danes, and Sienna Miller in the fantasy epic Stardust.[3] Pfeiffer co-starred in the film adaptation of the hit Broadway musical Hairspray as Velma Von Tussle.[3] She will make a cameo appearance in The Prince and the Pauper, a film in which her sister Dedee stars. Pfeiffer received her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on August 6, 2007, in front of the Hollywood & Highland Center.[5]
On her return to acting, she has said, "Now that I'm working again, I realize I really like this stuff."[6]
Pfeiffer's recently completed work on the romantic drama, Personal Effects with Ashton Kutcher, due in 2008.[7] Pfeiffer stars in her next film, Chéri, the French-period drama. Kathy Bates, and Rupert Friend, will co-star. The film will be directed by Stephen Frears. This is Frears' and Pfeiffer's second outing together. Frears' directed Pfeiffer in, Dangerous Liaisons. Filming began in April 2008 and will wrap sometime in July or August.
Personal life
Pfeiffer and husband David E. Kelley at the 47th Emmy Awards, 1994In 1981, Pfeiffer married Thirtysomething actor Peter Horton but they divorced in 1988 at the height of her career. She has been romantically linked with actors Val Kilmer, John Malkovich, Michael Keaton, and Fisher Stevens. In 1993, Pfeiffer married writer/producer David E. Kelley (creator of The Practice and Ally McBeal).
Earlier that year, before meeting Kelley, Pfeiffer adopted a daughter Claudia Rose, who was then later adopted by Kelley following their marriage. The adopted baby was the daughter of an African American nurse living in New York who already had four children. On August 5, 1994, Pfeiffer gave birth to a son, John Henry.[8] Pfeiffer's influences that persuaded her to act were Oscar-winning actresses Anne Bancroft and Ingrid Bergman.
Awards
Academy Award nominations
- 1988 - Best Supporting Actress - Dangerous Liaisons
- 1989 - Best Actress - The Fabulous Baker Boys
- 1992 - Best Actress - Love Field
Golden Globe Awards
BAFTA Awards
Filmography
Year Title Role Notes 1980Falling in Love Again Sue Wellington The Hollywood KnightsSuzie Q 1981Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen Cordelia Farenington 1982Grease 2Stephanie Zinone 1983ScarfaceElvira Hancock/Montana 1985Into the NightDiana LadyhawkeIsabeau d'Anjou 1986Sweet LibertyFaith Healy 1987The Witches of EastwickSukie Ridgemont Amazon Women on the MoonBrenda Landers 1988Married to the MobAngela de Marco Nominated for Golden Globe Award for Best Musical/Comedy Actress Tequila SunriseJo Ann Vallenari Dangerous LiaisonsMadame Marie de Tourvel Nominated for Best Supporting Actress Oscar; Won BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actress 1989The Fabulous Baker BoysSusie Diamond Nominated for Best Actress Oscar; Nominated for BAFTA Award for Best Actress; Won Golden Globe Award for Best Drama Actress 1990The Russia HouseKatya Orlova Nominated for Golden Globe Award for Best Drama Actress 1991Frankie and JohnnyFrankie Nominated for Golden Globe Award for Best Musical/Comedy Actress 1992Batman ReturnsCatwoman/Selina Kyle Love FieldLurene Hallett Nominated for Best Actress Oscar; Nominated for Golden Globe Award for Best Drama Actress 1993The Age of InnocenceEllen Olenska Nominated for Golden Globe Award for Best Drama Actress 1994WolfLaura Alden 1995Dangerous MindsLouanne Johnson 1996Up Close & PersonalSally/Tally Atwater To Gillian on Her 37th BirthdayGillian Lewis One Fine DayMelanie Parker Also executive producer 1997A Thousand AcresRose Cook Lewis Also producer 1998The Prince of EgyptTzipporah Voice 1999The Deep End of the Ocean (film)Beth Cappadora A Midsummer Night's DreamTitania The Story of UsKatie Jordan 2000What Lies BeneathClaire Spencer 2001I Am SamRita Harrison Williams 2002White OleanderIngrid Magnussen Nominated for Screen Actor's Guild Award for Best Supporting Actress 2003Sinbad: Legend of the Seven SeasEris Voice 2007HairsprayVelma Von Tussle StardustLamia I Could Never Be Your WomanRosie 2008Personal Effects Linda post-production CheriLéa de Lonval filmingOlympia Dukakis
for MoonstruckBAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role
1989
for Dangerous LiaisonsSucceeded by
Whoopi Goldberg
for GhostPreceded by
Meryl Streep
for A Cry in the DarkNYFCC Award for Best Actress
1989
for The Fabulous Baker BoysSucceeded by
Joanne Woodward
for Mr. and Mrs. BridgePreceded by
Jodie Foster, Sigourney Weaver, and Shirley MacLaine
tied for The Accused, Gorillas in the Mist, and Madame SousatzkaGolden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama
1990
for The Fabulous Baker BoysSucceeded by
Kathy Bates
tied for Misery
TV work
- The Solitary Man (1979)
- Delta House (1979) (canceled after 15 episodes)
- B.A.D. Cats (1980) (canceled after 6 episodes)
- Callie & Son (1981)
- Splendor in the Grass (1981)
- The Children Nobody Wanted (1981)
- One Too Many (1983)
- Tales from the Hollywood Hills: Natica Jackson (1987)
- The Simpsons (1993) (Mindy Simmons)
- Muppets Tonight (1996)
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Michelle Pfeiffer- ^ See inogolo:pronunciation of Michelle Pfeiffer.
- ^ Michelle Pfeiffer Biography (1957?-)
- ^ a b c d e f g Stated in interview at Inside the Actors Studio
- ^ Shipman, David (1991). The Great Movie Stars: The Independent Years. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 0316784893.
- ^ Michelle Pfeiffer gets star on Hollywood Walk of Fame | lalate news - America's Fastest Growing Celebrity News Site!
- ^ Access Hollywood
- ^ "Pfeiffer, Kutcher get together for romance Personal Effects".. Screen Daily. November 1, 2007.
- ^ Michelle Pfeiffer - Profile, Latest News and Related Articles
External links
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