Melanie Griffith
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Melanie Griffith | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Melanie at Cannes Film Festival in 2000 |
|||||||
Born | August 9, 1957 New York City, New York |
||||||
Spouse(s) | Don Johnson (1976; 1989 - 1996) Steven Bauer (1981-1987) Antonio Banderas (1996-present) |
||||||
|
Melanie Griffith (born August 9, 1957) is a Golden Globe award-winning and Oscar-nominated American film actress.
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Griffith was born in New York City, the daughter of actress Tippi Hedren and producer and former actor/advertising executive Peter Griffith.[1][2][3] Her parents divorced when she was four years old, after which her father remarried to model/actress Nanita Greene and had two more children, actress Tracy Griffith and set designer Clay A. Griffith.
[edit] Career
[edit] Film
Griffith began work at just nine months old in a commercial and later became an extra on Smith! (1969) and The Harrad Experiment (1973). Her first major role was in Arthur Penn's Night Moves (1975), which drew attention to her and typecast her as a sexy nymphet in films such as Smile, The Drowning Pool (both also 1975), and One on One (1977). Griffith appeared nude in the October 1976 issue of Playboy with her then-husband Don Johnson. In 1984 she starred in the Brian De Palma thriller Body Double (1984). The film won her the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress, and also led to her starring role in Jonathan Demme's Something Wild (1986), which became a cult favorite. She achieved mainstream success when she played the character of Tess McGill in Mike Nichols' 1988 film Working Girl, which won Griffith the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, and an Academy Award nomination for "Best Actress". Other films include Brian De Palma's The Bonfire of the Vanities and John Schlesinger's Pacific Heights (both 1990); Milk Money (1994); Fernando Trueba's Two Much (1995) - in which she met her husband Antonio Banderas - and John Waters' Cecil B. DeMented (2000).
[edit] Television
Griffith's television work includes playing actress Marion Davies in the HBO television movie RKO 281 (1999), for which she received an Emmy nomination as "Best Supporting Actress". She was also seen on The WB sitcom Twins (2005-2006), in which she played Lee, the mother of the show's main characters, played by Sara Gilbert and Molly Stanton.
[edit] Later career
Later in her career, Griffith made her stage debut at the Old Vic in London, England, where she acted with Cate Blanchett in the Vagina Monologues in February 1999.[4] Four years later, she made her Broadway debut playing Roxie in the musical "Chicago". An untrained performer in song and dance, Griffith still managed to get a rave review from "The New York Times" theatre critic Ben Brantley, who wrote: "Ms. Griffith is a sensational Roxie, possibly the most convincing I have seen" and "[the] vultures who were expecting to see Ms. Griffith stumble...will have to look elsewhere".[5] Griffith's celebratory reviews made it a box office success.[6][7] At the same time Griffith was performing in "Chicago", her husband Antonio Banderas was appearing across the street in another musical, "Nine".
[edit] Personal life
Griffith has been married four times, albeit twice to the actor Don Johnson (briefly in 1976 and then again from 1989 until 1996). She wed actor Steven Bauer in September 1981, but divorced in 1987. In 1989 Griffith married Johnson again, but the pair split several years later and the divorce was finalized just before Griffith married her current husband, Antonio Banderas, whose name she has tattooed on her arm, in May 1996.
Griffith has three children, one with each marriage: Alexander Griffith Bauer (born in 1985), Dakota Mayi Johnson (born in 1989), and Stella del Carmen Banderas Griffith (born in 1996). Dakota followed in her mother's footsteps and served as Miss Golden Globe at the 2006 Golden Globes awards ceremony. Griffith herself was Miss Golden Globe in 1975.
[edit] Awards & nominations
- Golden Globe Nomination as Best Supporting Actress for Body Double (1984)
- National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress for Body Double (1984)
- Named "Star of Tomorrow" by the Motion Picture Booker's Club (1984)
- Golden Globe Nomination as Best Actress in a comedy or musical for Something Wild (1986)
- Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for Working Girl (1988)
- Academy Award Nomination as Best Actress for Working Girl (1988)
- British Academy of Film and Television Arts Nomination as Best Actress for Working Girl (1988)
- Golden Globe Nomination as Best Supporting Actress in a TV Movie for Buffalo Girls (1995)
- Golden Globe Nomination as Best Supporting Actress in a TV Movie for RKO 281 (1999)
- Emmy Nomination as Best Supporting Actress in a TV Movie for RKO 281 (1999)
- Sant Jordi Award for Best Foreign Actress for Another Day in Paradise (1998) and Crazy in Alabama (1999)
- Taormina International Film Festival--Diamond Award (2000)
- Cannes Film Festival--Lifetime Achievement Award (2001)
- Stella Adler Angel Award (2002) - shared with her husband Antonio Banderas for their extensive charity work[8]
- Australian Film Institute Nomination for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for The Night we called it a Day (2003)
[edit] Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Other notes |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | Heartless | Miranda Wells | |
2003 | Tempo | Sarah | |
Shade | Eve | ||
The Night We Called It a Day | Barbara Marx | AFI nomination - Best Supporting Actress | |
2002 | Stuart Little 2 | Margalo the Bird | voice |
Searching for Debra Winger | Herself | ||
2001 | Tart | Diane Milford | |
2000 | Forever Lulu | Lulu McAfee | |
Cecil B. Demented | Honey Whitlock | ||
1999 | RKO 281 | Marion Davies | Emmy nomination - Best Supporting Actress, Golden Globe nomination - Best Supporting Actress - Miniseries |
Crazy in Alabama | Lucille Vinson | ||
1998 | Celebrity | Nicole Oliver | |
Shadow of Doubt | Kitt Devereux | ||
1997 | Lolita | Charlotte Haze | |
Another Day in Paradise | Sid | ||
1996 | Mulholland Falls | Katherine Hoover | |
1995 | Two Much | Betty Kerner | |
Now and Then | Tina 'Teeny' Tercell | ||
Buffalo Girls | Dora DuFran | Golden Globe nomination - Best Supporting Actress - Miniseries | |
1994 | Nobody's Fool | Toby Roebuck | |
Milk Money | V | ||
1993 | Born Yesterday | Billie Dawn | |
1992 | A Stranger Among Us | Emily Eden | |
Shining Through | Linda Voss | ||
1991 | Paradise | Lily Reed | |
1990 | The Bonfire of the Vanities | Maria Ruskin | |
Pacific Heights | Patty Palmer | ||
In the Spirit | Lureen | ||
Women and Men: Stories of Seduction | Hadley | ||
1988 | Working Girl | Tess McGill | Academy Award nomination - Best Actress, BAFTA nomination - Best Actress, Golden Globe win - Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical/Comedy |
Stormy Monday | Kate | ||
The Milagro Beanfield War | Flossie Devine | ||
1987 | Cherry 2000 | Edith 'E' Johnson | |
1986 | Something Wild | Audrey Hankel aka Lulu | Golden Globe nomination - Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical/Comedy |
1985 | Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Girl | |
1984 | Body Double | Holly Body | Golden Globe nomination - Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture |
Fear City | Loretta | ||
1981 | Golden Gate | Karen | |
She's in the Army Now | Pvt. Sylvie Knoll | ||
The Star Maker | Dawn Barnett Youngblood | ||
Underground Acres | Lucy | ||
Roar | Melanie | ||
1978 | Steel Cowboy | Johnnie | |
Daddy, I Don't Like it Like This | Girl in Hotel | ||
1977 | Joyride | Susie | |
One on One | The Hitchhiker | ||
The Garden | Young Girl | ||
1975 | Smile | Karen Love | |
The Drowning Pool | Schuyler Devereaux | ||
Night Moves | Delly Grastner | ||
1973 | The Harrad Experiment | Extra | uncredited |
1969 | Smith! | Extra | uncredited |
[edit] References
- ^ Melanie Griffith Biography (1957-)
- ^ Tracy Griffith Biography (1965-)
- ^ Ancestry of Melanie Griffith
- ^ TRANSCRIPT (Melanie's Romance Chat, February 10, 2000, 9PM EST)
- ^ http://theater2.nytimes.com/mem/theater/treview.html?id=1077011419481&html_title=&tols_title=CHICAGO+(PLAY)&byline=%20By+BEN+BRANTLEY+&pdate=20030804
- ^ B.O. rises; 'Chi' SRO Broadway Grosses
- ^ Bubbly B.O. perf. (Analysis).(Melanie Griffith stars in "Chicago")(Brief Article)
- ^ Antonio And Melanie Receive Hollywood Charity Award
[edit] External links
- Melanie Griffith at the Internet Movie Database
- Griffin's weblog
- Melanie Griffith cast bio on The WB
- Melanie Griffith at TV.com
Persondata | |
---|---|
NAME | Griffith, Melanie |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Actress |
DATE OF BIRTH | August 9, 1957 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | New York City, New York |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |