Michelle Pfeiffer
Biography:
Michelle Pfeiffer was born on April 29, 1958 in Santa Ana, CA. Her father, Dick,
was a heating and air conditioning contractor, and her mother, Donna, a
housewife. Michelle is the second of four children, and has an older brother,
Rick and two younger sisters, Dedee and Lori.
As a child, she says she was the school bully, the one other kids would come to
if they wanted someone beaten up. She never considered herself attractive, and
said she was always the biggest girl in her class. No one seemed to see her
acting potential when she was young. She was a rebellious little girl, and by
her own admissions, strong willed, stubborn and dramatic. She remembers how she
used to mouth off to her mother all the time, although making sure to stay out
of her father's earshot. Her mother would often write off her behavior with a
remarkably suitable phrase, "Here's my little actress."
Although born in Santa Ana, the family soon moved to
Midway City, where Michelle would graduate from Fountain Valley High School in
1976. Her life as a working girl began at the age of 14, when she lied about her
age to get a job in a clothing store at the local mall. After high school she
tried community college, hated it, and dropped out. She spent a year at Golden
West College studying court reporting, and did a stint as a supermarket checker
at Vons, a large Southern California grocery chain. It was while she was
checking that she made a life altering decision. She asked herself if there was
anything in the world that she could do, what would it be? The answer was acting.
She had heard that talent scouts were often judges at beauty pagents, so she
promptly entered, and won, the Miss Orange County beauty pagent of 1978. She
lost the Miss Los Angeles title, but won the agent she had been seeking. Her
first role was a one line walk on for the tv show "Fantasy Island". TV
commercials and more bit parts would follow. Upon leaving Orange County for Los
Angeles, she began taking acting classes. One of her fellow classmates was actor/director
Peter Horton. Her talent wasn't obvious at first, as Horton recalls when they
first did a scene together. "I thought, this poor girl, she's not very good!" he
recalls. But his opinion began to change the first time he directed her. He
could see she was searching for the talent that lay within, although she wasn't
sure exactly how to reach it, or how she would use it when she found it. "It was
purely a gut instinct she followed. It was either that or court reporting!"
Horton laughs. The two began dating, and in 1981 they were married. The public
at large first took notice of Michelle in the 1982 film Grease II, sequel to the
1978 mega-blockbuster Grease. But with a weak script and lack of big names, the
film quickly bombed. Agent Ed Limato, now the vice-chairman of ICM met Pfeiffer
through another agent when both were with the William Morris Agency. Their
meeting was brief, as Limato was on the phone at the time, and the two did
little more than wave to one another. The following week a casting director told
Limato that she was looking for a fresh face to play Al Pacino's drug-addicted
wife in Brian DePalma's Scarface. He didn't represent Pfeiffer, but told the
casting director he had just the actress she was looking for. For the next few
years she worked steadily, but her marriage fell apart. After separating from
Horton, her career really took off. She starred in the offbeat comedy Married to
the Mob and received a best supporting actress Oscar nomination for the her
portrayal of Madame De Tourvel in Dangerous Liaisons. Pfeiffer cemented her
newly fortified stardom with her sultry portrayal of a call girl turned torch
songstress in The Fabulous Baker Boys (earning another Oscar nomination), and
caused a sensation with her sexy rendition of "Makin' Whoopee" atop Jeff
Bridges' piano. She was now a world-class star. She adopted a Russian accent for
1990's The Russia House and de-glamorized herself for a moving performance
opposite Al Pacino in 1991's Frankie and Johnny playing a lonely waitress
terrified of human contact. When Annette Bening became pregnant, Pfeiffer
inherited her most flamboyant role to date: Catwoman in Batman Returns (1992).
Later that year she top lined Jonathan Kaplan's moving drama Love Field and
scored her third Oscar nomination. In 1993 she was cast by Martin Scorsese as
the slightly scandalous young woman who overwhelms Daniel Day-Lewis in the 1870s
period piece The Age of Innocence then reunited with Jack Nicholson for the
contemporary werewolf saga Wolf (1994). In 1989, as Michelle’s career was on the
rise, her marriage fell apart, and she got divorced. In the years following her
divorce from Horton, Pfeiffer dated Michael Keaton and John Malkovich, and then
had a serious three year relationship with actor Fisher Stevens. After they
split Michelle decided it was time for another serious life decision. She wanted
a family. Two weeks after privately entering into adoption proceedings, Michelle
had her first date with television producer David E. Kelley, the creator of
Picket Fences and Chicago Hope. They went on a few more dates, and it wasn't
long before Pfeiffer herself was smitten. She told Kelley of the adoption, and
he was very supportive. In March of 1993 the baby arrived -- a little girl she
named Claudia Rose. She had been born to a young mother having a hard time
providing for the four children she already had. Pfeiffer calls her daughter "an
angel" who turned her life around. In a way, she credits the child with bringing
her and David together. It was no surprise to friends and family when Michelle
and David announced they were engaged, and said they would be married in the
spring of 1994. In November Pfeiffer sent out invitations to attend Claudia
Rose's christening, and then the day before called everyone up and said "Surprise,
it's a wedding! Come if you can!" On Saturday November 13, 1993 Michelle
Pfeiffer and David Kelley were married. Later that afternoon their daughter,
wearing a crown of tiny pink roses, was christened Claudia Rose Kelley. Nine
months later, on August 5, 1994, their first biological child, John Henry Kelley,
was born. Pfeiffer continues to balance her personal and private life, making
family her number one priority. She was pregnant during the filming of Dangerous
Minds (1995), and has taken her children on location during shoots of her next
two projects, Up Close and Personal (1996), opposite Robert Redford, and her
next film, One Fine Day (1996), with George Clooney. She also made an appearance
in the film To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday (1996), which was penned by her
husband. Her next role was in the 1999 adaptation of Shakespear’s A Midsummer
Night’s Dream, playing Titania, the queen of the fairies. That year she also
appeared in drama The Deep End of the Ocean, and The Story of Us, with Bruce
Willis. In 2000 she played opposite Harrison Ford in the supernatural thriller
What Lies Beneath, and in 2001 she was in the critically acclaimed I Am Sam,
with Sean Penn. This year she plays Ingrid in the drama White Oleander. Upcoming
she will be voicing the role of Eris in the animated adventure Sinbad. |
Michelle Pfeiffer Pics
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