Jamie Lee Curtis

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Image:Curtisb.jpg Jamie Lee Haden-Guest, Baroness Haden-Guest (born November 22, 1958), known by her maiden name as Jamie Lee Curtis, is a Golden Globe-winning American film actress and a succesful author of books for children. Although she was initially known as a "scream queen", because of her starring roles in many horror films early in her career, Curtis has since compiled a body of work that covers every genre.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Curtis was born in Los Angeles, California, the daughter of well-known actors Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh; her paternal grandparents were Jewish immigrants from Hungary. Her parents divorced in 1962 and her mother remarried to a Robert Brandt. She has an older sister, Kelly Curtis, who is also an actress, and several half-siblings (all from her father's remarriage), Alexandra, Allegra, Ben, and Nicholas Curtis, who died in 1994 of a drug overdose.

Curtis graduated from Choate Rosemary Hall but had attended both Westlake School for girls and Beverly Hills High School before transferring to CRH. She returned to California in 1976. She attended the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California, where she considered majoring in social work, but left after a semester in order to pursue an acting career. Universal Studios put her under contract, and she starred in the television series, Operation Petticoat.

Private life

Curtis married actor Christopher Guest on December 18, 1984, becoming Lady Haden-Guest when her husband inherited the Barony of Haden-Guest in 1996, upon the death of his father. The couple have two adopted children, Anne Haden Guest (born 1986) and Thomas Haden Guest (born 1996). Curtis is also actor Jake Gyllenhaal's godmother.

Today, Curtis also takes time to support various philanthropic groups. She was Guest of Honor at the 11th annual Gala and Fundraiser in 2003 for Women in Recovery, Inc., a Venice, CA-based non-profit organization offering a live-in, twelve-step program of rehabilitation for women in need. Past Honorees of this organization have included Sir Anthony Hopkins; the 2005 honoree was Angela Lansbury.

Career

Film

Curtis made her film debut in the 1978 horror film, Halloween, playing the role of Laurie Strode, the only teenage character in the film who is not killed. The film was a major success and was considered the highest grossing independent film of its time. Curtis was subsequently cast in several horror films, which led to her association with the horror genre, garnering her the title of a "scream queen".

Her first follow-up to Halloween was the horror film, The Fog, which was directed by "Halloween" director John Carpenter. The film opened in February 1980 to mixed reviews but strong box office,<ref name="foggross">Template:Cite web</ref> further cementing Curtis as a horror film starlet. Her next film, Prom Night, was a low-budget Canadian slasher film and was released in July 1980. The film was considered similar in style to Halloween, and received negative reviews which marked it as a disposable entry in the then active "slasher film" genre. That year, Curtis also starred in Terror Train, which opened in October and received a negative reaction akin to Prom Night. Both films performed only moderately at the box office.<ref name="promgross">Template:Cite web</ref> Curtis had a similar function in both films - playing the main character whose friends are murdered, and who is practically the only protagonist to survive. Film critic Roger Ebert, who had given negative reviews to all three of Curtis' 1980 films, said that Curtis "is to the current horror film glut what Christopher Lee was to the last one-or Boris Karloff was in the 1930s."<ref name="ebert">Template:Cite web</ref>

Curtis later appeared in Halloween II, Halloween H20: 20 Years Later and Halloween: Resurrection. Her recent successful film roles for Curtis have included Disney's Freaky Friday (2003), opposite Lindsay Lohan. The movie was filmed at Palisades High School in Pacific Palisades, CA, near where Curtis and Guest make their home with their children. She was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy in this movie. She had previously won the said award for her work in the movie True Lies.

Television

In television, Curtis co-starred opposite Richard Lewis in the situation comedy Anything But Love. Her role as Hannah Miller received both a Golden Globe and People's Choice Award. She also earned a Golden Globe nomination for her work in TNT's adaptation of the Wendy Wasserstein play The Heidi Chronicles. More recently, Curtis starred in the CBS television movie Nicholas' Gift, for which she received an Emmy nomination.

Children's Books

Working with illustrator, Laura Cornell, Curtis has written a number of critically-acclaimed children's books. These include:

  • When I was Little: A Four-Year Old's Memoir Of Her Youth, published September 1995.
  • Tell Me Again About The Night I was Born, published August 1996.
  • Today I Feel Silly, and Other Moods That Make My Day, published September 1998, which was listed on the New York Times best-seller list for nine weeks.
  • Where Do Balloons Go?: An Uplifting Mystery, published August 2000.
  • I'm Gonna Like Me: Letting Off a Little Self-Esteem, published September 2002.
  • It's Hard to Be Five: Learning How to Work My Control Panel, published September 2004.

Selected filmography

Year Title Role Other notes
2004 Christmas with the Kranks Nora Krank
2003 Freaky Friday Tess Coleman
2002 Halloween: Resurrection Laurie Strode
2001 The Tailor of Panama Louisa Pendel
2000 Drowning Mona Rona Mace
1999 Virus Kelly Foster
1998 Halloween H20: 20 Years Later Laurie Strode/Keri Tate
1997 Fierce Creatures Willa Weston
1996 House Arrest Janet Beindorf
1994 True Lies Helen Tasker
1994 Mother's Boys Judith 'Jude' Madigan
1994 My Girl 2 Shelly DeVoto Sultenfuss
1992 Forever Young Claire Cooper
1991 My Girl Shelly DeVoto
1991 Queens Logic Grace
1990 Blue Steel Megan Turner
1988 A Fish Called Wanda Wanda Gershwitz
1988 Dominick and Eugene Jennifer Reston
1985 Amazing Grace and Chuck Lynn Taylor
1985 Perfect Jessie
1984 Grandview, U.S.A. Michelle 'Mike' Cody
1984 Love Letters Anna Winter
1983 Trading Places Ophelia
1981 Halloween II Laurie Strode
1981 Roadgames Pamela 'Hitch' Rushworth
1980 Terror Train Alana Maxwell
1980 Prom Night Kim Hammond
1980 The Fog Elizabeth Solley
1978 Halloween Laurie Strode

References

Footnotes

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Web sites

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