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Illeana Douglas (born July 25, 1965) is an American actress. She was born
Illeana Hesselberg, and her grandfather was the esteemed Melvyn Douglas (Melvyn
Hesselberg). Illeana's mother is an Italian American, and her father is one
quarter Jewish and three quarters Scottish.
Douglas is well known for her performances in Martin Scorsese's Cape Fear
and as singer/songwriter Denise Waverly in Alison Anders' Grace of My Heart.
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Blessed with a whippetlike physique and expressive, quirky features (especially
her enormous, saucer-shaped eyes), Illeana Douglas came by her acting genes
honestly enough as the granddaughter of two-time Academy Award-winner Melvyn
Douglas, who used to regale her with stories about hanging out with Marlene
Dietrich. Having performed stand-up comedy since she was a teenager, she
attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and embarked on a NYC stage
career, acting in "Takes on Woman" and "As Sure as You Live" with the Naked
Angels theater group, among her outings. While working as an assistant to
publicist Peggy Siegel, Douglas got the chance to audition for future beau
and mentor Martin Scorsese, whose office just happened to be located in the
same building as Siegel's, and landed her first film bit, dubbing a blood-curdling
scream in Scorsese's "The Last Temptation of Christ" (1988). Scorsese
subsequently cast her as Rosanna Arquette's friend in his segment of "New
York Stories" (1989), as a Mafioso wife in "GoodFellas" (1990), and, most
notably, as a legal secretary who flirts with and suffers a horrible beating
at the hands of psycho parolee Robert De Niro in the bombastic remake of the
1962 thriller "Cape Fear" (1991).
Douglas essayed a small role for Irwin Winkler's McCarthy-era drama "Guilty
by Suspicion" (also 1991, in which Scorsese acted), played the fussy eater
among the plane crash survivors in "Alive" and brought a fine puppy-like
frenzy to her ambitious secretary trying to stay away from men in the
enjoyably tacky, no-budget "Grief" (both 1993), a backstage look at the
creation of a shameless, tabloid TV show ("The Love Judge"). That year also
saw her as a member of the large boisterous Italian family in Nancy Savoca's
"Household Saints" (1993), although a significant portion of her scenes
ended up on the cutting room floor. Douglas played a bit (as did Scorsese)
in Robert Redford's "Quiz Show" (1994) and was sexily charming as an
aspiring screenwriter and mistress to a self-help expert (Dennis Hopper) in
the low-budget "Search and Destroy" (1995), co-produced by Scorsese. But she
really attracted critical and popular attention that year in Gus Van Sant's
"To Die For". As the sharp-tongued, ice-skating, lesbian sister of Matt
Dillon, she pegged her brother's cable weathergirl wife Nicole Kidman as a
phony from the get-go and, when he turned up dead, remained adamant about
her sister-in-law's guilt in the Buck Henry-scripted, satiric black comedy.
A self-professed feminist who refreshingly exclaims in the same breath that
she's boy crazy, Douglas made the perfect soul sister for writer-director
Allison Anders, playing her highest profile part yet as the Carole King-like
songwriter-singer of "Grace of My Heart" (1996), a rock musical drama
executive produced by Scorsese (their last collaboration to date). Her
winning portrayal of one woman's epic drive to find her voice in the male-dominated
music industry of the 50s and 60s was the centerpiece of Anders' picture,
which in its attempt to cover too much historical ground (from the waning
days of Tin Pan Alley at the Brill Building in the 50s and 60s to the
psychedelic 70s) tended to drag to its bittersweet conclusion. Still, the
acting across the board, particularly a strong performance by John Turturro
as a record producer, was a strong focal point throughout, and the
director's decision to use new sound alike tunes from the era, penned by
such contemporary artists as Burt Bacharach-Elvis Costello (in their first
teaming), Carole Bayer Sager and Los Lobos, proved the film's greatest asset.
Douglas made a strong showing in the Eve Ardenesque role of a corporate
cutthroat and best friend of Jennifer Aniston in the predictable but
pleasant romantic comedy "Picture Perfect" (1997), and she was back in best
friend mode for the formula tearjerker "Message in a Bottle" (1999),
providing some great moments as gal pal to Robin Wright Penn. A favorite of
indie directors, she was memorable in "Happy, Texas" (also 1999) as a
teacher, whose bad taste in clothes was equal parts aesthetic and political
statement, and also contributed a cameo to that year's "Can't Stop the
Dancing".
Douglas made her TV acting debut in a 1995 guest-spot on the NBC series
"Homicide: Life on the Street" and also portrayed Jonathan Silverman's
abrasive, on-again/off-again girlfriend Martha during the 1995-96 season of
"The Single Guy" (NBC). 1997 small screen credits included the Larry
Gelbart-scripted HBO movie "Weapons of Mass Destruction", the CBS miniseries
"Bella Mafia" and the TNT miniseries "Rough Riders", in which she provided a
much-needed female presence, shining graciously as Teddy Roosevelt's wife
Edith. Her much touted role as a former child star turned hooker turned
studio excutive in "Action" (Fox, 1999) earned kudos from critics but
viewers stayed away and the series met an early demise.
Douglas, who believes she would have flourished in the old studio system of
the 30s, claims she became a director in self-defense so that she could
showcase her neglected comedic side. She scripted (as well as acted in) her
first comedy short "The Perfect Woman" (1993), a nine-minute satire
eavesdropping on 30 women all trying to be "perfect," and the 30-minute
documentary "Everybody Just Stay Calm--Stories in Independent Filmmaking"
(Independent Film Channel) featured her as executive producer, director,
writer and host. She then returned to comedy for the 21-minute "Boy Crazy,
Girl Crazier" (1995), writing, directing and starring as one of two
desperately ambitious Hollywood hopefuls who manage to hilariously turn the
tables on one another in a matter of minutes. She has not directed since,
perhaps because there is no shortage of roles for the constantly working
actress. Unfortunately, director John McNaughton and screenwriter David
Mamet underutilized her as Meyer Lansky's first wife Anna in the 1999 HBO
biopic "Lansky". Nonetheless, the busy Douglas offered able support to Kevin
Bacon and Liza Weil in David Koepp's "A Stir of Echoes" (1999) and Madonna
and Rupert Everett in John Schlesinger's "The Next Best Thing" (2000). |
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ILLEANA DOUGLAS PICTURES |
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