Name: Elisabeth Shue
Date of Birth : October 6, 1963
Place of Birth : Wilmington, Del., USA
Sign : Sun in Libra, Moon in Taurus
Education : Attended Wellesley College and Harvard University
Occupation: Actress
A few years ago, Elisabeth Shue inhabited the crowded
cluster of actresses who plod through movie after movie
playing slight variations on one basic, unchallenging
role: the girlfriend. Her pretty, well-scrubbed characters
primarily existed to advance the male star's adventures,
and to offer guys in the audience a bit of eye-candy.
Then, in 1995, Shue landed a very different role: she
played an updated variation of the downtrodden hooker
with a heart of gold in Leaving Las Vegas, and the performance
transformed her into an A-list actress.
Given her contrast-laden background, it's not surprising
that Shue portrays both goody-goody and baddy-baddy
with equal aplomb. On the one hand, she comes from a
well-heeled Northeastern family, descended from Mayflower
passengers and educated in the Ivy League for generations;
on the other, Shue's parents split up when she was in
fourth grade and, since both worked long hours, their
children found ample time for trouble of the suburban
adolescent variety driving without a license, recreational
drug use, and so on. After high school, Shue enrolled
at Wellesley College, an all-women school where she
says she appreciated the scholastic isolation from booze
and boys.
By her junior year, Shue was looking for a way to supplement
her income and social life, so she followed a friend's
example and pursued work as a actress in television
commercials. At her first audition, Shue's athletic
skills impressed the producers, who hired her to plug
a Florida theme park by doing cartwheels and flips.
Shue followed with ads for Burger King, DeBeers diamonds,
and Hellmann's mayonnaise unexpected acting career had
been launched.
In 1984, Shue snagged both her first feature film role,
as Ralph Macchio's girlfriend in The Karate Kid, and
her first television role, as the teenage daughter of
a military family in a short-lived ABC series, Call
to Glory. Shue also acquired an acting coach and transferred
to Harvard, where she worked on a degree in political
science. (Shue still pursues her studies on and off.)
She continued acting with impressive girl-next-door
performances in Adventures in Babysitting (1987), Cocktail
(1988), the final two installments of the waning Back
to the Future franchise (1989, 1990), Soapdish (1991),
and The Marrying Man (1991). Shue's on-screen presence
was consistently engaging, but her roles did not afford
much depth of character.
Shue was languishing on Hollywood's third tier not
a good place to be for an actress passing thirty. To
make matters worse, baby brother Andrew landed a studly
starring role on TV's Melrose Place, and quickly eclipsed
Elisabeth's fame. Her luck changed, however, when director
Mike Figgis, whose previous projects included the stylish
downer Stormy Monday (1988), was looking to cast his
new project, the gritty Leaving Las Vegas. Figgis remembered
Shue from her 1988 audition for a movie he ended up
not making (it became Dennis Hopper's The Hot Spot),
and for his new film, he wanted her in the role of Sera,
a prostitute engaged in a tragic love affair with a
suicidal alcoholic (played by Nicolas Cage).
The low-budget, high-risk project paid off for all
involved. The movie won numerous critics awards, and
Shue's lightweight image disappeared behind her gutsy
performance. At Oscar time, the Academy recognized her
with a Best Actress nomination (she lost to Susan Sarandon).
Shue followed up her searing Leaving Las Vegas turn
with a role as the scientist love interest of Val Kilmer's
super-spy in Paramount's significantly bigger-budgeted
($40 million) cinematic adaptation of the sixties TV
show The Saint; with the role of Woody Allen's inamorata
in Deconstructing Harry; and with a turn as the scheming,
adultery-minded wife of a millionaire in the mystery
thriller Palmetto. Next up, Shue conspired with a malevolent
Jessica Lange in director Des McAnuff's adaptation of
the HonorT de Balzac novel Cousin Bette. She has signed
to play opposite Dustin Hoffman in an adaptation of
Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth.