Sunday 14 October 2012

Strong Female Actresses

Source(Google.com.pk)
Strong Female Actresses Biography
Sally Field is an American actress, director and writer who started her career on the short-running series Gidget, closely followed the huge hit The Flying Nun. She is perhaps best known for her roles in the films Norma Rae and Places in the Heart; both earned her Oscars for Best Actress. She is also remembered for playing strong women in Steel Magnolias, Mrs. Doubtfire and Forrest Gump.
Early Life

Actress, director, writer. Born on November 6, 1946, in Pasadena, California, as the youngest of two children. Field grew up in show business as the daughter of actress Margaret Field. After Sally's parents divorced, her

mother married actor and stuntman Jock Mahoney. Field's stepfather was a strict disciplinarian who expected faithful obedience from Field, her older brother, and half-sister Princess. Mahoney also fought frequently with Sally's mother, and the couple's increasingly rocky relationship weighted heavily on the children. Sally found solace from her difficult home life by focusing on her extracurricular activities at school. "I'd landed in the drama department, and it just kind of saved me," she later explained to Good Housekeeping magazine.
Early Television Career

After finishing up at Birmingham High School in Van Nuys, California, Field attended an acting workshop at Columbia Studios, which helped launch her film and television career. She landed the leading role in the television series Gidget, which was based on the popular 1959 Sandra Dee film by the same name. Field was only 18 years old when the series debuted in the fall of 1965. Petite and perky, she played a teenager on a quest to find fun with her best friend Larue (played by Lynette Winter). The show was canceled after one season, but Field became popular with television audiences—so popular, in fact, that the network created another series for her. The Flying Nun starred Field as Sister Bertrille, a nun so light that she could take flight. Field didn't want to take the part but her stepfather insisted, telling her that "If you turn down this part, you may never work again."

The Flying Nun premiered in September 1967, and soon became a huge hit. Viewers seemed to enjoy following the misadventures of quirky, aerodynamic Sister Bertrille. Behind the scenes, however, Field was miserable. She struggled with the feeling that she would never be considered a serious actress, and the show only magnified that fear. In 1968, she married her high school sweetheart Steven Craig, and soon became pregnant. Her pregnancy was hidden on the series using creative shots and the folds of her billowy nun's habit. Field wouldn't have to hide for long, though; the show was canceled in 1970, after three seasons on the air.
Taking On Serious Roles

After giving birth to a second child in 1972, Field returned to acting in 1973 with the short-lived sitcom The Girl with Something Extra. Field played a young newlywed with ESP on the show, which lasted only one season. Reconnecting to her craft, Field studied acting at the Actors Studio with famed teacher Lee Strasberg. Strasberg became a powerful mentor, encouraging Field to move away from her goody-two-shoes television image. This new part of her transformation also included divorcing her husband in 1975.

After several auditions, Field landed a role in 1976's bodybuilding film Stay Hungry with Jeff Bridges and Arnold Schwarzenegger. She co-starred as a party girl, a far cry from the innocent characters she played on the small screen. That same year, Field entered a new phase of her career with the television movie Sybil. She showed great emotional range as a woman with multiple-personality disorder, winning her first Emmy Award for her work on the TV film. Returning to the big screen, Field appeared in 1977's Smokey and the Bandit, playing a runaway bride who catches a ride from a trucker (played by Bert Reynolds). Field and Reynolds became romantically involved on the set of film, and starred together in several light-hearted comedies, including 1978's Hooper and 1980's Smokey and the Bandit II.
Strong Female Actresses
 Strong Female Actresses
Strong Female Actresses
Strong Female Actresses
Strong Female Actresses
 Strong Female Actresses
 Strong Female Actresses
 Strong Female Actresses
 Strong Female Actresses
 Strong Female Actresses
 Strong Female Actresses
 Strong Female Actresses
 Strong Female Actresses




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