Hilary Swank

Hilary Swank
Hilary Swank at Comic Con San Diego 2006.jpg
Swank appearing at Comic Con in San Diego to promote her film The Reaping, 2006
Born Hilary Ann Swank
July 30, 1974 (1974-07-30) (age 35)
Bellingham, Washington
Occupation actress, producer
Years active 1990–present
Spouse(s) Chad Lowe (1997–2006)

Hilary Ann Swank (born July 30, 1974) is a double Academy Award-winning American actress. Her Hollywood film career began with a small part in Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1992) and then a major part in The Next Karate Kid (1994), where she played Julie Pierce, the first female protégé of the sensei Mr. Miyagi. She has become known for her two Academy Award-winning performances: first as Brandon Teena, a transgender man in the movie Boys Don't Cry (1999), and a struggling waitress-turned-boxer, Maggie Fitzgerald, in Million Dollar Baby (2004).

Contents

Early life

Swank was born in Lincoln, Nebraska,[1] the daughter of Judy (née Clough), a secretary and dancer, and Stephen Swank, who was an officer in the Air National Guard and later a traveling salesman.[2] She has a brother, Dan. Many of her family members hail from Ringgold County, Iowa.[3] Swank came from humble beginnings, particularly as a child growing up in a trailer park near Lake Samish in Bellingham, Washington,[4] to which she moved at age six,[1] after having lived in Spokane, Washington. Swank has described her younger self as an "outsider" who felt that she belonged "only when [reading] a book or [seeing] a movie, and could get involved with a character," and was thus inspired to become an actress.[5]

When Swank was nine years old, she made her first appearance on stage starring in The Jungle Book. She became involved in school and community theater programs, including those of the Bellingham Theatre Guild. She went to Sehome High School[6] in Bellingham until she was sixteen. Swank also competed in the Junior Olympics and the Washington state championships in swimming; she ranked fifth in the state in all-around gymnastics[1] (which would come in handy when starring in The Next Karate Kid (1994) years later). Swank's parents separated when she was thirteen,[1] and her mother, supportive of her daughter's desire to act, moved to Los Angeles, where they lived out of their car until Swank's mother saved enough money to rent an apartment.[4] Swank has described her mother as the inspiration for her acting career and her life.[7] In California, Swank enrolled in South Pasadena High School (although she later dropped out of school[8]) and started acting professionally. She helped pay the rent with the money she earned appearing in television programs such as Evening Shade and Growing Pains.

Career

The Next Karate Kid is a 1994 film starring Hilary Swank and Pat Morita. It is the fourth and final movie in the Karate Kid series. In September 1997, Swank was cast as single mother Carly Reynolds on Beverly Hills, 90210. She was initially promised it would be a two-year role, but saw her character written out after 16 episodes in January 1998. Swank later said that she was devastated at being cut from the show, thinking, "If I'm not good enough for 90210, I'm not good enough for anything."

As it turned out, the firing was a lucky break for Swank, freeing her to audition for the role of Brandon Teena in Boys Don't Cry. Swank reduced her body fat to seven percent in preparation for the role.[9] Many critics hailed hers as the best female performance of 1999; her co-star, Chloë Sevigny, had her performance singled out as well. Swank's work ultimately won her the Golden Globe and Oscar for Best Actress. She subsequently won the Best Actress Oscar and Golden Globe again for playing a boxer in Clint Eastwood's 2004 Oscar-winning film Million Dollar Baby, a role for which she underwent training in the ring and gained 19 pounds of muscle.[9]

Swank's success meant that she had joined the ranks of Vivien Leigh, Helen Hayes, Sally Field, and Luise Rainer as the only actresses to have been nominated for Academy Awards twice and win both times. She is the third-youngest double Best Actress winner (after Rainer and Jodie Foster). After winning her second Oscar, she said, "I don't know what I did in this life to deserve this. I'm just a girl from a trailer park who had a dream." Swank had earned only $75 per day for her work on Boys Don't Cry, culminating in a total of $3,000.[10] [11][1] Her earnings were so low, that (according to an anecdote on 60 Minutes) she had not even earned enough to qualify for health insurance.

In early 2006, Swank signed a three-year contract as spokesperson for Guerlain (a women's fragrance).[12] In 2007, Swank starred in and executive produced[13] Freedom Writers, a drama about a real-life teacher who inspired a California high school class. Many reviews of Swank's performance were positive, with one critic noting that she "brings credibility" to the role[14] and another stating that her performance reaches a "singular lack of artifice, stripping herself back to the bare essentials".[15]

Swank starred in The Reaping, a horror film released on April 5, 2007, in which she plays a debunker of religious phenomena. Swank convinced the producers to move the film's setting from New England to the Deep South, and the movie was being filmed in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, when Hurricane Katrina struck.[16] Swank also appeared in the romantic comedy P.S. I Love You alongside Gerard Butler, an actor for whom she has much praise.[17] It was released at the end of 2007.[16]

Swank received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on January 8, 2007. Hers was the 2,325th star presented.[18][19]

Variety online reported in February 2008, that Swank would be portraying Amelia Earhart, and be co-executive producer for a biopic titled Amelia.[20] Filming occurred in the summer of 2008 in a number of international locations. Swank is also attached to star in the Hollywood remake version of Intimate Strangers.[1]

Personal life

Swank has said that she is "an actor, not a celebrity" and has described herself as a "homebody."[16] Swank considers herself a spiritual person, though, not a member of an organized religion[21]. She has said that she is "athletically inclined" and that she "love[s] sports."[13]

Swank developed potential health problems, including elevated mercury levels in her body, through certain preparations for her roles, including weight gain and loss for Boys Don't Cry and The Black Dahlia. She has stated that she would "do what [she] need[s] to make [the role] believable and to make it work" and that her "battle scars are a reminder that you're alive and human and that you bleed."[9] In 2007, Swank noted that she "feel[s] like in the last couple of years, I’ve really come into my own and a lot of that has come from figuring out who I really am and what I want in life."[4]

Swank married actor Chad Lowe on September 28, 1997. The two met in 1992, on the set of Quiet Days in Hollywood, a direct-to-video film.[1] Swank infamously forgot to thank Lowe during her acceptance speech after winning her first Oscar in 2000, and she spent nearly every public appearance afterward making up for it. Upon winning her second Oscar in 2005, Lowe was the first person she thanked. However, in January 2006, the couple separated. In subsequent interviews, Swank expressed hope that they could reconcile, but they announced in May 2006 that they were divorcing.[22] In December 2006, Swank confirmed that she was dating John Campisi, her agent.[23]

Filmography

Swank at the 2008 Academy Awards
Year Film/Television Series Role Notes
1990 ABC TGIF Danielle TV series
1991 Evening Shade Aimee #1 (1991-1992) TV series
Harry and the Hendersons Guest star TV series
Growing Pains Sasha Serotsky (1991-1992) TV series
1992 Camp Wilder Danielle TV series
Buffy the Vampire Slayer Kimberly Hannah
1994 The Next Karate Kid Julie Pierce
Cries Unheard: The Donna Yaklich Story Patty TV movie
1996 Sometimes They Come Back... Again Michelle Porter
Terror in the Family Deena Martin TV movie
Kounterfeit Colleen
1997 Quiet Days in Hollywood Lolita
The Sleepwalker Killing Lauren Schall Lifetime TV Movie
Leaving L.A. Tiffany Roebuck TV series
Dying to Belong Lisa Connors Lifetime TV Movie
Beverly Hills 90210 Carly Reynolds (1997-1998) TV series
1998 Heartwood Sylvia Orsini
1999 Boys Don't Cry Brandon Teena Won Academy Award for Best Actress
2000 The Gift Valerie Barksdale
The Audition Short subject
2001 The Affair of the Necklace Jeanne St. Rémy de Valois
2002 The Space Between Short subject
Insomnia Detective Ellie Burr
2003 11:14 Buzzy Also executive producer
The Core Major Rebecca Childs
2004 Million Dollar Baby Maggie Fitzgerald Won Academy Award for Best Actress
Red Dust Sarah Barcant
Iron Jawed Angels Alice Paul TV movie
2006 The Black Dahlia Madeline Linscott
2007 Freedom Writers Erin Gruwell Also executive producer
The Reaping Professor Katherine Winter
P. S. I Love You Holly Kennedy
2008 Birds of America Laura
2009 Amelia Amelia Earhart post-production
Fangland Evangeline Harker in-development (also producer)

Awards

  • Winner: 2004 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role - Million Dollar Baby
  • Winner: 1999 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role - Boys Don't Cry
  • Winner: 2004 - Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role - Million Dollar Baby
  • Nominee: 2005 - Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture - Million Dollar Baby
  • Nominee: 2005 - Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries - Iron Jawed Angels
  • Nominee: 2000 - Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role - Boys Don't Cry
  • Winner: 2005 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture: Drama - Million Dollar Baby
  • Nominee: 2005 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Mini-Series or Made for TV Movie - Iron Jawed Angels
  • Winner: 2000 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture: Drama - Boys Don't Cry
  • Winner: 2000 - Best Female Lead - Boys Don't Cry
  • 2005: Nominee: MTV Movie Award - Best Female Performance - Million Dollar Baby
  • 2000: Nominee: MTV Movie Award - Best Kiss - Boys Don't Cry
  • 2000: Nominee: MTV Movie Award - Best Female Performance - Boys Don't Cry
  • Nominee: 2001 - Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role - Boys Don't Cry
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Gwyneth Paltrow
for Shakespeare in Love
Academy Award for Best Actress
1999
for Boys Don't Cry
Succeeded by
Julia Roberts
for Erin Brockovich
Preceded by
Charlize Theron
for Monster
Academy Award for Best Actress
2004
for Million Dollar Baby
Succeeded by
Reese Witherspoon
for Walk the Line
Preceded by
Cate Blanchett
for Elizabeth
Golden Globe - Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama
for Boys Don't Cry

2000
Succeeded by
Julia Roberts
for Erin Brockovich
Preceded by
Charlize Theron
for Monster
Golden Globe - Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama
for Million Dollar Baby

2005
Succeeded by
Felicity Huffman
for Transamerica
Preceded by
Cameron Diaz
for There's Something About Mary
NYFCC Award for Best Actress
1999
for Boys Don't Cry
Succeeded by
Laura Linney
for You Can Count On Me

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Dawson, Angela (2007-01-02). "The write stuff", The Detroit News Online. Retrieved on 2007-01-06. 
  2. Hilary Swank Biography (1974-)
  3. http://coolice.legis.state.ia.us/Cool-ICE/default.asp?Category=BillInfo&Service=Billbook&ga=81&hbill=SR16
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Longsdorf, Amy (2007-01-03). "Swank: Acting gave me sense of focus", TimesLeader. Retrieved on 2007-01-06. 
  5. "HILARY AND HUNKY PATRICK PICTURE PERFECT AT PREMIERE", Hello! Magazine (2007-01-05). Retrieved on 2007-01-07. 
  6. Tiscali UK (2006). "Hilary Swank Biography". tiscali.film & tv web site. Retrieved on 2006-11-24. Biography spreads across 9 web pages. High School information is on page 2.
  7. "Hilary Swank tells all to Extra", United Press International (2007-01-03). Retrieved on 2007-01-04. 
  8. Slotek, Jim (2007-01-04). "Swank’s life lessons", Calgary Sun. Retrieved on 2007-01-06. 
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 "SWANK RISKS HEALTH FOR ROLES", PR Inside (2006-12-20). Retrieved on 2006-12-20. 
  10. "Jamie Bell's life story put on screen", The Guardian (2001-07-17). 
  11. Arc Lavine (2005-03-06). "Prize fight", Sunday Tribune. 
  12. "Hillary Swank's new sweet smelling deal", ABC (2006-02-28). Archived from the original on 2006-03-13. 
  13. 13.0 13.1 Westbrook, Bruce (2007-01-05). "Like her Freedom heroine, Hilary Swank loves her job", Houston Chronicle. Retrieved on 2007-01-06. 
  14. Sanford, James (2007-01-05). "Swank brings credibility to `Freedom Writers'", Kalamazoo Gazzette. Retrieved on 2007-01-06. 
  15. Roach, Vicky (2007-03-22). "Hilary's all class", The Sunday Telegraph. Retrieved on 2007-03-25. 
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Hart, Hugh (2007-04-01). "Real scare for cast of 'Reaping'", San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved on 2007-04-01. 
  17. Hilary Swank: Light and Shade, interview with stv.tv, December 2007
  18. "Hilary Swank to get star on Hollywood Walk of Fame", English.eastday.com (2007-01-08). Retrieved on 2007-01-08. 
  19. Associated Press (2007-01-08). "Hilary Swank gets star on Hollywood Walk of Fame", The Mercury News. Retrieved on 2007-01-08. 
  20. Variety:Amelia
  21. Hilary-Swank-Interview, Reaping Movie accessed 05 september 2008
  22. "Hilary Swank says "we're still married"", MSN BC (2006-01-17). 
  23. "Swank is dating her agent", Contact Music (2006-12-20). Retrieved on 2006-12-20. 

External links

Persondata
NAME Swank, Hilary
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Swank, Hilary Ann
SHORT DESCRIPTION Actress, producer
DATE OF BIRTH July 30, 1974
PLACE OF BIRTH Lincoln, Nebraska
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH