Mary Steenburgen | |
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Steenburgen in December 2009 |
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Born | Mary Nell Steenburgen February 8, 1953 Newport, Arkansas, U.S. |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1978–present |
Spouse | Malcolm McDowell (1980-1990) Ted Danson (1995-present) |
Mary Nell Steenburgen[1] (born February 8, 1953) is an American actress. She has starred in over fifty films spanning thirty years of movie production. Steenburgen was most successful in the role of Lynda Dummar in the film Melvin and Howard, which earned her an Academy Award and Golden globe for Best Supporting Actress. Steenburgen is married to fellow Hollywood actor Ted Danson.
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Steenburgen was born in Newport, Arkansas, the daughter of Nellie Mae (née Wall), a school-board secretary, and Maurice Steenburgen, a freight-train conductor who worked at the Missouri Pacific Railroad.[2][3][4][5] Steenburgen grew up in North Little Rock, Arkansas. Steenburgen married Malcolm McDowell in 1980 and they had two children together: Lily Amanda, born January 31, 1981, and Charles Malcolm, born July 10, 1983. The two divorced in 1990, and Steenburgen has been married to actor Ted Danson since 1995.
In September 2005, she and Danson provided a guest lecture for students at the Clinton School of Public Service where they discussed their roles in public service as well as the foundations and causes in which they are involved.[6] An alumna of Hendrix College, Steenburgen received an honorary doctorate from the institution in 1989.[7] In 2006, Steenburgen received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Lyon College in Batesville, Arkansas.[8]
She is a close personal friend of Secretary of State and former Senator Hillary Clinton, and supported Clinton's 2008 Presidential campaign along with her husband.[9]
She splits her time living in Ojai, California and Martha's Vineyard, in addition to sharing a condominium with Danson in the River Market District of Little Rock.
Steenburgen moved to New York City in 1972, working at Doubleday's while studying acting at New York's Neighborhood Playhouse under William Esper.[10] Her break came when she was discovered by Jack Nicholson in the reception room of Paramount's New York office and was cast as the lead in his second directorial effort, the 1978 Western Goin' South.[10] In only her third film, she won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for the 1980 film Melvin and Howard, playing the wife of a man who claims to have befriended reclusive eccentric Howard Hughes.
She had a leading role in the 1979 film Time After Time as a modern woman who falls in love with author H.G. Wells, played by husband-to-be Malcolm McDowell. In both this film and Back to the Future Part III later on, she played the love interest of a time traveler.
Other notable film appearances came in the well-received 1983 film Cross Creek, her performance as an adulterous wife in What's Eating Gilbert Grape? with Johnny Depp, as Hannah Nixon in the Oliver Stone biopic Nixon, and as a woman who discovers her husband is the father of a North Pole elf in the Will Ferrell holiday comedy Elf. She appeared in the 2008 comedy Step Brothers, another movie starring Will Ferrell, playing the mother of Ferrell's character.
In a little-known film, The Butcher's Wife, also starring Demi Moore and Jeff Daniels, Steenburgen plays a lead role in which she also sings. Film critic Charles Taylor, in The New York Times, said Steenburgen's "slow-drip voice comes to your ears like honey arriving on a moonbeam". She also acted in the film Life as a House.
Steenburgen played Clara Clayton in Back to the Future Part III (1990), a role which her children, as well as fans of the Back to the Future movies, convinced her to play. She reprised the role by providing the character's voice in Back to the Future: The Animated Series.
She has starred in the sitcom Ink with husband, Ted Danson, had a leading role in CBS' Joan of Arcadia and starred in the television miniseries of Gulliver's Travels with Ted Danson. She appeared as herself alongside Danson in the HBO comedy Curb Your Enthusiasm. In 2002 she played "Grace Rinato" in Law and Order: Special Victims Unit, in the episode "Denial."
In recent years she has been in the comedy films Four Christmases, Step Brothers and The Proposal.
According to a written note owned by Garry Marshall, Steenburgen was the first choice to play the lead in the 1990 film Pretty Woman, starring Julia Roberts.
Steenburgen will appear in a forthcoming film production about the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing, to be directed by Niki Caro. Steenburgen is slated to play Canadian reporter Linda Mack, who tried to mislead ABC News' Pierre Salinger on the subsequent investigation.
Steenburgen received the 2,395th star on Hollywood Walk of Fame on December 16, 2009.
It was announced in June 2010 that Steenburgen would star in a new FX pilot, Outlaw Country.[11]
Year | Film | Role | Other notes |
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1978 | Goin' South | Julia Tate/Moon | Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture Acting Debut - Female |
1979 | Time After Time | Amy Robbins | Saturn Award for Best Actress |
1980 | Melvin and Howard | Lynda Dummar | Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actress National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress |
1981 | Ragtime | Mother | Nominated — Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture |
1982 | A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy | Adrian | |
1983 | Faerie Tale Theatre | Mary / Little Red Riding Hood | Little Red Riding Hood |
Cross Creek | Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings | ||
Romantic Comedy | Phoebe Craddock | ||
1985 | One Magic Christmas | Ginny Hanks Grainger | Nominated — Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role |
Tender Is the Night | Nicole Warren Diver | TV mini-series Nominated — British Academy Television Award for Best Actress Nominated — CableACE Award for Actress in a Movie or Miniseries |
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1987 | The Whales of August | Young Sarah | |
Dead of Winter | Julie Rose/Katie McGovern/Evelyn | ||
1988 | The Attic: The Hiding of Anne Frank | Miep Gies | television movie Nominated — Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress – Miniseries or a Movie |
End of the Line | Rose Pickett | ||
1989 | Parenthood | Karen Buckman | |
Miss Firecracker | Elain Rutledge | ||
1990 | The Long Walk Home | Narrator voice | |
Back to the Future Part III | Clara Clayton | Nominated — Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress | |
1991 | The Butcher's Wife | Stella Keefover | |
1993 | Philadelphia | Belinda Conine | |
What's Eating Gilbert Grape | Betty Carver | ||
1994 | Pontiac Moon | Katherine Bellamy | |
The Gift | TV | ||
It Runs in the Family | Mrs. Parker (Mother) | ||
Clifford | Sarah Davis | ||
1995 | Nixon | Hannah Nixon | Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture |
Powder | Jessie Caldwell | ||
The Grass Harp | Sister Ida | ||
My Family | Gloria | ||
1996 | Gulliver's Travels | Mary Gulliver | TV |
Ink | Kate Montgomery | TV Series | |
1998 | About Sarah | Sarah Elizabeth McCaffrey | TV Nominated — Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie |
1999 | Noah's Ark | Naamah | TV |
2000 | Curb Your Enthusiasm | Herself | 4 episodes |
Picnic | Rosemary Sydney | TV | |
2001 | I Am Sam | Dr. Blake | |
Life as a House | Colleen Beck | ||
The Trumpet of the Swan | Mother Voice | ||
Nobody's Baby | Estelle | ||
2002 | Wish You Were Dead | Sally Rider | Nominated — DVD Premiere Award for Best Supporting Actress |
Sunshine State | Francine Pinkney | ||
Living with the Dead | Detective Karen Condrin | TV | |
2003–2005 | Joan of Arcadia | Helen Girardi | TV Series - 45 episodes Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actress – Television Series |
2003 | Elf | Emily Hobbs | |
Casa de los Babys | Gayle | ||
Hope Springs | Joanie Fisher | ||
2004 | Capital City | Elaine Summer | TV |
It Must Be Love | Clem Gazelle | TV | |
2005 | Marilyn Hotchkiss' Ballroom Dancing and Charm School | Marienne Hotchkiss | |
2006 | The Dead Girl | Beverley, Leah's Mother | |
Inland Empire | Visitor #2 | ||
2007 | Reinventing the Wheelers | Claire Wheeler | TV |
Elvis and Anabelle | Geneva | ||
Numb | Dr. Cheryl Blaine | ||
Nobel Son | Sarah Michaelson | ||
The Brave One | Carol | ||
Honeydripper | Amanda Winship | ||
2008 | Step Brothers | Nancy Huff | |
Four Christmases | Marilyn | ||
2009 | In the Electric Mist | Bootsie Robicheaux | |
The Open Road | Katherine | ||
The Proposal | Grace Paxton | ||
Did You Hear About the Morgans? | Emma Wheeler |
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