| Brooke Shields |
| Born |
May 31, 1965
New York City |
| Occupation |
actress |
Brooke Christa Camille Shields (born May 31, 1965) is an American actress and former fashion model.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Career
- 1.2 Personal life
- 1.2.1 Postpartum depression
- 2 Filmography
- 3 Publication
- 4 External links
|
Biography
Career
The 6-foot tall Shields' career as a model began in the 1960s as an infant, and she continued as a successful child model throughout the 1970s. In early 1980 (at age 14), Shields was the youngest fashion model to ever appear on the cover of the top fashion publication Vogue magazine. Later that same year (at age 15), Shields appeared in controversial print and TV ads for Calvin Klein jeans. The TV ad included her saying the famous tagline, "Nothing comes between me and my Calvins". By the age of 16, Shields had become one of the most recognizable faces in the world because of her dual career as a provocative fashion model and controversial child actress.
Shields's film career began in 1978 with her appearance in Louis Malle's Pretty Baby, a movie in which she played a child living in a brothel (and in which there were numerous nude scenes). Because she was only 12 when the film was released, and possibly 11 when it was filmed, questions were raised about child pornography. This was followed by a slightly less controversial, but also less notable film, Wanda Nevada (1979).
After two decades of movies, her best-known films are still arguably The Blue Lagoon (1980) (which included more nude scenes, but Shields later testified before a U.S. Congressional inquiry that older body doubles were used in some of them), and Endless Love (1981). She won the People's Choice Award in the category of Favorite Young Performer in four consecutive years from 1981 to 1984.
Shields put her film career on hold to attend Princeton University from 1983 to 1987, graduating with a degree in French literature. Her senior thesis was titled The Initiation: From Innocence to Experience: The Pre-Adolescent/Adolescent Journey in the Films of Louis Malle, "Pretty Baby" and "Lacombe Lucien." It was here at Princeton where she spoke openly about her sexuality and virginity. During her tenure at Princeton, Shields was a member of the Cap and Gown Club.
In 1984, she was Michael Jackson's date to the Grammy Awards and also dated him for a brief period.
Shields has appeared in a number of television shows, the most successful being the NBC sitcom Suddenly Susan, in which she starred from 1996 until 2000 and which earned her a People's Choice Award in the category of Favorite Female Performer in a New Television Series in 1997.
Shields has appeared in many on-stage productions, mostly musical revivals, including Grease, Cabaret, Wonderful Town and Chicago on Broadway; she also performed in Chicago in London's West End.
Shields made a couple of guest appearances on That '70s Show. She played Mrs. Burkhart, Jackie's (Mila Kunis) mother, who later was briefly involved with Donna's (Laura Prepon) father (played by Don Stark). Shields left That '70s Show when her character was written out.
Personal life
Shields was born in New York City into an aristocratic family (on her father's side); her father was the late Francis Alexander Shields and her mother is Teri Shields (born Maria Theresia Schmonn). Brooke's parents divorced when she was a small child. Her father remarried Diana Lippert, the former wife of Thomas Gore Auchincloss (half-brother of Gore Vidal and stepbrother of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis).
Brooke has three half sisters: Marina Torlonia Shields (who married Thomas William Purcell), Olympia, and Christiana Shields. Also, she has two stepsiblings: Diana Luise Auchincloss and Thomas Gore Auchincloss Jr.
Actor/comedian Eddie Murphy, in his concert film, Eddie Murphy: Raw, called Shields "the whitest woman in America". Her paternal grandparents are Francis Xavier Shields, a tennis star of Irish descent, and Italian princess Donna Marina Torlonia di Civitella-Cesi, who was a sister of Don Alessandro Torlonia, 5th Prince di Civitella-Cesi, husband of the spanish Infanta Doña Beatriz de Borbón y Battenberg (aunt of King Juan Carlos I of Spain). Their granddaughter, Sibilla Weiller (b. 1968), Brooke's cousin, married Prince Guillaume of Luxembourg (b. 1963), the youngest brother of Henri, Grand Duke of Luxembourg, in 1994.
Through her Italian grandmother, Shields is a descendant of Lucrezia Borgia, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, Honoré I of Monaco and Henry IV of France. Shields is "a 23rd generation descendant of Francesco I Gattilusio, the founder of the Lesbian Gattilusii dynasty," according to the monograph "The Lesbos Island Ancestors of Prince Rainier of Monaco, Dr. Otto von Habsburg, Brooke Shields, and the Marquis de Sade."[1]
Through her Irish grandfather, the branch of the Shields family from which Brooke Shields descends, traces its ancestry to William Shields, born 1600, at Lough Neagh in County Armagh and killed in County Antrim in 1655. He had four sons, William, James, Daniel, and John. William & James were deported by Cromwell to Barbados in 1655 (they may have been conscripted to serve in the invasion of Spanish America — the “Western Design” that collapsed at Hispaniola in that year). Both relocated to Middle Plantation (now Williamsburg, Virginia) in 1658 as indentured servants. James and his descendents became tavern-keepers. Shields Tavern is a restored public house in Colonial Williamsburg. John Shields, the gunsmith of the Lewis & Clark expedition was of this line as was United States President John Tyler through his mother. William migrated to Kent County, Maryland where he gave rise to the prominent Tennessee political clan, the New Orleans family of white jazz musicians. The third brother, Daniel, was a Catholic partisan who would die in the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. His son, one of the Wild Geese, associated with the Spanish and wound up in Cuba as governor general. Other descendents include the Civil War General James Shields, who would become U.S. Senator in three different states. The youngest of the four sons, John (born 1650), died on his voyage to America in 1732. His son William Shields was fostered by the Kent County, Maryland cousins and would found Emmitsburg, Maryland. Among many notable descendents were Arthur Shields, a controversial 19th-century Presbyterian, who was expelled from Princeton University and from this branche belongs Brooke Shields.
When Shields was a young starlet in the 1980s, her romantic relationships were the subject of many tabloid articles. Among the celebrities she dated in her youth were Ted McGinley, who took her to her high school prom, Prince Albert II of Monaco and Michael Jackson, who took her as his date to the Grammy Awards (an event which provoked Murphy's joke about Shields' complexion). She was married from April 19, 1997 to April 9, 1999 to professional tennis player Andre Agassi. Since April 4, 2001 she has been married to television writer Chris Henchy. They have two daughters: Rowan Francis (b. May 15, 2003) and Grier Hammond (b. April 18, 2006). Coincidentally, Shields' second child was born on the same day and in the same hospital as the first child of Katie Holmes and Tom Cruise.
Postpartum depression
Brooke Shields on the cover of
Guideposts (2005).
In the spring of 2005, Shields spoke to magazines (such as the Guideposts shown here) and appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show to publicize her battle with postpartum depression, an experience that included depression, thoughts of suicide, an inability to respond to her baby's needs, and delayed maternal bonding. The illness may have been triggered by a traumatic childbirth, the death of her father three weeks earlier, stress from in vitro fertilisation, a miscarriage, and a family history of depression, as well as the hormones and life changes brought on by childbirth. Her book, Down Came the Rain, discusses her experience. [1]
In May 2005 former co-star Tom Cruise, a Scientologist whose religion frowns on psychiatry, excoriated Shields for both using and speaking in favor of the antidepressant drug Paxil. Cruise also said, "Here is a woman, and I care about Brooke Shields because I think she is an incredibly talented woman, you look at [and think], where has her career gone?" Shields responded that Cruise's statements about anti-depressants were "irresponsible" and "dangerous." She said he should "stick to fighting aliens", (a reference to Cruise's starring role in War of the Worlds as well as (perhaps unknowingly) some of the more exotic aspects of Scientology doctrine and teachings), "and let mothers decide the best way to treat postpartum depression." Shields responded to a further attack by Cruise in an essay published in The New York Times on July 1, 2005, in which she made an individual case for the medication (see [1]). On Thursday, August 31, 2006, according to USAToday.com [2], Cruise privately apologized to Shields for the incident, and Shields accepted, saying it was "heartfelt".
Filmography
Film
Brooke Shields in
Pretty Baby (1978), her breakthrough film role.
- Communion (1976) Also Known as Alice Sweet Alice
- King of the Gypsies (1978)
- Pretty Baby (1978)
- An Almost Perfect Affair (1979) (Cameo)
- Tilt (1979)
- Just You and Me, Kid (1979)
- Wanda Nevada (1979)
- The Blue Lagoon (1980)
- Endless Love (1981)
- Sahara (1983)
- The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984) (Cameo)
- Speed Zone! (1989) (Cameo)
- Brenda Starr (1989)
- Backstreet Dreams (1990)
- Running Wild (1992)
- Legends of the West (1992) (documentary)
- Freaked (1993)
- I Can Make You Love Me (1993)
- The Seventh Floor (1994)
- Freeway (1996)
- Scratch the Surface (1997) (documentary)
- Junket Whore (1998) (documentary)
- The Misadventures of Margaret (1998)
- The Weekend (1999)
- Black and White (1999)
- The Bachelor (1999)
- After Sex (2000)
- Massholes (2000) (Cameo)
- Mayor of the Sunset Strip (2003) (documentary)
- Rent-a-Husband (2004)
- The Easter Egg Adventure (2005) (voice)
- The Outsider (2005) (documentary)
- Bob the Butler (2005)
- The Last Guy on Earth (2006) (post production)
Television
- After the Fall (1974)
- The Prince of Central Park (1977)
- Wet Gold (1984)
- The Diamond Trap (1988)
- The Simpsons (1993) (guest appearance)
- I Can Make You Love Me (1993)
- An American Love (1994)
- Nothing Lasts Forever (1995) (miniseries)
- Suddenly Susan (1996 - 2000) (also producer)
- Friends (guest appearance in 1996)
- The Almost Perfect Bank Robbery (1998)
- What Makes a Family (2001)
- Widows (2002) (miniseries)
- Miss Spider's Sunny Patch Friends (2003) (voice)
- Gone But Not Forgotten (2004) (miniseries)
- That '70s Show (recurring role during 2004)
- Nip Tuck (Guest Star 2006)
- Law and Order: Criminal Intent "Siren Call" 2006
Publication
- 1970's Movies
- 1980's Movies
- 1990's Movies
- Today Movies
External links
- Brooke Shields' Fansite
- Brooke Shields at the Internet Movie Database
- Brooke Shields at TV.com
- WebMD article on Shields and Postpartum Depression
- "Regarding Ardy": an online short film with Brooke Shields
- William Morris listing
- Brooke Shields' Official Website
- Brooke Shields at the Notable Names Database
- Brooke Shields at Yahoo! Movies
- The "Runaway Bunny" violin concerto, by Glen Roven and narrated by Brooke Shields
Categories: 1965 births | American child actors | American film actors | American models | American musical theatre actors | American stage actors | American television actors | Law & Order: Criminal Intent actors | Living people | Nip/Tuck actors | People from New York City | Princeton University alumni | People diagnosed with clinical depression | Roman Catholic entertainers | Tales from the Crypt actors | Worst Actress Razzie | Worst Supporting Actress Razzie | Quantum Leap actors | That '70s Show actors | Friends actors | Golden Globe Award Nominees