Barbara Hershey Born: Feb 05, 1948 in Hollywood, California Occupation: Actor Active: '70s-2000s Major Genres: Drama Career Highlights: Hannah and Her Sisters, The Stunt Man, A World Apart First Major Screen Credit: With Six You Get Eggroll (1968)
| Filmography | | HOOSIERS 1986 | | STUNTMAN, THE 1980 | | NATURAL, THE 1984 | | HANNAH AND HER SISTERS 1986 | | SHY PEOPLE 1987 | | TUNE IN TOMORROW 1990 | | WORLD APART, A 1988 | | PARIS TROUT 1991 | | RIGHT STUFF, THE 1983 | | FLOOD 1976 | | PASSION FLOWER 1986 | | DEFENSELESS 1991 | | PUBLIC EYE, THE 1992 | | KILLING IN A SMALL TOWN 1990 | | FALLING DOWN 1993 | | SPLITTING HEIRS 1993 | | DANGEROUS WOMAN, A 1993 | | LAST OF THE DOGMEN, THE 1995 | | PORTRAIT OF A LADY, THE 1996 | | SOLDIER'S DAUGHTER NEVER CRIES, A 1998 | | FROGS FOR SNAKES 1998 | | DROWNING ON DRY LAND 1999 | | LANTANA 2001 | | BOXCAR BERTHA 1972 | | PARADISE 2004 | | RIDING THE BULLET 2004 | | ENTITY, THE 1981 | | ANNE RULE PRESENTS: THE STRANGER BESIDE ME 2003 | | NATURAL: DIRECTOR'S CUT, THE 2007 |
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Biography:
While a prolific screen presence from the late-'60s onward, Barbara Hershey did not truly attain star status until two decades later, finally blossoming to become one of the most acclaimed American actresses of her generation. Born Barbara Herzstein on February 5, 1948, in Hollywood, CA, she studied drama during high school and in 1965 made her professional debut in the teen television romp Gidget. From 1966 to 1967, she was a regular on the series The Monroes and subsequently guest starred in a number of other programs. Hershey made her film bow in 1968's With Six You Get Eggroll, followed by the Western Heaven With a Gun and Last Summer. After a number of other lesser projects, she starred as the title heroine in 1972's Boxcar Bertha, the first major theatrical release from a then-unknown Martin Scorsese. David Carradine, Hershey's onscreen partner in crime, became her offscreen companion as well. Carradine directed them both in Americana (filmed in 1973 but not shown until eight years later), and together they had a child, Free.
In another nod to the counterculture, Hershey rechristened herself Barbara Seagull and traveled to the Netherlands to film the 1973 drama Angela, winning Best Actress honors for her work at the {~Berlin Film Festival}. Still, box-office success continued to elude her, and her resumé remained littered with undistinguished projects including the 1974 heist drama Diamonds, the 1976 comedy A Choice of Weapons, and the Western The Last Hard Men. By 1977, Hershey -- having dropped the Seagull surname -- turned to television, where she appeared in the Irwin Allen disaster production Flood! as well as the miniseries A Man Called Intrepid and the 1979-1980 weekly program From Here to Eternity. The 1980 comedy The Stunt Man, actually shot two years earlier, marked Hershey's return to feature films, and was followed by 1981's Take This Job and Shove It and the 1982 horror picture The Entity.
By this point, Hershey -- once viewed as a rising star -- had been largely written off by the Hollywood powers-that-be. However, in 1983, she accepted a small role in Philip Kaufman's acclaimed The Right Stuff which garnered her considerable notice. She followed it with another small but pivotal role in Barry Levinson's 1984 baseball fable The Natural, and after a pair of well-regarded television projects -- the 1985 Errol Flynn bio My Wicked, Wicked Ways and 1986's Passion Flower -- Hershey's name was back on the map. After years of low-budget and low-brow projects, suddenly she was a fixture of high-profile features including Woody Allen's masterful 1986 effort Hannah and Her Sisters, David Anspaugh's Hoosiers, and Levinson's 1987 comedy Tin Men. Also in 1987, Hershey's turn in Andrei Konchalovsky's Shy People won Best Actress honors at the {~Cannes Film Festival}, an award she again took home the following year for her performance in Chris Menges' A World Apart.
Hershey also excelled in more mainstream affairs, appearing opposite Bette Midler in the weeper Beaches. In 1988, she and Scorsese reunited for the first time since Boxcar Bertha in The Last Temptation of Christ, in which she appeared as Mary Magdalene, winning a Golden Globe nomination for her performance. In 1990, Hershey returned to television to star in the movie A Killing in a Small Town, for which she won an Emmy. Back in the movies, she remained noted for her performances in offbeat fare like 1990's Tune in Tomorrow, 1993's Falling Down, and 1996's The Pallbearer. For her supporting performance in Jane Campion's 1996 adaptation of The Portrait of a Lady, Hershey also earned an Academy Award nomination.
In 1998, the actress won further praise for her role as Kris Kristofferson's bohemian wife in A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries. The same year, she appeared as a struggling actress in Amos Poe's Frogs for Snakes, and then went on to play Bruce Willis' wife in the highly anticipated 1999 adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's Breakfast of Champions. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide.
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