Sally Field

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Sally Field
Image:Sally Field 1990.jpg
Field at the 62nd Academy Awards ceremony
Birth name Sally Margaret Field
Born November 6 1946 (1946-11-06) (age 62)
Pasadena, California, U.S.
Years active 1966-present
Spouse(s) Alan Greisman (1984-1993) (divorced) 1 child
Steven Craig (1968-1975) (divorced) 2 children

Sally Margaret Field (born November 6, 1946) is a two-time Academy Award winning American actress. She is also a three-time Emmy Award winner and two-time Golden Globe Award winner who became a household name at age 20 as Sister Bertrille in the 1960s sitcom The Flying Nun. She stars as Nora Holden Walker on the ABC hit drama, Brothers & Sisters, as a grieving matriarch who helps out in the family business.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Field was born in Pasadena, California, the daughter of Maggie, an actress, and Richard Dryden Field, who worked in sales.[1] Her parents divorced in 1950 and her mother subsequently remarried to actor and stuntman Jock Mahoney.

She attended Birmingham High School in Van Nuys, California. Among her classmates were famed financier Michael Milken, fellow actress Cindy Williams (of Laverne and Shirley fame) and Michael Ovitz of CAA and Walt Disney Studios fame.

[edit] Career

[edit] Early television roles

Image:Field Sally Gidget.JPG
Field as Gidget (1965).

Field got her start on television, as the boy-struck surfer girl in the mid-1960s surf culture sitcom series Gidget. She then went on to star in her best known television role, as Sister Bertrille in The Flying Nun. In an interview on the Flying Nun DVD, she said that she would have preferred to continue playing Gidget. Field also appeared in The Girl with Something Extra. While starring on The Flying Nun, Sally tried her hand at singing, releasing an album on Colgems Records in 1967 and cracking the Billboard Hot 100 with one single, "Felicidad", in 1967.

She had several guest appearances, including a recurring role on the western comedy Alias Smith and Jones starring Pete Duel (whom she worked with on Gidget) and Ben Murphy, and the Rod Serling's Night Gallery episode "The Whisper."

[edit] Sybil

Having played mostly comic characters on television, Field had a difficult time being cast in dramatic roles.[citation needed] She studied with famed acting teacher Lee Strasberg. Soon after, Field landed the title role in the 1976 TV film Sybil.

Field's dramatic portrayal of Sybil, a young woman afflicted with multiple personality syndrome in the TV film not only garnered her an Emmy Award in 1977, but also enabled her to break through the typecasting she had experienced from television roles.

[edit] Film roles

Field had a number of critical and commercial successes in movies, particularly in the 1980s. In 1977 she co-starred with Burt Reynolds, Jackie Gleason and Jerry Reed in that year's #2 grossing film Smokey and the Bandit.[citation needed]

In 1979, she starred as a union organizer in Norma Rae, and won the Best Female Performance Prize at the Cannes Film Festival and the Academy Award for Best Actress. In 1981, Field played a prostitute opposite Tommy Lee Jones in the South-set comedy Back Roads, which received middling reviews and grossed $11 million at the box office.

Field won another Academy Award in 1985 for her starring role in Places in the Heart. Her gushing acceptance speech is well-remembered for its earnestness. In it, Field stated "I haven't had an orthodox career, and I've wanted more than anything to have your respect. The first time I didn't feel it, but this time I feel it, and I can't deny the fact that you like me, right now, you like me!".[2] The line ending in "...I can't deny the fact that you like me, right now, you like me!" is often misquoted as simply "You like me, you really like me!" which has subsequently been the subject of many parodies. (Field parodied the line herself in a commercial.[citation needed]) Also in 1985, she co-starred with James Garner in Murphy's Romance. In A&E's biography of Garner, Field reported that her on-screen kiss with Garner was the best cinematic kiss she had ever had.

Field appeared on the cover of the March 1986 issue of Playboy magazine. She was the interview subject in that month's issue. (She did not appear as a pictorial subject inside the magazine, although she did wear the classic leotard and bunny ears "Bunny Outfit" on the cover).

She has had supporting roles in other movies, including Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) in which she played the wife of Robin Williams and the love interest of Pierce Brosnan, followed by the role of Forrest's mother in Forrest Gump (1994). She is only 10 years older than Tom Hanks, with whom she had co-starred six years earlier in Punchline.

[edit] Recent roles

On television, Field had a recurring role on ER in the 2000-2001 season as Dr. Abby Lockhart's mother Maggie, who is struggling to cope with bipolar disorder, a role for which she won an Emmy Award in 2001. After her critically acclaimed stint on the show, she returned to the role in 2003 and 2006. She also starred in the very short-lived 2002 series The Court.

Field has also ventured into the realm of directing. Her first directorial stint was for the television film, The Christmas Tree (1996). She also directed the feature film Beautiful (2000), as well as an episode of the TV mini-series, From the Earth to the Moon (1998).

Field was a late addition to the ABC drama Brothers & Sisters, which debuted in September 2006. In the show's pilot, the role of matriarch Nora Walker had been played by actress Betty Buckley. However, the producers of the show decided to take the character of Nora in another direction, and Field was cast in the role. She won the 2007 Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series in her role as Nora Walker. Field also has an upcoming voice role as Marina del Ray the villain in Disney's The Little Mermaid III. This movie is scheduled for a direct-to-DVD release in 2008.

Currently, Field can be seen on television as the compensated spokesperson for Roche Laboratories' postmenopausal osteoporosis treatment medication, Boniva.

[edit] Political advocacy

During her acceptance speech for her 2007 Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, Field made an anti-war statement: "If the mothers ruled the world, there would be no goddamn wars in the first place."[3] In the US, Fox censored her, so that she was cut off at "god--", and did not return to her speech. Fox also censored two other speakers, saying only that the content might be "considered inappropriate by some viewers".[4]

[edit] Private life

Field dated Burt Reynolds for many years. She married Steven Craig in 1968. The couple had two sons, Peter, a novelist and Eli, an actor and director. They divorced in 1975.

In 1984, she married film producer Alan Greisman. They had one son, Sam. The couple divorced in 1993.

[edit] Appearances

[edit] Filmography

Year Film Role Other notes
1967 The Way West Mercy McBee
1976 Stay Hungry Mary Tate Farnsworth
1977 Smokey and the Bandit Carrie / 'Frog' Nominated - Golden Globe
Heroes Carol Bell
1978 The End Mary Ellen
Hooper Gwen Doyle
1979 Norma Rae Norma Rae Academy Award for Best Actress; Golden Globe
Beyond the Poseidon Adventure Celeste Whitman
1980 Smokey and the Bandit II Carrie / 'Frog'
1981 Back Roads Amy Post
Absence of Malice Megan Carter Nominated - Golden Globe
1982 Kiss Me Goodbye Kay Villano Nominated - Golden Globe
1984 Places in the Heart Edna Spalding Academy Award for Best Actress; Golden Globe
1985 Murphy's Romance Emma Moriarty Nominated - Golden Globe
1987 Surrender Daisy Morgan
1988 Punchline Lilah Krytsick
1989 Steel Magnolias M'Lynn Eatenton Nominated - Golden Globe
1991 Not Without My Daughter Betty Mahmoody
Soapdish Celeste Talbert / Maggie
1993 Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey Sassy voice
Mrs. Doubtfire Miranda Hillard
1994 A Century of Cinema Herself documentary
Forrest Gump Mrs. Gump Nominated - BAFTA Award
1996 Eye for an Eye Karen McCann
Homeward Bound II: Lost in San Francisco Sassy voice
2000 Where the Heart Is Mama Lil
2001 Say It Isn't So Valdine Wingfield
2003 Legally Blonde 2: Red, White and Blonde Rep. Victoria Rudd
Going Through Splat: The Life and Work of Stewart Stern Herself documentary
2006 Two Weeks Anita Bergman
2009 Lincoln Mary Todd Lincoln pre-production

[edit] Television work

Year Production Role Other notes
1965-1966 Gidget Frances Elizabeth 'Gidget' Lawrence
1967-1970 The Flying Nun Sister Bertrille
1971 Maybe I'll Come Home in the Spring Denise 'Dennie' Miller
Hitched Roselle Bridgeman
Marriage: Year One Jane Duden
1972 Home for the Holidays Christine Morgan
1973-1974 The Girl with Something Extra Sally Burton
1976 Bridger Jennifer Melford
Sybil Sybil Dorsett Emmy Award
1995 A Woman of Independent Means Bess Alcott Steed Garner TV mini-series - Nominated - Emmy Award;
Nominated - Golden Globe
1977 Merry Christmas, George Bailey Mrs. Bailey/Narrator
1998 From the Earth to the Moon Trudy Cooper miniseries
1999 A Cooler Climate Iris Nominated - Emmy Award
2000 David Copperfield Aunt Betsey Trotwood
2000 - Present ER Maggie Wyczenski Emmy Award - 2001
Nominated - Emmy Award - 2003
2002 The Court Justice Kate Nolan cancelled after 6 episodes
2005 Conviction
2006 - Present Brothers & Sisters Nora Walker Golden Globe - 2007
Nominated - Golden Globes 2008
Awards
Preceded by
Jill Clayburgh
for An Unmarried Woman and Isabelle Huppert
for Violette Nozière
Award for Best Actress - Cannes Film Festival
1979
for Norma Rae
Succeeded by
Anouk Aimée
for Leap Into The Void
Preceded by
Jane Fonda
for Coming Home
Academy Award for Best Actress
1979
for Norma Rae
Succeeded by
Sissy Spacek
for Coal Miner's Daughter
Preceded by
Shirley MacLaine
for Terms of Endearment
Academy Award for Best Actress
1984
for Places in the Heart
Succeeded by
Geraldine Page
for The Trip to Bountiful
Preceded by
Jane Fonda
for Coming Home
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama
1980
for Norma Rae
Succeeded by
Mary Tyler Moore
for Ordinary People
Preceded by
Shirley MacLaine
for Terms of Endearment
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama
1985
for Places in the Heart
Succeeded by
Whoopi Goldberg
for The Color Purple
Preceded by
Ingrid Bergman
for Autumn Sonata
NYFCC Award for Best Actress
1979
for Norma Rae
Succeeded by
Sissy Spacek
for Coal Miner's Daughter
Preceded by
Susan Clark
for Babe
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress - Miniseries or a Movie
1977
for Sybil
Succeeded by
Joanne Woodward
for See How She Runs
Preceded by
Beah Richards
for The Practice
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress - Drama Series
2001
for ER
Succeeded by
Patricia Clarkson
for Six Feet Under
Preceded by
Mariska Hargitay
for Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress - Drama Series
2007
for Brothers & Sisters
Succeeded by
TBD

[edit] References

  1. ^ Sally Field. Film Reference.com.
  2. ^ Oscar acceptance speech: Littlereview.com
  3. ^ "Sally Field Anti-War Statement Video, Emmy Winners: 'Sopranos' Win Big", The Post-Chronicle, 2007-09-18. Retrieved on 2007-09-18. 
  4. ^ Marikar, Shelia. "On TV, 'Extreme Caution' vs. Free Speech", ABC News, 2007-09-18. Retrieved on 2007-11-05. 

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Sally Field
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Sally Field
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NAME Field, Sally
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION actress
DATE OF BIRTH November 6, 1946
PLACE OF BIRTH Pasadena, California, U.S.
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH
de:Sally Field

es:Sally Field fr:Sally Field hr:Sally Field it:Sally Field he:סאלי פילד mr:सॅली फील्ड nl:Sally Field ja:サリー・フィールド no:Sally Field nn:Sally Field pl:Sally Field pt:Sally Field ru:Филд, Салли fi:Sally Field sv:Sally Field tg:Саллй Фиелд tr:Sally Field

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