| A beautiful Southern blonde with real, old-fashioned movie-star
appeal, Dunaway reached her highest level of popularity in an era when
leading men were showing more "realistic" traits.
Subsequently, her glamour rubbed off on considerably less elegant types
such as Dustin Hoffman and Jack Nicholson. But Dunaway is an extremely
skilled actress who was every bit as capable as any of her costars, so
there was never any incongruity in even the least likely pairings. A
theater arts major from Boston University's School of Fine and Applied
Arts, Dunaway made her screen debut in The Happening and quickly
followed with Otto Preminger's Hurry Sundown (both 1967), immediately
drawing attention to herself. But she made the biggest impression (and
got an Academy Award nomination) in another film that year, Bonnie and
Clyde paired with Warren Beatty in a crime film that romanticized its
bankrobber protagonists and then annihilated them in an unprecedented
on-screen massacre that galvanized audiences. Most of her subsequent
1960s roles were successful but unspectacular; she played a savvy
investigator opposite jaded millionaire Steve McQueen in The Thomas
Crown Affair (1968), and the young love interest of Kirk Douglas'
adman-gonegoofy in Elia Kazan's leaden The Arrangement (1969). The 1970s
brought her a number of meaty roles, including a turn opposite Dustin
Hoffman in 1970's Little Big Man and the tragic female lead of Chinatown
(1974) opposite Jack Nicholson. Her on-set clashes with director Roman
Polanski became the stuff of Hollywood legend. Her work in the film
netted her a second Academy Award nomination. Two years later she
actually won a Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of a ruthless
network-TV executive in the outrageous satire Network (1976). She also
appeared in The Three Musketeers (1974) and The Four Musketeers (1975)
as villainous Milady de Winter; in Three Days of the Condor (1975),
sheltering hunted man Robert Redford; and in Eyes of Laura Mars (1978),
as a high-fashion photographer. Then, somehow, her career lost momentum.
The quality of her performances hadn't declined, but the quality of her
parts had. The 1980s found her laboring in the likes of The First Deadly
Sin (1980), The Wicked Lady (1983), Supergirl, (1984, a super turkey),
Ordeal by Innocence (1984), Burning Secret Midnight Crossing (both
1988), and Wait Until Spring, Bandini (1989). The decade was
redeemed-partially-by two outstanding performances: Dunaway camped it up
playing movie star and abusive mom Joan Crawford in Mommie Dearest
(1981), and took an uncharacteristically gritty turn as an alcoholic
lowlife in Barfly (1987, opposite Mickey Rourke), winning serious
critical attention again. She has worked steadily, generally in
supporting roles, since that time. She did enjoy a well-written lead
opposite Richard Widmark in a made-for-TV movie, Cold Sassy Tree (1989),
and was properly chilling as the sexless wife of Robert Duvall in The
Handmaid's Tale (1990). Recent credits include Double Edge (1992), The
Temp (1993), Arizona Dream (1995, filmed in 1991), and Don Juan DeMarco
(1995). In the fall of 1993 she made her TV sitcom debut as the star of
the short-lived "It Had to Be You." |