| Largely underappreciated for years in Hollywood before her
Oscar-nominated turn as the First Lady in Nixon (1995), Joan Allen has had
a distinguished career encompassing the stage, screen, and television. A
native of Rochelle, Illinois, where she was born August 20, 1956, the
blond, swanlike actress developed an interest in acting while in high
school. Voted Most Likely to Succeed by her senior class, Allen went on to
study theatre at Northern Illinois University. She then moved to Chicago,
where she became one of the founding members of the vaunted Steppenwolf
Theatre Company, along with such respected talents as Gary Sinise and John
Malkovich. Allen made her screen debut with a small role in the 1985 film
Compromising Positions and a year later played two wildly different
characters in Manhunter and Peggy Sue Got Married. Her portrayals of a
tragically confused young woman who attempts to seduce a serial killer in
the former film and a brainy high school student in the latter impressed a
number of critics, but it was on the stage that Allen was most
appreciated. In 1988, she won a Tony award for her Broadway debut
performance in Burn This, and a year later she earned her second Tony
nomination for her role in Wendy Wasserstein's highly acclaimed The Heidi
Chronicles. Following increasingly substantial roles in such films as In
Country (1989), Ethan Frome (1992), and Searching for Bobby Fischer
(1993), Allen won a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for her
stunning portrayal of First Lady Pat Nixon in Oliver Stone's Nixon. The
acclaim surrounding her performance in the 1995 film finally gave Allen
the Hollywood recognition she deserved; the following year this
recognition was further enhanced with her Oscar-nominated turn as the
long-suffering Elizabeth Proctor in Nicholas Hytner's adaptation of The
Crucible. More praise came Allen's way in 1997, when she headlined a
stellar ensemble cast in Ang Lee's lauded adaptation of Rick Moody's The
Ice Storm. Starring as a troubled upper middle-class Connecticut housewife
alongside the likes of Kevin Kline, Sigourney Weaver, Christina Ricci, and
Tobey Maguire, Allen gave repression a stirring, beautifully nuanced name.
That same year she went in a completely different direction, starring as
the wife of an FBI agent (John Travolta) in John Woo's popular action
thriller Face/Off. Allen returned to the realm of the repressed housewife
in 1998, starring (and reuniting with Maguire) in the acclaimed 1950s-set
comedy drama Pleasantville. |