| Though she came to prominence in the 1980s, Kathleen Turner, with her
blend of raw sexuality, beauty, intelligence, and drive, could give golden
age sirens like Lana Turner and Ava Gardner a run for their money. After
years of working as a relative unknown in way-off Broadway productions and
in the television soap opera The Doctors, Turner burst onto the movie
scene in a star-making blaze when she was cast as femme fatale Matty
opposite William Hurt in Lawrence Kasdan's neo-noir thriller Body Heat
(1981). She continued to wreak havoc on the opposite sex throughout the
decade, appearing in a variety of popular movies that ranged from drama to
light-hearted adventure to jet-black comedy. The daughter of a U.S.
ambassador, Turner experienced a peripatetic upbringing in a fiercely
competitive environment. Living in Canada, Cuba, Washington, D.C.,
Venezuela and England, she learned to adjust to new situations at a very
young age. She later claimed the experience molded her as an actress and
taught her to constantly re-fashion herself to meet the needs of
particular situations. Turner first became conscious of wanting to be an
actress while living in England, where, during her weekly visits to the
theater, she was thrilled by the work of Diana Rigg, Christopher Plummer,
Angela Lansbury and others. While attending high school, Turner also
enrolled in classes at London's Central School of Speech and Drama. She
studied there until 1973, when her father's death forced her mother to
move the family back to her hometown of Springfield, Missouri. It was
there that Turner would take voice lessons at Southwest Missouri State
University, where she later enrolled. Finding the campus devoid of the
culture she craved, however, Turner transferred to the University of
Maryland and in 1977 graduated with a degree in theater. Following
graduation, she moved to New York and, in between waiting tables, found
work in television commercials and obscure stage productions until
deciding it was time to try Hollywood. Turner had just finished an
unsuccessful audition when, fortuitously enough, she encountered the
casting agent for Body Heat. Her subsequent portrayal of the murderous
Matty proved to be her breakthrough, and led to a series of widely varied
starring roles. For her sophomore effort, she tried her hand at comedy
with The Man With Two Brains, in which she starred opposite Steve Martin.
Again, as with her previous role, she played a woman who used her feminine
wiles to manipulate a man. In the erotic Crimes of Passion (1984), she
once more was cast as a woman using sex for manipulation, playing a
fashion designer/hooker who gets involved with a street preacher.
Understandably not wanting to get typecast by this point, Turner next
played a dowdy author who finds herself caught up in an exciting South
American adventure with dashing Michael Douglas and sleazy Danny De Vito
in Romancing the Stone (1984). The film was a smash hit and Turner found
herself a star. The following year, the trio reunited for the sequel The
Jewel of the Nile, and in 1989, they once again collaborated on The War of
the Roses, Danny DeVito's grimly funny dissection of a messy divorce.
Other high points of that period included Turner's performance as a
beautiful but ruthless hit woman in Prizzi's Honor (1985) and her
Oscar-nominated turn as a dissatisfied housewife who gets a second chance
to alter her life in Francis Ford Coppola's moving Peggy Sue Got Married
(1986). In 1988, Turner reteamed with William Hurt for a supporting role
in Kasdan's The Accidental Tourist (1988). That same year, she gave a
devastatingly sexy performance as the voice of Jessica Rabbit in Who
Framed Roger Rabbit? Unfortunately, despite these successes, Turner
subsequently had a hard time finding quality roles, and her appearances
during the early to mid-1990s were sporadic. One highlight of this period
was her turn as the completely psychotic suburban housewife who goes on a
killing spree in John Waters' funny but uneven Serial Mom (1994). In the
latter half of the 1990s, Turner began to find more quality work in films
like Moonlight and Valentino (1995) and The Real Blonde (1997). In 1999,
she could be seen starring in the children's comedy Baby Geniuses, The
Prince of Central Park and Sofia Coppola's eagerly awaited adaptation of
Jeffrey Eugenides' The Virgin Suicides, which cast Turner as the matriarch
of a profoundly dysfunctional family. |