| Georgia-born Kim Basinger studied dancing and singing from
childhood, intending to make her professional bow as a musical comedy
performer. While still a high schooler, Basinger left for New York to
pursue a career as a model; her blonde hair and beautiful, pliable
features were equally suited to the demureness of Breck's home-permanent
ads and the more revelatory requirements of Playboy magazine. After
studying acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse, she made her starring debut
in the 1978 TV-movie Katie: Portrait of a Centerfold. The reviews were
kind but condescending, noting that as an actress, Basinger was very
pretty. Basinger countered her critics with an excellent performance as
prostitute Lorene Rogers in the 1979 TV miniseries From Here to Eternity,
which led to plum acting assignments in theatrical features. She became
best-known during the 1980s for her work in such films as the Bond flick
Never Say Never Again (1983), The Natural (1984), Batman (1989), and,
perhaps most infamously, in Adrian Lyne's 9 1/2 Weeks (1986). Successfully
dissipating the standard "dumb blonde" onus often attached to
models-turned-actresses of the decade, Basinger was an active
environmentalist offscreen, and in 1989 she endeared herself to the
Georgia chamber of commerce by purchasing a small village not far from her
home town of Athens and attempting to pump up the local economy. Much of
the laudatory press enjoyed by Basinger and her actor husband Alec Baldwin
was scuttled during the troubled filming of 1991's The Marrying Man,
wherein the couple allegedly comported themselves in an unprofessional a
manner. This storm subsided, but within a year the actress made headlines
again due to a costly lawsuit. Determining that Basinger's verbal
agreement to appear in the film Boxing Helena was legal and binding, a
judge ordered the actress, who'd pulled out of the project, to pay
$8,000,000 in damages to the film's producers. Recast with Sherilyn Fenn,
Boxing Helena proved to be just as disastrous as Basinger feared, and
after she was forced to declare bankruptcy, her appeal was accepted by the
court. In 1997, following a few more years of career difficulties,
Basinger surprised observers with one of the year's most triumphant
comebacks. For her role as a hooker with a heart in Curtis Hanson's
lavishly praised L.A. Confidential, she won both the Oscar and Golden
Globe for Best Supporting Actress, as well as renewed critical respect.
Two years later, she combined her onscreen career with her offscreen
committment to environmental causes with her portrayal of real-life
wildlife preservationist Kuki Gallmann in Hugh Hudson's I Dreamed of
Africa. |