| Possessing an unusual beauty marked by perhaps the most distinctive set
of lips in the business (an inheritance from father Steven Tyler), Liv
Tyler unsurprisingly made her entrance into acting via the world of
modeling. Since her breakthrough role in 1996's Stealing Beauty, she has
emerged as a performer with bona fide talent, dropping her
"model-actress" hyphenate in favor of just plain
"actress." Born in Portland, Maine on July 1, 1977 to model and
former 1970s rock groupie Bebe Buell, Tyler spent most of her youth
believing that rocker Todd Rundgren was her father. However, as she grew
older, she began to notice more than a passing resemblance between herself
and Aerosmith front man Steven Tyler, who was a family friend, and she
ultimately discovered that he was indeed her biological father. When she
was twelve, she took Tyler's last name as her own. After experiencing
obligatory pre-teen awkwardness--hers featured braces and a bit of a
weight problem--Tyler had blossomed enough by the time she was 14 to
consider modeling. She moved to New York City in the company of her mother
and began to pursue a career. After appearing on the covers of magazines
like Seventeen and Mirabella, Tyler got her first taste of acting while
filming a television commercial. She made her film debut in 1994 as the
sister of an autistic boy in Bruce Beresford's Silent Fall, appearing in
the mystery alongside Richard Dreyfuss and Linda Hamilton. Following this
fairly auspicious debut, Tyler's next project, 1995's Empire Records,
proved a disappointment on both commercial and critical levels. Tyler kept
at it, next starring as the unrequited love interest of a reclusive pizza
maker (Pruitt Taylor Vince) in James Mangold's Heavy the same year. Her
work in the critically hailed film won her wide praise, and her career
began to take off. Tyler's breakthrough came the following year in
Bernardo Bertolucci's Stealing Beauty. Starring as a 19-year-old who comes
to Italy to find her father and lose her virginity, she suddenly became
Hollywood's new "It" Girl, appearing on magazine covers and as
one of People's "50 Most Beautiful" in 1997. After a lead as one
of the titular Abbott sisters in Inventing the Abbotts (1997) and a brief
cameo in U-Turn the same year, Tyler stepped into the realm of bloated
budgets and even more bloated box-office returns with her role as Bruce
Willis' daughter and Ben Affleck's girlfriend in Armageddon (1998). The
following year, she returned to the arthouse circuit with Robert Altman's
Cookie's Fortune. The film was widely praised, as was its ensemble cast,
which included Tyler, Glenn Close, Julianne Moore, Charles S. Dutton,
Chris O'Donnell, and Ned Beatty. The same year, Tyler lent her talents to
the eighteenth-century road movie genre, starring opposite Robert Carlyle
and Jonny Lee Miller in Plunkett and Macleane. She also had a leading role
as the object of Ralph Fiennes' jaded affections in Martha Fiennes'
Onegin, which premiered in September at the Toronto Film Festival. |