| The daughter of actress Tippi Hedren, Melanie Griffith experienced the
stranger by-products of fame early in life. Named after her mother's
character in Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds, Griffith was presented with a
wax replica of her mother in a miniature coffin by the black-humored
director when she was six years old. Eight years later, Griffith left the
comfortable confines of Hedren's exotic animal ranch to live with her
mother's co-star at the time, the twenty-two-year-old Don Johnson. Four
years later Griffith and Johnson were married, only to divorce a year
later. Problems with drugs and drinking almost inevitably followed,
culminating when Griffith, then 23, was hit by a car on Sunset Boulevard:
according to the hospital medics, she would have died if she hadn't been
so drunk. Griffith, who had gotten off to a promising start with films
like Night Moves (1975), began to attempt a comeback in the 1980s. She
studied acting with Stella Adler and made a distinct impression in Brian
DePalma's Body Double in 1984. Two years later, she received further
notice for her role in Something Wild, a comedy which cast her as a free
spirit opposite an uptight Jeff Daniels. In 1988, Griffith had her
greatest success to date, first appearing in Robert Redford's The Milagro
Beanfield War and then starring in Mike Nichols' Working Girl. For her
work in the latter film, in which she portrayed a young career woman
trying to conquer the New York business world, Griffith earned an Oscar
nomination and no small amount of critical respect. Unfortunately, many of
her subsequent films proved to be less than successful, starting with
Brian DePalma's widely panned adaptation of The Bonfire of the Vanities in
1990. While her acting career continued on its highs and lows, Griffith
once again wed Johnson in 1989; their second union lasted until 1996. That
same year, the actress married Spanish heartthrob Antonio Banderas
following a much-publicized romance. She went on to do some of her best
work in years in 1997 as the puffy, tragically misguided Mrs. Haze in
Adrian Lyne's adaptation of Lolita. She then took to the road playing drug
dealer James Woods' old lady in Another Day in Paradise; although the film
didn't make much of a ripple at the theatre, it did feature a particularly
memorable scene wherein Griffith injected heroin into her crotch. Also in
1998, the actress could be seen portraying a flippant movie star in Woody
Allen's Celebrity. She next stepped in front of the camera for her
husband, starring as an eccentric wanna-be actress who totes her dead
husband's head around in a hat box in Crazy in Alabama in 1999. |