| Former model Rene Russo's first dramatic role of note was
on the 1987 TV series Sable, in which she played Eden Kendall, the
literary agent to a children's book writer-turned-crimefighter. Her
breakthrough theatrical feature was Major League (1989), wherein the
statuesque blonde actress was saddled with portraying the
"misguided" heroine who foolishly prefers marriage with a
stable, secure lawyer over a relationship with boozing, philandering
ballplayer Tom Berenger. Since then, happily, the message conveyed by
Russo's characters has been "Don't mess with me: I can cope." In
One Good Cop (1991), she played the strongly supportive wife of police
officer Michael Keaton, who successfully tackles the sudden responsibility
of caring for the surly children of Keaton's late partner. In Lethal
Weapon 3 (1993), Russo could be seen as the karate-chopping cop who wins
the confidence (and the love) of "loose cannon" Mel Gibson by
proudly showing off her line-of-duty wounds and evincing a fascination
with the Three Stooges. In In the Line of Fire (1992), Russo was once more
partnered on an equal basis with the leading man, in this case CIA
operative Clint Eastwood; one of her best scenes featured her wired for
sound -- despite a most revealing evening gown -- at a Washington social
affair. Apparently there are still reviewers out there who can't quite
grasp the concept of a leading lady who can match her leading man blow for
blow in a tight situation. In 1995, some observers seemed surprised that
Russo, playing a radiation-suited military research operative in Outbreak,
was "as good as" her male counterparts Dustin Hoffman and Morgan
Freeman. Despite such ill-founded critical misgivings, Russo has continued
to do strong work playing strong women: the acclaimed Get Shorty (1995)
featured her as a B movie actress, while she re-teamed with Gibson for Ron
Howard's crime thriller Ransom (1996) and Lethal Weapon 4 (1998). She also
played a psychologist who puts the swing back into washed-up golfer Kevin
Costner's game in the well-received Tin Cup (1996), and generated
considerable heat as a crime investigator who hunts down and then beds
down with art thief Pierce Brosnan in the 1999 remake of The Thomas Crown
Affair. |