| Screen siren, opinionated diva, and one of the few
actresses in Hollywood who can claim to be both a Paul Verhoeven muse and
a MENSA member, Sharon Stone is nothing if not a legend in her own right.
Beginning with her notorious disinclination to wear underwear during a
police interrogation in Basic Instinct, Stone went on to become one of the
most talked-about actresses of the 1990s, earning both admiration and
infamy for her on- and off-screen personae. Almost as famous as Stone's
glamorous image are her working class roots. Born in the Northwest
Pennsylvania town of Meadville on March 10, 1958, Stone grew up a bookworm
in a large family. Highly intelligent in addition to being a local beauty
pageant queen, she won a scholarship to Pennsylvania's Edinboro University
when she was fifteen. After studying creative writing and fine arts, she
decided to pursue a modeling career, and, after moving to New York, she
signed on with the Eileen Ford agency. Stone became a successful model by
the late 1970s, appearing in print and television ads for Clairol, Revlon,
and Diet Coke. In 1980, Stone branched out into acting, making her screen
debut as the "pretty girl on train" in Woody Allen's Stardust
Memories. Following this role, she spent the 1980s appearing in one
forgettable film after another, often cast as the stereotypical blonde
bimbo. She finally got a break in 1990, when she appeared as Arnold
Schwarzenegger's kickboxing secret agent wife in Verhoeven's Total Recall.
Any recognition she gained for that role, however, was more than eclipsed
by the notoriety she earned for her starring turn in her second Verhoeven
feature, Basic Instinct. The 1992 film, in which Stone portrayed a
bisexual author/sexual adventurer who may or may not be a serial killer,
did her a huge favor by making her a star, but also a sizable disservice
by further typecasting her in blonde seductress roles. Stone's subsequent
effort, the erotic thriller Sliver (1993), was an example of this: the
actress attracted notice less for her acting than for her willingness to
simulate masturbation. Her role in the following year's The Specialist was
also fairly limiting; an action flick co-starring Sylvester Stallone, it
called for Stone to run around in a tight dress in heels when she wasn't
seducing various characters. In 1995, Stone managed to break into the
"serious actress" arena with her performance in Martin
Scorsese's Casino. Cast as an ex-prostitute, she won an Oscar nomination
and a Golden Globe for her work, as well as the general opinion that she
was capable of more than making the camera her gynecologist. Stone
branched out further that same year with The Quick and the Dead, a
revisionist western directed by Sam Raimi in which she starred as a
tough-talking, hard-drinking broad bent on revenge. Unfortunately, the
film was a relative flop, as were here subsequent 1996 films, Diabolique,
a remake of the 1954 French film, and Last Dance, a drama that featured
Stone as a woman on death row. By this point winning more notice for her
off-screen role as an arbiter of fashion and old-school Hollywood glamour
than for her on-screen acting work, Stone next lent her voice to the
animated Antz in 1998. The film proved to be a success, unlike the
actress's other projects that year, the sci-fi thriller Sphere and The
Mighty. The latter film, which Stone produced as well as starred in, was a
heartfelt story about two adolescent misfits; although it did win a number
of positive reviews, audiences largely stayed away from it. The same
couldn't be said of Stone's next film, a 1999 remake of Gloria: not only
did audiences stay away from it, critics savaged it with vituperative
glee. Never one to let a bad review get her down, Stone soon rebounded,
receiving a more positive reception for her performance in The Muse and
starring as Nick Nolte's long-suffering wife in Simpatico. |