Catherine Keener Biography

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Overlooked by Hollywood for not possessing a classical leading lady look, dark-haired and sharp-featured Catherine Keener took an alternative route to success, carving out her niche in independent films with a series of diverse, engaging performances that have made her one of the industry’s best-kept secrets. After graduating from college, Keener found work as a casting agent, forming a close friendship with fellow casting director Gail Eisenstadt, who encouraged Keener to pursue acting and cast her in her first film role as a cocktail waitress in “About Last Night …” (1986), exhorting Rob Lowe and Jim Belushi to “Go! Go! Go!” in their drinking contest, thus earning a Screen Actors Guild card. She made her TV debut in a failed pilot (”The Alan King Show” CBS, 1986), had a brief taste of being a regular on the short-lived cop show “Ohara” (ABC, 1987-88) and acted in two 1989 flicks, the Outward Boundish “Survival Quest” (featuring future husband Dermot Mulroney) and the unpromisingly-titled “Curse of the Corn People” (CBS), which actually involved a group of Kansans making a low-budget horror film.

Following small roles in Dennis Hopper’s “Backtrack” (1990) and Blake Edwards’ “Switch” (1991), Keener received her big break as the level-headed and loving Yvonne, confronting Brad Pitt’s preening would-be pop star in cinematographer Tom DiCillo’s writing-directing debut “Johnny Suede” (also 1991), which inaugurated her longstanding collaboration with the director. Feeling she had not got near her due for that picture, DiCillo wrote a part with her in mind, filming first the self-contained short “Scene Six, Take One” (1994) before expanding it into the feature “Living in Oblivion” (1995). An insider’s look at low-budget filmmaking, it featured a wicked send-up of Pitt in the guise of James Le Gros, playing an egocentric, blond-maned star wreaking havoc on a shoestring shoot. Keener starred as an actress who, together with the inept director (Steve Buscemi), cinematographer (Mulroney) and crew, precipitates endless takes of a particularly emotional scene, and DiCillo took his shots at Pitt, showing how an all-powerful star can throw his weight around both overtly and covertly.

Keener was the girlfriend of a boxer-turned-hitman (Alan Gelfant) in “The Destiny of Marty Fine” (1995) and had a small role in Stacy Cochran’s “Boys” (1996) before Nicole Holofcener’s gal-pal film “Walking and Talking” (also 1996) gave her a strong role as a continual loser in love who must come to terms with the impending marriage of her best friend (Anne Heche). That same year, the busy actress portrayed Demi Moore’s judgmental sister-in-law in the Nancy Savoca scripted and helmed segment (”1952″) of HBO’s “If These Walls Could Talk” (in which Heche also appeared in the Cher-directed “1996″) and reunited with DiCillo for the small-town comedy “Box of Moonlight”, playing a flaky local who romances John Turturro. The following year found her back with DiCillo for “The Real Blonde”, his comic exploration of the quest for integrity in the superficial worlds of fashion advertising, rock videos and soap operas. Her job as a makeup stylist for a hotshot fashion photographer (Marlo Thomas) paid most of the bills accrued in her relationship with aspiring actor (no agent, no credits) Matthew Modine, who kept trying to resist the charms of Elizabeth Berkeley.

Keener upped her mainstream profile with a cameo as George Clooney’s former mistress in “Out of Sight” (1998), adapted from Elmore Leonard’s novel, and by portraying Nicholas Cage’s faithful wife in “8mm” (1999). In between she appeared in the ensemble of Neil LaBute’s “Your Friends & Neighbors” (also 1998), a biting look at the tangled relationships of a group of bright, endlessly loquacious urbanites. As Ben Stiller’s significant other, Keener impressed as a woman who realizes her relationship (particularly its sexual component) is not working and determines to do something about it by engaging in a lesbian affair. Enjoying a bit of role reversal in Spike Jonze’s “Being John Malkovich” (also 1999), she earned a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination as the sexy, bitchy Maxine who finds herself in a love triangle involving a puppeteer (John Cusack) and his wife (a surprisingly frumpy Cameron Diaz), the three of them absolutely gaga about being able to spend time inside Malkovich’s head. She then finished another productive year as Nick Nolte’s abandoned girlfriend whom Jeff Bridges involves in the resolution of a decades old con in “Simpatico”, Matthew Warchus’ screen adaptation of Sam Shepard’s play. In 2002, Keener was one of the high points in Steven Soderbergh’s disappointing return-to-indie-style feature “Full Frontal,” yet again creating a character with a potent combination of compelling and unsympathetic qualities. Worse for the actress was Danny DeVito’s dull and unfunny “Death to Smoochy” (2002), in which she played a TV executive caught in a war between two TV kiddie show hosts (Edward Norton and Robin Williams), and her ease at playing career women with tough exteriors veered into typecasting territory when she appeared in “S1m0ne” (2003), the tale of the success of a computer-generated actress.

Keener earned raves for her role in writer-director Rebecca Miller’s low-profile indie “The Ballad of Jack & Rose” (2005) as the girlfriend of a protective father (Daniel Day-Lewis) whose integration into the family threatens his young daughter (Camilla Bell). She then had a welcome supporting turn in the thriller “The Interpreter” (2005), playing the wisecracking partner of Sean Penn’s federal agent, before being cast in one of her most appealing roles yet as Trish, the alluring, good-natured, too-young grandmother who become the object of the sexually inexperienced Steve Carell’s affection in the hit comedy “The 40 Year-Old Virgin” (2005). Keener infused the character with a genuine warmth and middle-aged sexiness that led audiences to invest in the relationship and helped the film add a more sweet and involving element to its otherwise R-rated arsenal of sex-related jokes. She then played the pivotal role of Nelle Harper Lee in “Capote” (2005), the soon-to-be Pulitzer Prize winner of “To Kill A Mockingbird” fame who helped friend and author Truman Capote (Philip Seymour Hoffman) investigate a grisly quadruple murder in Holcomb, Kansas that became the eccentric writer’s true crime classic, In Cold Blood. Keener was nominated for several awards, including an Academy Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role.

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Lauren Graham Biography

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Lauren Helen Graham (born March 16, 1967) is an American actress. She is best known for her acting role in Gilmore Girls.

Lauren was born in Honolulu, Hawaii. When she was five, her parents divorced. Her mother, Donna Grant, moved to London to join a rock and roll band. Lauren and her father, Lawrence, moved to the D.C. area where he became a congressional staffer and single parent. She traveled extensively with her father while growing up. He is currently a lobbyist for the chocolate and confection industry.

Lauren discovered acting while in elementary school. Graham attended Langley High School, where she took part in the Drill Team which is a mix of Dance and Cheerleading. She began acting in community theatre and any other production she could find. She graduated from Barnard College/Columbia University in 1988 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English. Lauren then moved to Texas where she earned a Master’s Degree in Acting from Southern Methodist University in 1992.

After completing her education, Lauren returned to New York where she worked as a cocktail waitress and aspiring actress. In 1995, she moved to Hollywood. In addition to her many guest starring and co-starring roles on prime time TV, she had three starring roles on failed sitcoms before landing the lead role of Lorelai Gilmore on the WB’s Gilmore Girls (2000-present), for which she is best known. In addition, she has had many roles in theatrical movies, including several NYU student films and several major studio releases. She has appeared in the movies Bad Santa, The Pacifier and Sweet November. She appeared on Third Rock from the Sun as a grad student who caught the eye of Dick (John Lithgow). In addition, she has appeared on the hit comedy Seinfeld (as one of Jerry’s dates), as well as on Newsradio and Law & Order. She would like to return to the stage and hopes she will never have to do a Porky’s movie or be asked to have plastic surgery.

She is currently set to appear in the movie Evan Almighty, playing the role of Evan’s wife.

Lauren Graham is not married and lives in West Hollywood. She dated actor Tate Donovan. As of February 2006, she is dating actor Marc Blucas.

When Graham appeared on Law & Order in 1997, actor Scott Cohen also guest starred. Three years later when Graham started Gilmore Girls, Cohen became a regular on the show as Lorelai Gilmore’s boyfriend and then fiancé, Max Medina.

She dated Robert Maschio during his senior year at Columbia University and helped persuade him to try out acting as a career.

Sarah Larson: How I Met George Clooney

Sarah Larson: How I Met George Clooney From cocktail waitress to A-list girlfriend – Sarah Larson is living the dream.

Now the former Fear Factor winner is opening up about how she snagged George Clooney, one of the planet’s most eligible bachelors.

Although it’s been widely reported that the two met at the June 2007 Ocean’s Thirteen premiere at the Palms Casino Resort on Las Vegas, she says they actually met much earlier.

“It was on his birthday three or four years ago at Whiskey at [Vegas’s] Green Valley Ranch,” Larson says, according to the Las Vegas Review Journal.

The actor was with a group of pals, including Whiskey Bar owner Rande Gerber (Cindy Crawford’s husband). “I was with some friends. We were all dancing, taking pictures, being silly.”

At the time, Larson worked as a cocktail server at the venue – but she was dating someone else.

Then, when Clooney arrived in Vegas for the Ocean premiere last summer, “he heard I was working at Moon [nightclub].” The actor tracked her down, she says, and “we hung out.” A month later, he invited her to go to Italy.

Road to Romance

As their one-year anniversary approaches, Clooney and Larson can certainly look back on a very eventful year.

They’ve survived a motorcycle crash. They’ve ruled the red carpet at film festivals and the Academy Awards. And, the Review Journal reports, she’s even met his parents.

Next up for the couple? Clooney, who turns 47 next month, will whisk Larson away for a vacation at his Italian villa.

It’s a trip, she said, that could help her burgeoning modeling career. (The 28-year-old recently strutted her stuff in a swimsuit in an Ashley Paige fashion show. She also modeled a Pucci gown – and $500,00 worth of diamonds – in Los Angeles this week.) “We’ll be in Como,” she says, “which isn’t that far from Milano.”

The Leatherheads star is very supportive of her career, she added.

“Your boyfriend better be,” she noted. “If they aren’t, you gotta kick ’em in the butt and walk away.”