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Brittany Murphy Biography:
Brittany Murphy first came to the attention
of film audiences when she starred as Tai, one of Alicia Silverstone's
airhead friends in the 1995 comedy Clueless. After making her name as
this dim bulb character, Murphy went on to prove that she was anything
but clueless with a number of television and film roles that gave expression
to the scope of her talent and versatility.
Born in Atlanta on November 10,
1977, Murphy was raised by her mother in Edison, New Jersey. A precocious
child who began putting on shows when she was a toddler, Murphy was acting
in regional theatre productions by the age of nine.
Work in various commercials followed,
and in 1990 she landed her first television role, on the sitcom Blossom.
She then went on to a lead on the short-lived sitcom Drexell's Class in
1991, and the following year she made her film debut in the dysfunctional
family drama Family Prayers. Murphy's talent for portraying all sorts
of dysfunction was further exhibited in such films as Clueless; the Reese
Witherspoon trailer trash odyssey Freeway (1996); and the made-for-TV
David and Lisa (1998). Murphy won particular acclaim for her work in the
last film; the story of two emotionally troubled teens (Murphy and Lukas
Haas) that reach out to each other allowed the actress to prove herself
in a purely dramatic role.
In 1999, Murphy could again be
seen portraying an emotionally damaged character in Girl, Interrupted,
in which she played a patient at a mental institution. That same year,
she explored the collective insanity of the beauty pageant world in Drop
Dead Gorgeous, playing a pageant contestant who'd rather be living it
up in New York with her cross-dressing brother. On the small screen that
year, she switched to darker fare with the Holocaust drama The Devil's
Arithmetic. With her plate increasingly full moving into the new millennium,
Murphy could be seen in the both the Michael Douglas thriller Don't Say
a Word, and alongside Drew Barrymore in Riding in Cars With Boys in 2001.
Cast opposite Eminem in director Curtis Hanson's 2002 drama, 8 Mile, Murphy
provided a compelling performance as an aspiring rap star's unapologetic
muse before starting 2003 on a lighter note with the comedy Just Married.
In addition to the praise she
has received for her film portrayals, Murphy has won a different sort
of acclaim for the work she has done on the animated TV series King of
the Hill. As the voice of the Hills' beauty school sex kitten niece Luanne,
the actress earned the kind of recognition that can only come from an
animated character who was named one of the sexiest women on television
by a major men's magazine.
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