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Daryl Hannah Biography:
Daryl Christine Hannah was born December 3rd, 1960, in Chicago, Illinois.
As a child, she was diagnosed as almost autistic. According to her sister,
actress Page Hannah, Daryl was a "very private, rather dreamy person
with a 'Please Knock' sign on the door and parakeets and hamsters running
loose inside."
Daryl has suffered from insomnia since a very early age, which encouraged
her to escape into the world of movies as a young girl.
Her parents divorced when she was in the first grade. After they remarried,
Daryl was eventually one of eight children (including half-siblings and
step-siblings), consisting of seven girls and a brother, Don. Her uncle,
Haskell Wexler, was a filmmaker who won two Oscars for his work as a cinematographer.
In high school, Daryl played soccer on the boys' team because there was
no soccer team for girls. Before deciding to pursue acting, she practiced
ballet with Maria Tallchief. She then switched to drama, studying at Chicago's
Goodman Theater.
Hannah made her screen debut in the 1978 Brian De Palma thriller The Fury,
when she was just 17. It was only a small part, but it gave her the incentive
to further her dramatic training. She studied with Stella Adler and graduated
from the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.
Following her graduation, she played Kim Basinger's younger sister in
1981's Hard Country. In 1982, she co-starred in Summer Lovers, but it
was another film from the same year that made audiences sit up and take
notice of the young actress. As Pris, the seductive, pleasure-model "replicant" in Ridley Scott's futuristic detective story Blade Runner, Hannah was
perfectly cast as the statuesque, sexy android.
Also in 1982, Daryl began a ten-year, on-again, off-again relationship
with singer/songwriter Jackson Browne. During this period, she occasionally
played keyboards and sang backup with his band in the studio and on stage.
If people took notice of her for her supporting role as Pris, then it's
fair to say that her next role made her a star. Appearing opposite Tom
Hanks in Ron Howard's 1984 romantic comedy Splash, Hannah demonstrated
her versatility and comedic flair as Madison the mermaid.
Appearances in some more films that year solidified her status as a rising
new talent: She played a student who gets involved with a motorcycle riding
loner in Reckless, and Mickey Rourke's girlfriend in The Pope of Greenwich
Village. Further pointing to her potential as a rising actress, Hannah
was selected as one of 12 "Promising New Actors of 1984" in
John Willis' Screen World.
Despite her sudden popularity and acclaim, Hannah's next few film appearances
didn't ignite audiences or critics alike. In 1986's The Clan of the Cave
Bear, she portrayed a Cro-Magnon cavegirl, but few people actually saw
the film. She followed this up by playing a performance artist in the
comedy Legal Eagles, co-starring Robert Redford, and then as an interior
designer in Oliver Stone's 1987's critically-acclaimed Wall Street.
Many critics felt that her best performance since Splash came when she
portrayed the title role in the 1987 romantic comedy Roxanne, starring
Steve Martin in a contemporary retelling of Cyrano de Bergerac. The following
year she was featured alongside acting legend Peter O'Toole in High Spirits,
where she played a lonely ghost.
Hannah was teamed with some big-name actresses in 1989's Steel Magnolias
and was highly praised for her portrayal of a Southern hairdresser. She
also got to work with Woody Allen that same year, appearing in Crimes
and Misdemeanors.
1989 was also the year Daryl Hannah made headlines regarding her new love
interest. She began a serious relationship with John F. Kennedy, Jr.,
whom she dated on and off until 1994. The couple never wed, allegedly
due to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis' disapproval of her son marrying an
actress.
Hannah next portrayed a fragile mental patient in the 1990 black comedy
Crazy People. In 1991's At Play in the Fields of the Lord, she played
a missionary's wife. She returned to comedy, as Chevy Chase's mixed-up
love interest in 1992's Memoirs of an Invisible Man.
Daryl Hannah's next project was a giant achievement for the actress (literally);
she co-produced and starred in the title role of the made-for-TV film
Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman in 1993. She also played Jack Lemmon's daughter
in Grumpy Old Men that same year.
The following year, she was honored at the Berlin International Film Festival.
Hannah wrote, produced and directed The Last Supper, and received the
Jury Award for Best Short. She revised her role as Jack Lemmon's daughter
in the sequel Grumpier Old Men and co-starred in the drama The Ties That
Bind, both in 1995.
Daryl Hannah played an adult film actress trying to break into legitimate
films in 1997's The Last Days of Frankie the Fly, co-starring Dennis Hopper
and Kiefer Sutherland. In Robert Altman's The Gingerbread Man, she was
given the opportunity to really act again, portraying a mentally off-center
housewife.
Hannah learned the art of the striptease for her role in 2000's Dancing
at the Blue Iguana. She demonstrated her pole-dancing skills on The Tonight
Show, but hasn't yet joined the growing list of Hollywood ladies who've
installed a stripping pole in their homes.
In the fall of 2000, Hannah conquered her lifelong fear of the live stage
when she starred in the London production of The Seven Year Itch. She
reprised Marilyn Monroe's part from the 1955 film of the same name, receiving
mixed reviews from critics.
More roles in smaller, indie films followed, including Jackpot and Ring
of Fire in 2001, and Run for the Money in 2002. She recently portrayed
Shane West's mother in the teen flick A Walk to Remember starring Mandy
Moore and will next be seen in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill.
After her highly publicized romance with John F. Kennedy, Jr., Daryl Hannah
has been romantically linked with her Run for the Money castmate Val Kilmer
and magician David Blaine.
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Daryl
Quotes:
"I don't have a pole at home -- but there's something in my
barn that functions as one."[after "working" undercover
as a stripper while preparing for a role.]
“A movie camera is like having someone you have a crush on
watching you from afar -- you pretend it's not there.”
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