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Biography: Named after the Norse god of thunder, Thora was born in Los Angeles to Jack and Carol Birch (they kept up the tempestuous theme by naming her younger brother Bolt). By age 4 she was a regular at commercial auditions, and by 6 she'd landed a spot on the short-lived daycare sitcom "Day by Day" (1988). Her film career got off to an auspicious start that same year, when she won a Young Artist Award for her debut opposite Neil Patrick Harris in the kiddie fantasy flick Purple People Eater (1988). After a short break, she picked up a role in another fleeting sitcom, "Parenthood" (1990) (based on the movie of the same name). By age 9, Birch had her life pretty much figured out--she told the L.A. Times that she planned to become a director by 24, then spend a year ice skating, then spend a year as a policewoman, and, finally, become a singer. She picked up her last name (early appearances credited her as just "Thora") and returned to the big screen as Elijah Wood's tomboy friend in Paradise (1991). She then scored a high-profile supporting role as Harrison Ford's daughter in Patriot Games (1992), which she reprised in Clear and Present Danger (1994). In between, she kept busy with family flicks Hocus Pocus (1993) and Monkey Trouble (1994). In 1995, Birch graduated into adolescent territory with her turn as a younger Melanie Griffith in Now and Then. She followed that up with a top-billed role in the snowy adventure Alaska (1996). After that she took a three-year hiatus from acting. She resurfaced in 1999, first in the made-for-TV Night Ride Home (1999) (TV) and then, more visibly, in American Beauty (1999). Birch had heard about 'Beauty' through the industry grapevine, and she immediately set her sights on the part of Jane Burnham. As it turned out, she was the first to audition for director Sam Mendes; while he saw dozens of other actresses for the role, none delivered a more convincing Jane. Still reeling from her sudden celebrity status, Birch plucked a handful
of diverse projects from the deluge of post-‘Beauty’ scripts.
Seeking an even edgier adolescent role, she appeared as a punk-rocker
in the indie film The Smokers (2000), then dropped the tough-girl pose
to play the gentle Empress Savina in the live-action adaptation of Dungeons
& Dragons (2000). She also signed up to play a teen hipster caught
up in a post-high school identity crisis in Ghost World (2001) (based
on the graphic novel), and an English schoolgirl in the thriller The Hole
(2001). Style-conscious and sophisticated beyond her years, Birch lives
on her family's East L.A. ranch (where she recently finished high school
through a computer-based correspondence course). She still hopes to try
her hand at directing someday, but for now she's content to continue blossoming
in front of the camera. |
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