Willowy, Oscar®-nominated actress Jill Clayburgh rose to
prominence in the mid-seventies as the modern and complex
heroine of such dramas as "An Unmarried Woman" (1978) and
"Starting Over" (1979). Her star declined in the 1980s, during
which she concentrated on motherhood and independent features,
but she returned to performing in the late 1990s and early 2000s
in a string of feature films - most notably as the sympathetic
adoptive mother of Augusten Burroughs in the movie version of
his best-selling memoir, "Running with Scissors" (2006) - as
well as a series of television projects, most notably as the
matriarch of the wealthy Darling family in ABC's hit drama,
"Dirty Sexy Money" (2007-2009).
Born in New York City, NY on April 30, 1944, Clayburgh's mother
was the production secretary to theatre impresario David
Merrick, while her father, Albert Henry "Bill" Clayburgh, was a
manufacturing executive. Clayburgh's childhood was a wealthy and
privileged one; she attended the exclusive Brearley School and
later Sarah Lawrence College, where she developed an interest in
acting. While still an undergraduate, she made her film debut as
a bride-to-be alongside a young Robert De Niro in "The Wedding
Party" (1963), which also marked Brian De Palma's first credit
as a director. The film was not released to theaters until 1969,
when De Niro was beginning to gain notice for his theater and
early film work.
Clayburgh pursued summer stock at the Williamstown Theater
Festival while in college, later taking up residency at the
Charles Street Repertory Theater in Boston, MA, where she met
fellow up-and-coming actor Al Pacino, with whom she was involved
for much of the early 1970s. She made her Off-Broadway debut in
1968 in "The Sudden and Accidental Re-Education of Horse
Johnson," and logged a year (1969-1970) on the daytime soap
"Search for Tomorrow" (CBS/NBC, 1951-1986) before making her
debut on the Great White Way in the original productions of "The
Rothschilds" (1970) and "Pippin" (1972). After landing an
uncredited bit part in the cult film "The Telephone Book"
(1971), Clayburgh made her major motion picture debut in the
much-disliked film version of Philip Roth's "Portnoy's
Complaint" (1972).
Her next few features gave her limited screen time in supporting
roles - she was Ryan O'Neal's wife in "The Thief Who Came to
Dinner" (1973), and a victim of brain surgery
candidate-turned-killer George Segal in Michael Crichton's "The
Terminal Man" (1974). But an Emmy-nominated turn as a hooker who
introduces reporter Lee Remick to the world of high-class
prostitution in the 1975 TV-movie "Hustling" earned her the
attention of critics and viewers, as did her dim portrayal of
screen legend Carole Lombard in "Gable and Lombard" (1976) and
the 1976 TV movie "Griffin and Phoenix: A Love Story," in which
she and Peter Falk played terminally ill lovers. Her combination
of beauty and talent was soon placing her at the top of casting
agents' lists for female leads, which led to her appearing in
two major features - as Gene Wilder's love interest in the
comedy-thriller "Silver Streak" (1976) and the daughter of a
football team owner caught in a love triangle with two players -
Burt Reynolds and Kris Kristofferson - in "Semi-Tough" (1977).
Both films were respectable hits, and Clayburgh's star status
was quickly on the rise.
1978 was Clayburgh's year, thanks to her starring role in Paul
Mazursky's "An Unmarried Woman," a comedy-drama that attempted
to capture both the zeitgeist of 1970s New York and the
experience of a woman as she searches for love and identity
after the collapse of her marriage. Critics were knocked out by
Clayburgh's portrayal of a realistic female character, awarding
her an Oscar nomination as well as the Best Actress Award at the
Cannes Film Festival. She stumbled a bit with a risky role in
Bernardo Bertolucci's "La Luna" (1979) as an opera singer who
dallies with incest in an attempt to draw her son away from a
life of drug addiction, but recovered by re-teaming with Burt
Reynolds in "Starting Over" (1979), a comedy about a divorced
man who must choose between his ex-wife (Candice Bergen) and a
new love interest (Jill Clayburgh). Both actresses received
Oscar nods for their performances.
Clayburgh also returned to the stage that year in a revival of
David Rabe's "In the Boom Boom Room." In addition to landing the
lead role of Chrissy, a naïve go-go dancer struggling to
navigate through a string of bad relationships and emotional
upheavals, offstage, she married Rabe, with whom she had two
children, daughter Lily (born 1982) and son Michael (born 1986).
Her playwright husband later penned the script for her 1982
film, "I'm Dancing As Fast As I Can," which was based on author
Barbara Gordon's experiences with Valium addiction, earning
Clayburgh some of her best reviews to date.
Clayburgh's third and final film as the emblematic single woman
of the 1970s and 1980s came with "It's My Turn" (1980), in which
she played a successful math professor who falls for Michael
Douglas, the son of her father's new wife. She then segued into
a Golden Globe-nominated role as a conservative Supreme Court
appointee who butts heads with an older and more liberal judge
(Walter Matthau) in the film version of "First Monday in
October" (1981), the acclaimed stage play about political
opponents on the Supreme Court by Jerome Lawrence and Robert K.
Lee of "Inherit the Wind" fame. The picture would be Clayburgh's
last box office success for some time.
She received her first negative reviews for Costa-Gavras'
muddled Middle Eastern drama "Hannah K." (1983), which drew fire
from critics for its controversial pro-Palestine stance.
Clayburgh countered by focusing her energy on her family and the
occasional television project, including "Where Are the
Children" (1986), based on the Mary Higgins Clark thriller, and
Andrei Konchalovsky's "Shy People" (1987), about a journalist
(Clayburgh) who meets her bayou resident cousin (Barbara
Hershey). The rest of the eighties found the former A-list
actress completely flying under the radar.
Her output increased during the 1990, with television remaining
her format of choice, but there was also the occasional feature
like the psychological thriller "Whispers in the Dark" (1992)
and "Rich in Love" (1994), with Clayburgh as a Southern
matriarch who abandons her eccentric family. On television, she
played actress Jill Ireland in "Reason For Living: The Jill
Ireland Story" (1991), which recounted her struggle with cancer,
and the ill-fated Kitty Menendez in "Honor Thy Mother and
Father: The True Story of the Menendez Murders" (1994). She also
began appearing in episodes of popular series like "Law and
Order" (NBC, 1990- ), as an unscrupulous lawyer, and "Ally
McBeal" (Fox, 1997-2002) as Calista Flockhart's mother.
Clayburgh also tried her hand as a series regular on three
short-lived shows - the Emmy-winning drama "Trinity" (NBC,
1990), the dysfunctional family sitcom "Everything's Relative"
(NBC, 1999), and the much-reviled "Leap of Faith" (NBC,
2002).
Clayburgh received an Emmy nomination in 2005 for her turn as a
dissatisfied liposuction patient who causes trouble for the
plastic surgery team of Troy/McNamara on "Nip/Tuck" (FX, 2003-
). That same year, she returned to Broadway in a critically
dismissed revival of Neil Simon's "Barefoot in the Park" as
Amanda Peet's mother. "Nip/Tuck" creator Ryan Murphy was so
impressed with the now character actress that he also tapped her
to play the depressed adoptive mother of Augusten Burroughs in
his film version of the author's best-selling memoir, "Running
with Scissors" (2006) - in which she was often cited as the best
thing about the depressing, bizarre film. She also starred as
Pat Nixon in "Dirty Tricks" (2008), about the life of Martha
Mitchell, wife of Richard Nixon's Attorney General, John
Mitchell. In 2008, she joined the cast of the sudsy drama "Dirty
Sexy Money" (ABC) as the female head of a wealthy and
unscrupulous family. Clayburgh died of Leukemia on Nov.6, 2010.
Biographical data provided by TCMdb
Jill Clayburgh 1944-2010 - TCM Remembers Jill Clayburgh, 1944-2010
November 06, 2010
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