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Birth Name: |
Julie Fiona Roberts |
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Birth Date: |
October 28, 1967 at 12:16 am |
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Birth Place: |
Smyrna, Georgia, USA |
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Height: |
5' 9" |
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Sex: |
F |
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Nationality: |
American |
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Profession: |
actress |
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Education: |
Fitzhugh Lee Elementary School |
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Griffin Middle School |
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Campbell High School in Smyrna,
Georgia (graduated in 1985) |
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Husband/Wife: |
Daniel Moder (cameraman; born on
January 31, 1969; met while filming The Mexican, began
dating summer 2001, married on July 4 , 2002 in Taos, New
Mexico), Lyle Lovett (singer; born on November 1, 1957;
married on June 27, 1993; divorced on March 22, 1995) |
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Relationship: |
Benjamin Bratt (actor; November
1997-June 2001), Matthew Perry (actor; dated in 1995),
Daniel Day-Lewis (actor; 1994-1995), Jason Patric (actor;
dated in 1991), Kiefer Sutherland (actor; 1990-1991), Dylan
McDermott (actor; dated in1989) |
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Father: |
Walter Roberts (actor, writer;
married in 1955; divorced in 1971; died of cancer in 1977) |
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Mother: |
Betty Lou Roberts (nιe Motes;
actress) |
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Sister: |
Lisa Roberts (actress; born in
1965) |
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Brother: |
Eric Roberts (actor; born on
April 18, 1956) |
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Half Sister: |
Nancy Motes (born on May 19,
1975) |
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Step Father: |
Michael Motes |
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Sister in law: |
Eliza Roberts (actress) |
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Son: |
Henry Daniel Moder (born in June
2007 in Los Angeles), Phinnaeus Walter Moder (born on
November 28, 2004 at a Southern California hospital; twins;
father: Daniel Moder) |
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Daughter: |
Hazel Patricia Moder (born on
November 28, 2004 at a Southern California hospital; twins;
father: Daniel Moder) |
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Claim to fame: |
as Vivian Ward in Pretty Woman
(1990) |
|
A winsome beauty with a large,
incandescent smile and a mane of hair, Julia Roberts was one of the
few bankable female stars of the 1990s whose love affair with the
public and world's press continued into the next century. Critics have
long speculated on the secret of her undeniable appeal, but it
remained one of those enigmas of contemporary pop culture. Roberts
lacked the technical polish of some of her contemporaries, but was
able to command the screen like no one else, even while surrounded by
heavy hitters like Sally Field, Denzel Washington and Susan Sarandon.
Her public life was also key to her longevity. From the trail of
broken-hearted beaus she left in her wake to her self-imposed
post-"Pretty Woman" exile to getting pregnant with twins the public
ate it all up with a spoon.
Born Oct. 28, 1967 in Smyrna, GA, Roberts originally planned to be a
veterinarian, but later studied journalism instead. She was introduced
to performing at an early age by her theatrical parents, who ran the
Atlanta-based Actors and Writers Workshop out of their home. She made
her screen debut opposite her brother Eric in "Blood Red," although
the 1986 film went unreleased for three years. Noticing that her old
brother was scoring some success in Hollywood, Roberts decided to try
acting as a career. She first gained notice starring in two
youth-oriented movies in 1988 "Mystic Pizza" and "Satisfaction"
(1988). In the former, Roberts played a memorably fiery Portuguese
waitress. Only a year or two into her new career, the young actress
earned a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination as the doomed
diabetic heroine, Shelby, of "Steel Magnolias" (1989).
With her performance as a warm-hearted prostitute who transforms cold
executive Richard Gere in Garry Marshall's saccharine but immensely
successful rags-to-riches saga, "Pretty Woman" (1990), Roberts became
one of Hollywood's most popular and bankable stars certainly its top
female and earned a surprise Best Actress Academy Award nomination.
The iconic role would forever label her America's "pretty woman"
even over a decade later. While her contribution made the routine
thrillers "Flatliners" (1990) and "Sleeping with the Enemy" (1991)
popular successes, she faltered a bit at the box office in late 1991
with the weepie romance "Dying Young." She finished the year with the
supporting role of Tinkerbell in Steven Spielberg's lavish but
disappointing update of the Peter Pan myth, "Hook." Roberts' toothsome
portrayal of the feisty fairy revealed no insights into the tiny
winged character, and she struggled gamely with the physical and
artistic rigors of doing most of her scenes alone on a special effects
soundstage. Rumors of bad blood between Roberts and Spielberg cast a
pall on the project, sending the increasingly reclusive star into a
self-imposed exile, which only fueled the press more.
It was at the peak of her early '90s fame that Roberts took an
unannounced break from acting to get her highly publicized personal
life in order. Romances with co-stars Liam Neeson, Dylan McDermott and
most notably Kiefer Sutherland whom she reportedly left for his best
friend Robert Patrick only days before the wedding all petered out,
though her romance with the odd-looking actor/singer Lyle Lovett ended
in a brief bare-footed marriage in 1993. Roberts made a cameo
appearance as herself in Robert Altman's "The Player" (1992) before
making her much ballyhooed return to the screen after two years,
reasserting her commercial magic opposite Denzel Washington in the
political thriller, "The Pelican Brief" (1993), but lost a bit of
ground opposite Nick Nolte in the middling romantic comedy, "I Love
Trouble" (1994). Her next few film roles proved spotty: she was
passable as a journalist in Robert Altman's high-fashion comedy "Ready
to Wear/Pret-a-Porter" (1994), spunky as a woman coping with marital
problems in the romantic comedy "Something to Talk About" (1995), and
dour in the period horror film "Mary Reilly" (1996), all of which
failed to find much audience favor. As Woody Allen's leading lady in
his musical comedy "Everyone Says I Love You" (1996), she fared
slightly better (and displayed a pleasant if not spectacular singing
voice). Cast opposite old beau Neeson as his love interest in Neil
Jordan's biopic of Irish revolutionary "Michael Collins" (also 1996),
Roberts gave a gallant try but was hampered by a wavering Irish
accent.
1997 saw the actress reassert her position as both America's
sweetheart and a box-office performer with her starring role in the
hit comedy, "My Best Friend's Wedding." Cast as a scheming restaurant
critic who sets out to break up the wedding of the man she thinks she
loves, Roberts turned what could have become an unsympathetic
character into an audience favorite through the sheer force of her
natural charm and vibrancy. She was abetted by Rupert Everett's
scene-stealing supporting turn as her editor and a subtle script by
Ron Bass that inverted many of the clichιs of screwball comedy.
Roberts' much-anticipated teaming with Mel Gibson in Richard Donner's
"Conspiracy Theory" (also 1997), however, proved to be somewhat
disappointing thanks to a muddled script. Ron Bass was one of several
writers who worked on the script of "Stepmom" (1998), a comedy-drama
that cast Roberts as the much younger girlfriend of a divorced man
coping with his two children and his saintly ex-wife. Most critics
dismissed the film as pap but audiences lapped it up and made it a
modest box-office success. She followed with a turn as a world-famous
movie star who falls in love with a bumbling British bookseller (Hugh
Grant) in "Notting Hill", an uneven romantic comedy, which
nevertheless, did well at the box office. The much ballyhooed
reteaming with Gere under Garry Marshall's guidance in "Runaway Bride"
(both 1999) brought out the crowds, but the film could in no way
compete with the "Pretty Woman" legacy that came before. Together
these films earned over $300 million domestically, justifying the
actress' standing as the highest paid female actor.
Just as critics thought she was all charm and no real acting chops,
Roberts took on the role of her life, essaying the real-life legal
secretary who assisted in turning a water poisoning case into one of
the largest class-action lawsuits in U.S. history, in "Erin Brockovich"
(2000). Her stellar work under the direction of Stephen Soderbergh,
earned her just about every accolade in 2001, including the Best
Actress Oscar.
After such a heavy project, Roberts returned to comedy, playing the
frustrated girlfriend of a low-level, somewhat bumbling gangster (Brad
Pitt) in the "The Mexican" (2001). Although she and Pitt were not on
screen together for very long, the pair shared a nice easy chemistry
but the actress had better rapport with James Gandolfini, as the
hitman who kidnaps her as insurance. Despite fielding many offers and
after already playing a movie star on screen, Roberts opted this time
to play the personal assistant to the movie star (Catherine
Zeta-Jones) in the disastrous, critically reviled comedy, "America's
Sweethearts" (2001). To recover from that disaster, Roberts re-teamed
with Soderbergh for a small role in his remake of "Ocean's Eleven"
(2001). Playing Tess Ocean, George Clooney's perpetually disappointed
wife, Roberts did her best to keep up with the hunky boys, including
Brad Pitt, Matt Damon and Andy Garcia. Robert's next project was also
with Soderbergh, in the non-narrative sequel to his 1989 film "Sex,
Lies and Videotape" "Full Frontal" (2002). Roberts' character,
wearing an extremely unattractive hairdo, was shockingly uninteresting
and unimportant to the story, such as it was. Worse was her limp turn
in new buddy George Clooney's directorial debut, "Confessions of a
Dangerous Mind" (2002), the supposed life story of game show
producer/host-turned-government agent Chuck Barris, in which she
played a spy femme fatale in a performance so purposefully arch as to
defy belief.
Roberts fared better in her next project, the harmless "Mona Lisa
Smile" (2003), playing Katherine Watson, a liberal-minded educator who
takes a feminist position at Wellesley in the 1950s and quickly comes
under fire for teaching her female students to aspire to something
other than marriage and kids. While the film's premise and storyline
a female spin on the familiar "Dead Poets' Society" model was
predictable, Roberts' delivered a mature and engaging performance
that, in ways different from her previous efforts, had audiences once
again rooting for her.
Just as Roberts began filming the anticipated sequel "Ocean's Twelve"
(2004), the actress, who was by then onto her second marriage to
cameraman Danny Moder, announced to the world that she was pregnant
with twins. Perhaps due to the impending birth, Roberts appeared to be
having more fun than in the first "Oceans," gamely playing off of her
pregnancy and in a harder-to-swallow plot spin her character's
uncanny resemblance to movie star Julia Roberts. Just prior to the
release of that film, Roberts made international headlines when she
gave birth to a boy and a girl, Phinnaeus and Hazel, in November,
2004. Hot on the heels of that arrival was the debut of the Mike
Nichols-directed drama "Closer" (2004), in which she played an
American photographer in London caught up in the heated, sometimes
erotic, often cruel love/sex gender war amid two shifting sets of
couples (Jude Law and Natalie Portman; Roberts and Clive Owen). The
highly literate film received excellent reviews and brought Roberts'
her best notice since "Erin Brockovich."
After taking time off to enjoy her twins and family time on her Taos,
NM ranch, Roberts returned to work this time, surprising many by
accepting a role on Broadway. In April of 2006, Roberts headlined the
Richard Greenberg drama, "Three Days of Rain," co-starring Paul Rudd
and Bradley Cooper. Although her reviews were lukewarm, the play sold
out its 12-week run, proving Roberts' appeal extended beyond the big
screen and various magazine covers. |