Shirley MacLaine
Shirley MacLaine (born
Shirley MacLean Beaty April 24,
1934) is an
Academy Award-winning
American actress, well-known not only for her acting, but for her devotion to her belief in
reincarnation. She is also the writer of a large number of
autobiographical works, many dealing with her
new age beliefs, such as
solipsism, as well as her
Hollywood career. She is the older sister of
Warren Beatty (Beatty changed his name from 'Beaty' to 'Beatty').
MacLaine was born in
Richmond, Virginia to an
American father of
English descent and a Canadian mother of
Irish and
Scottish ancestry. Her family followed the
Baptist faith. MacLaine grew up in
Waverly, Virginia, graduated from
high school and moved to
New York City to live out her dream of being a
Broadway actress.
She achieved her goal when she became understudy to actress
Carol Haney in
The Pajama Game; Haney broke her ankle, and MacLaine replaced her.
A few months thereafter, with Haney still out of commission, director-producer
Hal B. Wallis was in the audience, took note of MacLaine, and signed her to go to
Hollywood to work for
Paramount Pictures.
She would later sue Wallis over a contractual dispute, a suit that is credited with having ended the old-style studio system of actor management.
Her first film was the
Alfred Hitchcock film
The Trouble with Harry in
1955. Her film career is now in its fifth decade. MacLaine was nominated for the
Academy Award for
Best Actress in a Leading Role five times: in
1958 for
Some Came Running, in
1960 for
The Apartment, in
1963 for
Irma La Douce, in
1977 for
The Turning Point and in
1983 for
Terms of Endearment (which she finally won). In
1975, she also received a nomination for
Best Documentary Feature for her documentary
The Other Half of the Sky: A China Memoir. She recently appeared as the maternal grandmother to
Cameron Diaz and
Toni Collette in
In Her Shoes.
MacLaine was married to businessman Steve Parker until 1982. They had a daughter, Sachi Parker (b. 1956). Shirley filed for divorce after she learned (through her spiritual guide) that Steve had lied to her about his childhood in Japan, and that he had transferred all her money into the bank account of his Japanese mistress over the years.
In political circles, MacLaine is known for her former relationship with
Andrew Peacock, a former
Australian
Liberal Party Prime Ministerial asiprant who was later appointed as Ambassador to the United States. She also has a close friendship with Ohio
congressman,
Dennis Kucinich, who was a candidate in the 2004
Democratic presidential primary.
MacLaine found her way into many
law school casebooks when she sued
Twentieth Century-Fox for
breach of contract. She was to play a role in a film titled,
Bloomer Girl, but the production was cancelled.
Twentieth Century-Fox offered her a role in another film,
Big Country, Big Man, in hopes of getting out of its contractual obligation to pay her for the cancelled film. MacLaine's refusal led to an appeal by Twentieth Century-Fox to the
Supreme Court of California in 1970, where the Court ruled against them.
Parker v. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., 474 P.2d 689 (Cal. 1970).
The Trouble with Harry (
1955)
Artists and Models (
1955)
Around the World in Eighty Days (
1956)
The Sheepman (
1958)
The Matchmaker (
1958)
Hot Spell (
1958)
Some Came Running (
1958) – Academy Award nomination for Best Actress
Ask Any Girl (
1959)
Premier Khrushchev in the USA (
1959) (documentary)
Career (
1959)
Can-Can (
1960)
The Apartment (
1960) – Academy Award nomination for Best Actress
Ocean's Eleven (
1960) (Cameo)
All in a Night's Work (
1961)
Two Loves (
1961)
The Children's Hour (
1961)
My Geisha (
1962)
Two for the Seesaw (
1962)
Irma la Douce (
1963) – Academy Award nomination for Best Actress
What a Way to Go! (
1964)
The Yellow Rolls-Royce (
1964)
The Car That Became a Star (
1965) (short subject)
John Goldfarb, Please Come Home (
1965)
Gambit (
1966)
|
MacLaine on the cover of Time |
Woman Times Seven (
1967)
The Bliss of Mrs. Blossom (
1968)
Sweet Charity (
1969)
Two Mules for Sister Sara (
1970)
Desperate Characters (
1971)
The Possession of Joel Delaney (
1972)
Year of the Woman (
1973) (documentary)
The Other Half of the Sky: A China Memoir (
1975) (documentary) (also producer, writer, and director) – Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary Feature
The Turning Point (
1977) – Academy Award nomination for Best Actress
Being There (
1979)
Loving Couples (
1980)
A Change of Seasons (
1980)
Want to Be Beautiful (
1981) (documentary)
Terms of Endearment (
1983) – Academy Award for Best Actress
Cannonball Run II (
1984)
Madame Sousatzka (
1988)
Steel Magnolias (
1989)
Waiting for the Light (
1990)
Postcards from the Edge (
1990)
Defending Your Life (
1991) (Cameo)
Used People (
1992)
Wrestling Ernest Hemingway (
1993)
A Century of Cinema (
1994) (documentary)
Guarding Tess (
1994)
The Celluloid Closet (
1995) (documentary)
Mrs. Winterbourne (
1996)
The Evening Star (
1996)
A Smile Like Yours (
1997)
Get Bruce (
1999) (documentary)
Bruno (
2000) (also director)
These Old Broads (
2001)
Broadway, the Golden Age: By the Legends Who Were There (
2003) (documentary)
Carolina (
2003)
Bewitched (
2005)
In Her Shoes (
2005)
Rumor Has It (
2005) Upcoming:
Broadway: Beyond the Golden Age (
2007) (documentary)
Closing the Ring (2007)
Shirley's World (
1971-
1972)
Out on a Limb (
1987)
The West Side Waltz (
1995)
Joan of Arc (miniseries) (
1999)
These Old Broads (
2001)
Hell on Heels: The Battle of Mary Kay (
2002)
Salem Witch Trials (
2002) (miniseries)
*
1984 - Won
Best Actress in a Leading Role -
Terms of Endearment*
1978 - Nominated Best Actress in a Leading Role -
The Turning Point*
1976 - Nominated
Best Documentary, Features -
The Other Half of the Sky: A China Memoir*
1964 - Nominated Best Actress in a Leading Role -
Irma la Douce*
1961 - Nominated Best Actress in a Leading Role -
The Apartment*
1959 - Nominated Best Actress in a Leading Role -
Some Came RunningShe was named after
Shirley Temple.
MacLaine has a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1615 Vine Street.
*
Shirley's Official Website