The
second child of two, Elizabeth Berkley was
born on July 28, 1972 in Farmington Hills, MI, where she spent
her youth. Although a
Michigan
native,
she graduated from Calabasas High School in Calabasas, CA (though
some sources site Farmington Hills as her site of graduation).
Defying later critics of her intellectual prowess, she earned a
degree in English Literature from UCLA in 1995.
Portentously, Berkley's parents enrolled
her in dance classes at the age of five. Her interest in dance eventually
led her to musicals,
which in turn led her to dramatic acting. After a brief stint as
a teen model, Elizabeth Berkley made her
TV debut in an episode of PBS' Wonderworks. Berkley first
appeared on network television in Gimme a Break! (NBC,
1981-87) and Silver
Spoons (NBC, 1982-86). A few other small roles, mostly on
TV, followed, before Berkley was cast in Saved by the Bell in
1989. Allegedly, the producers could not decide between her and Tiffani
Thiessen for the role of Kelly Kapowski, so they created the role
of Jessie Spano in order to have both women on the show.
Cashing in on the whole Beverly Hills, 90210
(Fox, 1990-2000) craze, Saved by the Bell, was the
very definition of a teen sitcom, made specifically for teens. Written
in broad,
predictable strokes, with frequent, ham-fisted attempts at discussing
real teen issues, the show and the school it encompassed was populated
essentially by stereotypes: the jock, the prom king, the pretty girl,
the nerd, etc. Berkley's Spano was the brainy, feminist/activist
girl. Much like her character would have done, when the network doubled
its order of episodes during the show's final season, Elizabeth
Berkley refused to sign a new contract, instead opting to
pursue a career
in film.
Although she did appear in several other
films that appeared at around the same time including her feature
acting debut as an uptight teenager in White Wolves II: Legend of
the Wild (released
direct to video, 1995) – none of them earned anything approaching
the notoriety of Showgirls (1995) – the film
by which she would forever be measured. She played a young stripper
named Nomi Malone who, although lacking in the intellectual and morals
department, was somewhat less so in the physical department. The
film, written by Joe Eszterhas and directed by Paul Verhoeven – the
team responsible for the titillating hit film Basic Instinct
(1992) – chronicled
the various obstacles that Malone confronted while trying to become
a Las Vegas showgirl. For its graphic violence, sex (both hetero-
and homosexual) and near-constant nudity, the film received an NC-17
rating, which it flaunted boldly and unconventionally for that period
of time.
Due to the laughingly wooden acting and a
misogynistic plot barely up to porn flick standards, Showgirls
was savaged by critics and bombed in theaters. It earned a record
13
Golden Raspberry
Award nominations awarded to the worst films of the year
- and won seven times. Nevertheless, it eventually
found a place as a cult favorite and the subject of a hilarious drinking
game. Although her reputation was unjustly damaged far more than
the men actually responsible for putting the trainwreck of a film
on screen her agent even dropped her Elizabeth
Berkley's career managed to weather the storm,
even if Showgirls did not catapult her to the A-list as Basic Instinct
had done for Sharon Stone.
|
| |
 |
Actress
Teri Hatcher Desperate Housewives
Teri Hatcher began her performing
career as a young girl taking ballet lessons at the San
Juan Girls' Ballet Studio in downtown Los Altos, California.
She later studied acting at the American Conservatory Theater.
One of her early jobs (in 1984) was as a cheerleader with
the San Francisco 49ers. Teri
Hatcher Bio and Photos |
| |
|
 |
Actress
Erica Durance Smallville
Born in Calgary, Erica Durance was raised in Three Hills, Alberta. After
graduating from high school, Durance moved to Vancouver, British Columbia,
to pursue her interest in acting professionally. "I wanted to get
my feet wet in a smaller area than Los Angeles when I gave it a try",
Durance has said. Erica
Durance Bio and Photos |
| |
|
 |
Movie
and Television Actress Alyssa Milano
In 1983, at age 10, she landed her breakthrough role on the new sitcom "Who's
the Boss?" as Tony Danza's saccharine sweet daughter, Samantha Micelli,
a kid whose native Brooklyn accent rivaled her TV dad's. Alyssa
Milano Bio and Photos |
| |
|
 |
Movie
Actress Cameron Diaz
Cameron Diaz left school at 16 to become a model. For the next five years,
she traveled the globe, working in Japan, Australia, Mexico, Morocco, and
Paris. As a model for the Elite Agency, she did commercial work for such
products as Coke, Nivea, and L.A. Gear. Cameron
Diaz Bio and Photos |
| |
|
 |
Movie
Actress Reese Witherspoon
Reese Witherspoon has been featured
four times in the annual "100 Most Beautiful" issues
of People magazine. In 2007, she was selected by People
and the entertainment news program Access Hollywood as
one of the best dressed female stars of the year. Reese
Witherspoon Bio and Photos |
| |
|
 |
Movie
Actress Jessica Alba
Jessica Alba's first film role,
in the 1994 film Camp Nowhere, came her way by chance.
She was cast with a bit part in the film after one of the
characters dropped out of the production. Dark-haired Jessica
was cast as the replacement, thanks to the fact that her
hair matched that of the original actress. Jessica
Alba Photos |
| |
|
 |
Television
Actress Jennifer Love Hewitt
Jennifer Love Hewitt has been in
front of the camera ever since she was nine when she joined
a Show Team in Texas, this was a dance team that traveled
to Russia and Denmark. When she was ten she was an international
spokesperson for LA Gear shoes. Jennifer
Hewitt Bio and Pictures |
|