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Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Born Today- Hilary Swank- wikipedia

Hilary Swank

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hilary Swank
Life Ball 2013 - magenta carpet Hilary Swank 03.jpg
Swank on the 'magenta carpet' at Life Ball 2013 in Vienna, Austria.
Born Hilary Ann Swank
July 30, 1974 (age 40)
Lincoln, Nebraska, U.S.
Occupation Actress
Years active 1990–present
Spouse(s) Chad Lowe (m. 1997–2007)
Hilary Ann Swank (born July 30, 1974) is an American actress. She has twice won the Academy Award for Best Actress and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2007.
Swank made her film debut in a minor role in the 1992 comedy film Buffy the Vampire Slayer before starring in her breakout lead role in the fourth installment of the The Karate Kid franchise The Next Karate Kid in 1994, alongside Pat Morita. On television, she was cast as part of the main cast in the eighth season of the drama series Beverly Hills 90210 as single mother Carly Reynolds from 1997 to 1998. Swank garnered critical acclaim for her portrayal of Brandon Teena in the 1999 biographical indie film Boys Don't Cry, which earned her the Academy Award for Best Actress and Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama. She starred in Clint Eastwood's 2004 sports drama film Million Dollar Baby as struggling-waitress-turned-boxer Maggie Fitzgerald, which won her a second Academy Award and Golden Globe for Best Actress as well as the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role.
Her other films include, The Gift (2000), Insomnia (2002), Iron Jawed Angels (2004), The Reaping (2007), P.S. I Love You (2007), Freedom Writers (2007), the biographical aviation film Amelia (2009) and New Year's Eve (2011).

Early life

Swank was born in Lincoln, Nebraska.[1] Her mother, Judy Kay (née Clough),[2] was a secretary and dancer, and her father, Stephen Michael Swank, was a Chief Master Sergeant in the Oregon Air National Guard and later a traveling salesman.[3] She has a brother Daniel, who is eight years her senior.[4] Many of Swank's family members are from Ringgold County, Iowa.[1] Her maternal grandmother, Frances Martha Dominguez, was of Mexican (Spanish and Native American) descent, while Hilary's paternal grandmother was born in England; Hilary's roots also include German, English, Swiss-German, Scottish, Scots-Irish, Welsh, and Dutch ancestry.[5][6] The surname "Swank", originally Schwenk, is of German origin.[7]
After living in Spokane, Washington, Swank's family moved to a trailer park near Lake Samish in Bellingham, Washington, when Swank was six.[8]
She attended Happy Valley Elementary, Fairhaven Middle, then Sehome High School in Bellingham until she was sixteen.[6][9] She also competed in the Junior Olympics and the Washington state championships in swimming, and she ranked fifth in the state in all-around gymnastics. Swank made her first appearance on stage when she was nine years old, starring in The Jungle Book.[9] She became involved in school and community theater programs, including those of the Bellingham Theatre Guild and The Seattle Children's Theater.
When she was fifteen, her parents separated, and she and her mother, supportive of her daughter's desire to act, moved to Los Angeles, where they lived out of their car until Swank's mother saved enough money to rent an apartment.[8] Swank has called her mother the inspiration for her acting career and her life.[10] In California, Swank enrolled in South Pasadena High School, dropping out later. She described her time at South Pasadena High School: “I felt like such an outsider. I didn't feel like I fit in. I didn't belong in any way. I didn't even feel like the teachers wanted me there. I just felt like I wasn't seen or understood.”[8] She explained her becoming an actor out of feeling as an outsider: “As a kid I felt that I belonged only when I read a book or saw a movie, and could get involved with a character. It was natural that I became an actor because I longed so much to be those other people, or at least to play them”.[11]

Career

Early work

Swank made her film acting debut in the 1992 film Buffy the Vampire Slayer in a small role, after which she acted in the direct-to-video drama Quiet Days in Hollywood, where she co-starred with her future husband at the time Chad Lowe.[4] Her first leading film role was in the fourth installment of the Karate Kid series, The Next Karate Kid (1994), which utilized her gymnastics background and paired her with Pat Morita. In 1995, she appeared with British actor Bruce Payne in Kounterfeit. In 1994, she also starred in the drama Cries Unheard: The Donna Yaklich Story as the abused step-daughter who was protected by Donna (Jaclyn Smith). In September 1997, Swank played single mother Carly Reynolds in Beverly Hills, 90210 and was initially promised it would be a two-year role, but saw her character written out after 16 episodes in January 1998.[6] Swank later stated that she was devastated at being cut from the show, thinking, "If I'm not good enough for 90210, I'm not good enough for anything."[12]

Critical success

The firing freed her to audition for the role of Brandon Teena in Boys Don't Cry. To prepare for the role, Swank lived as a man for a month, and reduced her body fat to seven percent. Many critics hailed her as the best female performance of 1999, and her work ultimately won her the Golden Globe and Oscar for Best Actress.[6] Swank had earned only $75 per day for her work on Boys Don't Cry, culminating in a total of $3,000.[13] Her earnings were so low that she had not even earned enough to qualify for health insurance.[14]
Swank again won the Best Actress Oscar and another Golden Globe, for playing a female boxer in Clint Eastwood's 2004 film Million Dollar Baby, a role for which she underwent extensive training in the ring and weight room gaining 19 pounds of muscle aided by professional trainer Grant L Roberts.[14] With her second Oscar, she had joined the ranks of Vivien Leigh, Helen Hayes and Luise Rainer as the only actresses to have been nominated for Academy Awards twice and win both times.[15] After winning her second Oscar, she said, "I don't know what I did in this life to deserve this. I'm just a girl from a trailer park who had a dream."[14]
In 2006, Swank signed a three-year contract with Guerlain for the women's fragrance Insolence.[16] She received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on January 8, 2007 and was the 2,325th star presented.[17][18]

2007–present

In 2007, Swank starred in Freedom Writers, about how a real-life teacher, Erin Gruwell, inspired a California high school class. Many reviews of her performance were positive, with one critic noting that she "brings credibility" to the role,[19] and another stating that her performance reaches a "singular lack of artifice, stripping herself back to the bare essentials".[20] Swank next starred in the horror film The Reaping, as a debunker of religious phenomena it was released on April 5, 2007. Swank convinced the producers to move the film's setting from New England to the Deep South, and the film was being filmed in Baton Rouge, Louisiana when Hurricane Katrina struck.[21] The same year, she also appeared in the romantic drama P.S. I Love You with Gerard Butler.[21][22]
Swank portrayed the pioneering aviator Amelia Earhart in the biopic film Amelia that she also co-executive produced.[23] Filming began in summer 2008 in a number of international locations and Swank met Robert Bresnik, a San Diego artist who supported her role as Earhart by producing several photographic reproductions of the flyer, at Legoland. Bresnik's grandfather Albert Bresnik was Earhart's official photographer, and he owned the original negatives of his grandfather's shoots.[24]
In 2012, Swank's audiobook recording of Caroline Knapp's Pack of Two: The Intricate Bond Between People and Dogs was released at Audible.com.[25] In 2013, she has starred in the television film Mary and Martha along with Brenda Blethyn. She played a woman whose son has died of malaria.[26]
Swank is attached to star in the Hollywood remake of Intimate Strangers.[27] It was incorrectly reported that she would play a lead role in, and produce a film adaptation of the John Marks novel Fangland.[28][29]

Personal life

Swank and First Lady Michelle Obama and in 2011
While filming Quiet Days in Hollywood.[4] Swank met actor Chad Lowe.[30] They married on September 28, 1997[31] but divorced on November 1, 2007.[32]
In 2006 Swank began dating her agent, John Campisi[33] They ended their relationship in the summer of 2012.[34] She has no children.

Human rights controversy

In October 2011, Swank attracted controversy for attending an event in Chechnya's capital Grozny on the 35th birthday of Chechen president Ramzan Kadyrov on October 5.[35] After wishing him "Happy birthday, Mr. President", she reportedly claimed knowledge about Kadyrov saying: "I read. I do my provisory research".[36] Following criticism from human rights groups, who report having informed her about the human rights abuses in Chechnya prior to the event, asking her to reconsider her participation,[37][38] Swank said she was unaware that Kadyrov had been accused of human rights violations and that she "deeply regrets" taking part in the lavish concert, and will donate her personal appearance fees "to various charitable organizations."[39]

Filmography

Feature films and television shows
Year Title Role Notes
1990 ABC TGIF Danielle
1991 Harry and the Hendersons
Episode: Harry Goes Ape
Evening Shade Aimee No. 1 2 episodes
1991–1992 Growing Pains Sasha Serotsky 2 episodes
1992 Buffy the Vampire Slayer Kimberly Hannah
1992–1993 Camp Wilder Danielle
  • 19 episodes
  • Nominated– Young Artist Award for Best Young Actress in a New Television Series
1994 Cries Unheard: The Donna Yaklich Story Patty Yaklich TV movie
The Next Karate Kid Julie Pierce
1996 Sometimes They Come Back... Again Michelle Porter Direct-to-video
Terror in the Family Deena Martin TV movie
Kounterfeit Coleen Direct-to-video
1997 Quiet Days in Hollywood Lolita
Dying to Belong Lisa Connors TV movie
The Sleepwalker Killing Lauren Schall TV movie
Leaving L.A. Tiffany Roebuck 6 episodes
1997–1998 Beverly Hills, 90210 Carly Reynolds 16 episodes
1999 Boys Don't Cry Brandon Teena
2000 The Gift Valerie Barksdale Nominated—Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress
The Audition
Short
2001 The Affair of the Necklace Jeanne St. Rémy de Valois
2002 Insomnia Detective Ellie Burr Nominated—Empire Award for Best Actress
2003 11:14 Buzzy Nominated—DVDX Award for Best Actress (in a DVD Premiere Movie)
The Core Major Rebecca Childs
2004 Red Dust Sarah Barcant
Iron Jawed Angels Alice Paul
Million Dollar Baby Maggie Fitzgerald
2006 The Black Dahlia Madeleine Linscott
2007 The Reaping Katherine Winter
Freedom Writers Erin Gruwell Golden Camera Award for Best International Actress
P. S. I Love You Holly Kennedy
2008 Birds of America Laura
2009 Amelia Amelia Earhart Hollywood Film Festival Best Actress
2010 Conviction Betty Anne Waters Nominated—Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
2011 The Resident Dr. Juliet Devereau Nominated—Fright Meter Award for Best Actress
New Year's Eve Claire Morgan Segment: Times Square
2013 Mary and Martha Mary TV movie
You're Not You Kate Also producer; post-production
2014 The Homesman Mary Bee Cuddy Post-production


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