Mariska Hargitay
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Mariska Hargitay | |
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Hargitay, November 2011
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Born | Mariska Magdolna Hargitay January 23, 1964 Santa Monica, California, U.S. |
Other names | Mariska Hermann |
Education | UCLA |
Occupation | Actress, producer, director |
Years active | 1983–present |
Organization | Joyful Heart Foundation |
Title | Miss Beverly Hills (1982) |
Spouse(s) | Peter Hermann (m. 2004) |
Children | 3 |
Parents | Jayne Mansfield Mickey Hargitay |
Signature | |
Website | |
www |
Mariska Hargitay (/məˈrɪʃkə ˈhɑrɡɨteɪ/ mə-rish-kə har-gi-tay; born Mariska Magdolna Hargitay; January 23, 1964)[1][2][3] is an American actress, best known for her role as New York City sex crimes Detective Olivia Benson on the NBC television drama Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, a role that has earned her multiple awards and nominations, including an Emmy and Golden Globe.
The daughter of actress Jayne Mansfield and actor/bodybuilder Mickey Hargitay, Hargitay is a former beauty queen who made her film debut in the 1985 horror-comedy film Ghoulies, and her major television debut in the 1986 adventure drama series Downtown. She appeared in numerous roles in film and television shows throughout the late 1980s and 1990s before being cast as Olivia Benson, a role that led to her founding the Joyful Heart Foundation, which provides support to women who have been sexually abused.
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[hide]Early life[edit]
Hargitay was born at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, California, the daughter of actress and 1950s-era sex symbol Jayne Mansfield. Her father was the Hungarian-born former Mr. Universe Mickey Hargitay.[1] Her first and middle names are Hungarian and refer to Mary Magdalene (Mariska is a diminutive of Mary). Hargitay was raised Roman Catholic.[4] She has two older brothers, Miklos and Zoltan, and three half-siblings, Jayne Marie Mansfield and Antonio "Tony" Cimber (from her mother's first and third marriages, respectively) and Tina Hargitay (from her father's first marriage).
Hargitay's parents had divorced in May 1963, but a judge later found their Mexican divorce invalid. They reconciled a few months before Hargitay's birth in January 1964, but soon separated again; in August 1964, her mother successfully petitioned the court to rule the Mexican divorce legal. A few weeks later, Mansfield married the director Matt Cimber, who had directed her in a 1964 production of the William Inge play Bus Stop.[1] On June 29, 1967, Mansfield was killed in an automobile accident on a stretch of U.S. Route 90 between New Orleans and Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. Her boyfriend, Sam Brody, and the driver were also killed. Asleep in the back of the vehicle, Hargitay, then three and a half years old, was left with a zigzag scar on one side of her head. Her brothers Miklós and Zoltán were also in the car, but escaped with minor injuries. After the death of their mother, the three siblings were raised by their father and his third wife, Ellen Siano.[1] Hargitay dislikes comparisons with her famous mother and at age 18 said, "My dad was Mr. Universe, so it would be fun for me to be Miss Universe."[5]
While a student at her Catholic secondary school, Marymount High School, Hargitay was active in cheerleading, student government, athletics, and the theater program.[6] She enjoyed acting and enrolled at UCLA after graduation from high school in 1982. That same year, Hargitay was crowned Miss Beverly Hills USA.[7] By the time she was a freshman in college, Hargitay had an agent and several small roles to her credit. She attended UCLA School of Theater Film and Television (where she was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma).[8][9] She left before completing her degree when she began her acting career.[1]
Hargitay attended Groundlings theatre company in Los Angeles. Her improv teacher was Kathy Griffin. Griffin stated in an interview, "We started class, and in the Groundlings curriculum, one of the first exercises you do is the cliched 'trust' game. I made everyone stand in a circle, with me in the center, and I said, being onstage, you have to trust your fellow actors, especially when you're an improviser. You're going to be there for each other, and they're going to be there for you. For example, I'm going to fall back, knowing that you'll catch me. Then I let myself fall backward, and sure enough, I was caught. Everyone gets out some nervous laughter, and then they all took turns doing it. By the time it got around to Mariska Hargitay, we'd already done it with ten or eleven students, and they had clearly gotten the point. Then it was Mariska's turn. 'Okay, Mariska, cross your arms in front of you and gently fall back,' I said. She fell back and nobody caught her. She fell flat on her ass. I was horrified. This had never happened in one of my classes before."[10]
Career[edit]
In 1982, after Hargitay was crowned Miss Beverly Hills USA,[7] she then competed in the Miss California USA pageant the following year, placing fourth runner-up to Julie Hayek, who was later crowned Miss USA.[11] In 1984, she appeared in Ronnie Milsap's music video for "She Loves My Car".[12] A year later she had a small role in the horror film, Ghoulies.[13]
Hargitay said in 1986 that she never thought about doing television until a role for the one-hour adventure drama series Downtown was offered.[13] In 1988, she had a recurring role as Carly Fixx in the soap opera Falcon Crest.[12] She portrayed police officer Angela Garcia in the 1992 series Tequila and Bonetti, and appeared in an episode of the fourth season of Seinfeld. Two years later, Hargitay portrayed Didi Edelstein, the sexy next-door neighbor, in the 1995 sitcom Can't Hurry Love, which starred Nancy McKeon. In 1997, Hargitay played detective Nina Echeverria on the drama series Prince Street, and had a recurring role as Cynthia Hooper during the fourth season of ER. Hargitay has appeared on numerous other television programs, including: Freddy's Nightmares; Ellen; All-American Girl; Baywatch; Cracker; Gabriel's Fire; In the Heat of the Night; The Single Guy; Wiseguy, and thirtysomething. Her voice is featured on the 2005 video game True Crime: New York City.
Hargitay also had a minor role in the 1995 film Leaving Las Vegas, and briefly replaced Gabrielle Fitzpatrick in Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie, although the scene was removed from the film.[14]
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit[edit]
Casting for the lead characters of NBC police procedural television drama series Law & Order: Special Victims Unit occurred in the spring of 1999. Dick Wolf, along with officials from NBC and Studios USA, were at the final auditions for the two leads at Rockefeller Center. The last round had been narrowed down to six finalists. For the female lead – Detective Olivia Benson – Samantha Mathis, Reiko Aylesworth, and Hargitay were being considered. For the male role – Detective Elliot Stabler – the finalists were Tim Matheson, John Slattery, and Christopher Meloni. Meloni and Hargitay had auditioned in the final round together and after the actors left, there was a moment of dead silence, after which Wolf blurted out, "Oh well. There's no doubt who we should choose – Hargitay and Meloni." The duo, who Wolf believed had the perfect chemistry from the first time he saw them together, were his first choice. Garth Ancier, then head of NBC Entertainment, agreed, and the rest of the panel assembled voiced their assent.[16] Hargitay trained as a rape crisis advocate to prepare for the role of Benson.[17]
During the last months of her pregnancy in 2006, she took maternity leave from SVU, and was temporarily replaced by Connie Nielsen.[18][19]
In May 2009, after the show's tenth season, Hargitay and Meloni's contract expired when they were reportedly making $375,000[20]–$385,000 per episode.[21] During negotiations in April for a new contract, the duo attempted to receive a percentage of the show's profits as other high-profile Law and Order actors had done in the past. It was rumored that NBC threatened to replace Hargitay and Meloni if they persisted in their demands.[22] However, two months later it was officially reported that both their contracts had been renewed for two more years.[21] When the thirteenth season was about to air, initial reports indicated that Hargitay would appear in only the first 13 episodes.[23] However, NBC chairman Bob Greenblatt later clarified that she would be in every episode of the season.[24]
Personal life[edit]
Hargitay is fluent in five languages: English, Hungarian, French, Spanish, and Italian. [27] This is a talent that she has displayed on the show several times, such as by mirandizing and interrogating suspects who do not speak English.
On August 28, 2004, in Santa Barbara, California, Hargitay married Peter Hermann, an actor whom she met on the set of Law & Order: SVU, on which Hermann plays the recurring role of Defense Attorney Trevor Langan. On June 28, 2006, Hargitay gave birth to their son, August Miklos Friedrich Hermann, by an emergency caesarean section.[28] In April 2011 she and her husband adopted Amaya Josephine and attended her birth. In October 2011, she and her husband adopted a baby boy, Andrew Nicolas Hargitay Hermann, who had been born in mid-2011.[29][30]
Upon winning her Emmy[31] on August 27, 2006, Hargitay made a point of thanking her father for everything he had done for her in her life.[32] Just 17 days later, on September 14, 2006, her father died from multiple myeloma in Los Angeles, California, at age 80.[33][34]
Health problems[edit]
In late December 2008, Hargitay suffered a partially collapsed lung after taking a fall during a stunt on the set of SVU. She underwent surgery in January and returned to work shortly afterward.[35] On March 3, 2009, she was hospitalized after suffering chest pains related to the injury. It was disclosed that she would probably need more surgery.[36] Despite this, she missed only one episode on SVU 's tenth season.[37]
Charity work[edit]
Hargitay is founder and president of the Joyful Heart Foundation, an organization established in 2004 to provide support to survivors of sexual assault, domestic violence, and child abuse.[38][39] According to Hargitay, she was inspired by an encounter with a school of dolphins that surrounded her while she was swimming off the coast of Hawaii at the age of 15. The encounter, which had ignited profound spiritual feelings within her, was one that Hargitay hoped to share with others. As of November 2010, the Joyful Heart Foundation has sent over 5,000 women and children on therapeutic programs in New York, Los Angeles, and Hawaii, which combine yoga, meditation, massage, journaling, and swimming with dolphins.[17] According to Hargitay, "I started getting fan mail from survivors who felt a connection to Olivia. In many of these letters, people would disclose their personal stories of abuse — some for the very first time. I remember getting the sense that many were living in isolation with so much shame, but the shame belonged to the perpetrators. I wanted to help find a way to help people reclaim their lives and live them with a renewed sense of possibility and hope. And that's what we work to do every day at Joyful Heart."[40]According to Hargitay, the Foundation has raised $20 million and helped approximately 5,000 survivors as of April 2011.[41] Reference to the Joyful Heart Foundation was worked into episodes of Special Victims Unit, via a necklace containing two pendants representing the Foundation that Hargitay's character began wearing in the show's 13th season.[42]
Hargitay has worked with Michigan Police and Wayne Country Prosecutor Kym Worthy to raise awareness about the statistics of untested rape kits. While planning to produce a documentary called Shelved, about the thousands of untested rape kits, Hargitay has said:
Hargitay appeared in the 17th season of NBC's "The More You Know" public service announcement in 2006,[44] and again in the spring of 2009.[45] She is an honorary board member director of the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation.[46]
On September 27, 2011, Hargitay donated $100,000 to her alma mater, the UCLA School of Theater Film and Television for scholarship.[47]
In 2012 Hargitay campaigned for the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA).[48]
On February 17, 2012, Hargitay made a donation of $35,800 to the Obama Victory Fund, the maximum individual contribution allowed by law.[49][50]
Filmography[edit]
Television[edit]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1986 | Downtown | Jesse Smith | 14 episodes |
1988 | In the Heat of the Night | Audine Higgs | Episode: "...And Then You Die" |
Freddy's Nightmares | Marsha Wildmon | Episode: "Freddy's Tricks and Treats" | |
Falcon Crest | Carly Fixx | 15 episodes | |
1989 | Finish Line | Lisa Karsh | Television film |
Baywatch | Lisa Peters | Episode: "Second Wave" | |
1990 | Wiseguy | Debbie Vitale | Episode: "Romp" |
thirtysomething | Courtney Dunn | Episode: "Fathers and Lovers" | |
Booker | Michelle Larkina | Episode: "Black Diamond Run" | |
Gabriel's Fire | Carmen | Episode: "Windows"Perfect Weapon 1991
Jennifer, Kenpo Student
| |
1992 | Tequila and Bonetti | Officer Angela Garcia | 11 episodes |
Grapevine | Katie | Episode: "The Katie and Adam Story" | |
1993 | Hotel Room | Diane | Episode: "Getting Rid of Robert" Episode: "Blackout" |
Blind Side | Melanie | Television film | |
Key West | Laurel | Episode: "Less Moonlight" | |
Seinfeld | Melissa Shannon | Episode: "The Pilot" | |
1994 | Gambler V: Playing for Keeps | Etta Place | Television film |
1995 | All-American Girl | Jane | Episode: "Young Americans" |
Can't Hurry Love | Didi Edelstein | 19 episodes | |
1996 | Ellen | Dara | Episode: "The Mugging" |
The Single Guy | Kate Conklin/The Mounted Cop | Episode: "Mounted Cop" Episode: "Kept Man" Episode: "The Virgin" | |
1997 | Night Sins | Paige Price | Television film |
Prince Street | Det. Nina Echeverria | 6 episodes | |
Cracker | Det. Penny Hatfield | Episode: "True Romance 1" | |
The Advocate's Devil | Rendi | Television film | |
1997–98 | ER | Cynthia Hooper | 13 episodes |
1999 | Love, American Style | Wendy | Segment: "Love And The Blind Date" |
1999–present | Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | Det. / Sgt. Olivia Benson | 343 episodes |
2000, 2005 | Law & Order | Det. Olivia Benson | Episode: "Entitled" Episode: "Fools For Love" Episode: "Flaw" |
2004 | Plain Truth | Ellie Harrison | Television film |
2005 | Law & Order: Trial by Jury | Det. Olivia Benson | Episode: "Day" |
2010 | Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List | Herself | Episode: "Kathy with a Z" |
2011 | Barefoot Contessa | Herself | Episode: "Sweet Charity" |
2014 | Chicago P.D. | Sgt. Olivia Benson | Episode: "They'll Have to Go Through Me" |
Film[edit]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
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1985 | Ghoulies | Donna | |
1986 | Welcome to 18 | Joey | |
1987 | Jocks | Nicole | |
1988 | Mr. Universe | Herself | (Mickey Hargitay's daughter) |
1991 | Hard Time Romance | Anita | |
The Perfect Weapon | Jennifer | ||
Strawberry Road | Jill Banner | ||
1993 | Bank Robber | Marisa Benoit | |
1995 | Leaving Las Vegas | Hooker at Bar | |
1999 | Lake Placid | Myra Okubo | |
2001 | Perfume | Darcy | (as Marishka Hargitay) |
2006 | Tales from Earthsea | Tenar | Voice |
2008 | The Love Guru | Herself | Cameo |
Director[edit]
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
2014 | Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | Directorial debut; episode: "Criminal Stories" |
Producer[edit]
Year | Title | Notes |
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2014–present | Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | 7 episodes |
Awards and accolades[edit]
Hargitay won an Emmy and Golden Globe for her role as Detective Olivia Benson. She received UCLA's TFT Distinguished Alumni Award in 2011 and was honored at the school's June commencement ceremony.[47] Hargitay was awarded with the 2,511th star of the Hollywood Walk of Fame on November 8, 2013. Her star is placed next to the star of her mother, which is located at 6328 Hollywood Boulevard.[51]
All award and nominations are for the television show Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.
Year | Award | Category | Result |
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2000 | Satellite Awards | Best Performance by an Actress in a Series, Drama | Nominated |
Viewers for Quality Television Awards | Best Actress in a Quality Drama Series | Nominated | |
TV Guide Awards | Favorite Actress in a New Series | Nominated | |
2004 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series | Nominated |
Prism Awards | Performance in a Drama Series Episode | Nominated | |
Gracie Allen Awards | Individual Achievement for Best Female Lead - Drama - Series | Won | |
Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series | Nominated | |
2005 | Golden Globe Award | Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series - Drama | Won |
Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series | Nominated | |
2006 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series | Nominated |
Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series | Won | |
2007 | TV Land Awards | Favorite Lady Gumshoe | Nominated |
Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series | Nominated | |
Prism Awards | Performance in a Drama Series Episode | Won | |
Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series | Nominated | |
2008 | Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series | Nominated |
2009 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series | Nominated |
People's Choice Awards | Favorite Female TV Star | Nominated | |
Gracie Allen Awards | Outstanding Female Lead - Drama Series | Won | |
Golden Globe Awards | Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series - Drama | Nominated | |
Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series | Nominated | |
2010 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series | Nominated |
Emmy Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Drama Series | Nominated | |
2011 | People's Choice Awards | Favorite TV Crime Fighter | Nominated |
Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series | Nominated | |
Emmy Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Drama Series | Nominated | |
2012 | Muse Awards | New York Women in Film & Television | Won |
2014 | People's Choice Awards | People's Choice for Best Dramatic Actress | Nominated |
Prism Awards | Female Performance in a Drama Series Multi-Episode Storyline | Nominated | |
Gracie Allen Awards | Outstanding Female Actor in a Leading Role in a Drama | Won |
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