Biography
With a smoldering sensuality that perfectly complements her remarkable subtlety as an actress, critics and journalists have frequently singled out Diane Lane for her memorable work in such films as
Rumble Fish (1983),
A Walk on the Moon (1999) and
The Perfect Storm (2000). From her earliest stage appearances to her later status as a powerful star of feature films, Lane's uncanny ability to project her character's innermost emotions into the hearts of filmgoers has earned her a much-deserved rank among the Hollywood elite. Diane Lane was born in New York City in 1965, the daughter of drama coach Burt Lane and Playboy centrespread Colleen Farrington; her eyes seemed to sparkle with stars from the tender age of six. Cast in a La Mama Experimental Theatre production of Medea, Lane would subsequently appear on stage in numerous productions, both in her native New York and abroad. It wasn't long before the late-'70s found Lane reaching the apex of her early career, and in 1978 she made her film debut in director
George Roy Hill's
A Little Romance. Cast alongside no less than Sir Laurence Olivier, Lane held her own in the role of an American student who finds love while studying abroad, and as a result gained remarkable exposure on the cover of Time Magazine in August of the following year. Lane was touted as one of the most promising actors of her generation, and this success parlayed her into a series of neglected films. In a number of these instances, she could not be faulted for choosing substandard material; her appearance in
Lamont Johnson's fresh and rousing female western
Cattle Annie and Little Britches (1981), for example (alongside
Amanda Plummer,
Burt Lancaster and
Rod Steiger) drew lavish critical praise even as the studio inexplicably threw the film into the wastecan. Lane fared better with twin roles in a pair of teen dramas from director
Francis Ford Coppola in 1983 (
The Outsiders and
Rumble Fish) once again earned the burgeoning film actress the spotlight and reminded audiences of her immense talent; she became a Coppola favorite, but didn't fare as well with his
Cotton Club, a massive critical and commercial flop that did little to boost her career, even as it introduced her to co-star
Richard Gere (with whom she would reteam, professionally, years later).
After rounding out the decade with yet another memorable turn in the television miniseries
Lonesome Dove (1989), Lane's career once again became a more low-key affair, though her performances frequently outshined the otherwise unremarkable series of films she appeared in.
Though roles in such efforts as
Chaplin (1992),
A Streetcar Named Desire (1995), and
Jack (1996) kept her from falling off the radar, Lane didn't truly shine again until her role as a housewife who embarks on a fragile extramarital affair in
A Walk on the Moon (1998). Following that film with a pair of memorable performances in
My Dog Skip and
The Perfect Storm (both in 2000), Lane's career seemed to have achieved some stability, but it wasn't before a pair of forgettable features (
Hardball and
The Glass House, both in 2001) that Lane scored with yet another tale of marital infidelity. Director
Adrian Lyne's
Unfaithful, a retooling of
Claude Chabrol's La Femme Infidèle, once again found Lane in the throes of an alluring stranger.
Unfaithful - the anticipated onscreen reunion of Lane with
Richard Gere - pondered the crushing reverberations of extramarital carnality, and Lane provided an ample and intriguing center of gravity for the film.
When February 2003 rolled around and the Academy announced its nominations for the previous year, Lane received her first-ever Oscar nod for her emotional turn in
Unfaithful. It did not pay off with a win, but Lane's follow-ups with roles in substantial fare including Just Like Mona (2002) and the wildly-popular
Under the Tuscan Sun (2003) suggested that Lane's career had finally found solid box-office ground. Time validated this assertion: 2005's
Must Love Dogs, a romantic comedy vehicle co-starring Lane and
John Cusack, drew positive responses from many moviegoers and did decent, if not spectacular, box office, despite the excoriation of some critics (Salon's Stephanie Zacharek moaned, "It's ostensibly about adults, but there's nothing remotely adult about it.") 2006's
Hollywoodland casts Lane in a mystery about the enigmatic demise of
Superman's
George Reeves. The same year's
Killshot boasts an inspirational pedigree, which includes director
John Madden (
Shakespeare in Love, Her Majesty Mrs. Brown),
Wings of the Dove scenarist
Hossein Amini, producers Bob and
Harvey Weinstein and
Quentin Tarantino, cinematographer
Caleb Deschanel and co-starrers
Thomas Jane and the gifted
Mickey Rourke (who first pooled his talents with Lane in 1983's
Rumble Fish). The film, an adaptation of
Elmore Leonard's novel, tells the story of a married couple who wind up in the Federal Witness Protection Program - and on a hit man's X list - when their extortion scheme falls apart.
Married to
Highlander Christopher Lambert from 1988 to 1994 (with a single daughter from that marriage), Lane wed actor
Josh Brolin in late 2004. In addition to her high-profile movie career, she is also an avid photographer; the January 2005 issue of InStyle Magazine prominently published a series of landscapes that Lane shot during one of her road trips into the American west.
~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide