Biography
Simply by growing old gracefully, actress Susan Sarandon has defied the rules of Hollywood stardom: Not only has her fame continued to increase as she enters middle age, but the quality of her films and her performances in them has improved as well. Ultimately, she has come to embody an all-too-rare movie type -- the strong and sexy older woman. Born Susan Tomaling on October 4, 1946, in New York City, she was the oldest of nine children. Even while attending the Catholic University of America, she did not study acting, and in fact expressed no interest in performing until after marrying actor
Chris Sarandon. While accompanying her husband on an audition, Sarandon landed a pivotal role in the controversial 1970 feature
Joe, and suddenly her own career as an actress was well underway. She soon became a regular on the daytime soap opera
A World Apart and in 1972 appeared in the feature
Mortadella.
Lovin' Molly and
The Front Page followed in 1974 before Sarandon earned cult immortality as Janet Weiss in 1975's camp classic
The Rocky Horror Picture Show, the quintessential midnight movie of its era. After starring with
Robert Redford in 1975's
The Great Waldo Pepper, Sarandon struggled during the mid-'70s in a number of little-seen projects, including 1976's
The Great Smokey Roadblock and 1978's
Checkered Flag or Crash. Upon beginning a relationship with the famed filmmaker
Louis Malle, however, her career took a turn for the better as she starred in the provocative
Pretty Baby, portraying the prostitute mother of a 12-year-old
Brooke Shields. Sarandon and Malle next teamed for 1980's superb
Atlantic City, for which she earned her first Oscar nomination. After appearing in
Paul Mazursky's
Tempest, she then starred in
Tony Scott's controversial 1983 horror film
The Hunger, playing a scientist seduced by a vampire portrayed by
Catherine Deneuve. The black comedy
Compromising Positions followed in 1985, as did the TV miniseries
Mussolini and I.
Women of Valor, another mini, premiered a year later.
While Sarandon had enjoyed a prolific career virtually from the outset, stardom remained just beyond her grasp prior to the mid-'80s. First, a prominent appearance with
Jack Nicholson,
Cher, and
Michelle Pfeiffer in the 1986 hit
The Witches of Eastwick brought her considerable attention, and then in 1988 she delivered a breakthrough performance in
Ron Shelton's hit baseball comedy
Bull Durham, which finally made her a star, at the age of 40. More important, the film teamed her with co-star
Tim Robbins, with whom she soon began a long-term offscreen relationship. After a starring role in the 1989 apartheid drama
A Dry White Season, Sarandon teamed with
Geena Davis for
Thelma and Louise, a much-discussed distaff road movie which became among the year's biggest hits and won both actresses Oscar nominations. Sarandon was again nominated for 1992's
Lorenzo's Oil and 1994's
The Client before finally winning her first Academy Award for 1995's
Dead Man Walking, a gut-wrenching examination of the death penalty, adapted and directed by Robbins. Now a fully established star, Sarandon had her choice of projects; she decided to lend her voice to
Tim Burton's animated
James and the Giant Peach (1996). Two years later, she was more visible with starring roles in the thriller
Twilight (starring opposite
Paul Newman and
Gene Hackman) and
Stepmom, a weepie co-starring
Julia Roberts. The same year, she had a supporting role in the
John Turturro film
Illuminata.
Sarandon continued to stay busy in 1999, starring in
Anywhere But Here, which featured her as
Natalie Portman's mother, and
Cradle Will Rock, Robbins' first directorial effort since
Dead Man Walking. On television, Sarandon starred with
Stephen Dorff in an adaptation of Anne Tyler's Earthly Possessions, and showed a keen sense of humor in her various appearances on
SNL,
Chappelle's Show, and
Malcolm in the Middle. After starring alongside
Goldie Hawn in
The Banger Sisters, Sarandon could be seen in a variety of projects including Alfie (2004, Romance and Cigarettes (2005), and
Elizabethtown (2006). In 2007, Sarandon joined
Rachel Weisz and
Mark Wahlberg in
The Lovely Bones, director
Peter Jackson's adaptation of Alice Sebold's novel of the same name. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide