Biography
Born into a show-biz family that includes her grandfather, Cliff Arquette, father,
Lewis Arquette, and siblings, David, Patricia, and
Alexis Arquette, offbeat leading actress Rosanna Arquette worked as a teen in television movies through the '70s and the early '80s, but she didn't become a real star until her role in
Susan Seidelman's sleeper
Desperately Seeking Susan (1985). Though her part seemed to promise a bright future for the talented and beautiful actress, she has since been more or less relegated to supporting roles and co-leads.
Born in Manhattan on August 10, 1959, Arquette moved about frequently with her family while she was growing up. She made her acting debut in Los Angeles at the age of 17 in a theatrical production of Metamorphosis, and she continued acting in local plays when her family relocated to Virginia. After an audience with a casting director, Arquette began appearing on television, and she made her feature-film debut in
More American Graffiti in 1979. She had her first starring role in
John Sayles' 1983 romantic drama
Baby It's You, playing an overachieving Jewish girl who falls in love with an Italian hunk (
Vincent Spano). Though she has subsequently been typecast as kooky but sexy women, early in her career, Arquette demonstrated considerable dramatic ability in
The Executioner's Song (1982), the television biopic about convicted killer Gary Gilmore which was later released theatrically.
Arquette has spent much of her subsequent career popping up in a number of diverse films, including
Quentin Tarantino's
Pulp Fiction (1994), which featured her in a brief but pivotal role as a junkie;
David Cronenberg's
Crash (1996), in which she all-too memorably allowed
James Spader to have sex with her gaping leg wound;
Buffalo '66 (1998), which cast her as the protagonist's trampy high school dream girl; Alison Anders and Kurt Voss'
Sugar Town (1999), in which she played an actress and one-time sex symbol; and
The Whole Nine Yards (2000), a comedy that cast her as the suburban neighbor of a mobster (
Bruce Willis) trying to make good. If subsequent roles didn't necessarrily advance her career as much as longtime followers had hoped, Arquette nevertheless remained busy onscreen with a series of low-profile independent efforts intercut with the occasional mainstream feature. Her headlining role as an ageing virgin who's first act of intimacy shakes the foundation of a small Illinois commuity (2000's
Too Much Flesh) may have never reached US shores for distribution, though a memorable performance in
Allison Anders' redemption-themed drama
Things Behind the Sun the following year offered the longtime actress a dramatic role that stateside audiences could access. Thouse who did actually see the
David Spade comedy
Joe Dirt (2001) were offered a brief but memorable comedic performance by Arquette, in addition to her four other roles that year alone the actress turned in a heartfelt performance as a woman struggling with her compulsive sexuality in
Diary of a Sex Addict. After turning up in the made for television drama
Rush of Fear in 2003, Arquette could once again be seen on the big screen in the comedy drama Max and Grace. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide