Biography
The youngest recipient of the Best Supporting Actress Academy Award, American actress Tatum O'Neal was the daughter of actors
Ryan O'Neal and
Joanna Moore. When her father was cast as the confidence trickster protagonist of
Paper Moon (1973), O'Neal was awarded the part of Addie Loggins, the con man's "ward" and partner in crime. For this remarkable debut, O'Neal won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress -- which enabled her to demand profit percentage points on her next film,
The Bad News Bears (1976). O'Neal played the only female member of a misfit junior-league baseball team (she was doubled by two young baseball champs); her highlight scene in
Bears was the one in which she all but promised her body to a preteen punk to get him to join the ball club. Mid-'70s audiences were oddly attuned to films in which children swore and swilled beer, so
The Bad News Bears was O'Neal's second box-office hit in a row.
Nickelodeon (1976) followed, wherein O'Neal played a 12-year-old silent-film scenarist, a character based on
Anita Loos. This film, in which she was reunited with her
Paper Moon co-star/father
Ryan O'Neal and director
Peter Bogdanovich, may have represented the actress' best work, but few filmgoers saw it. By 1980, O'Neal was old enough to appear as a summer-camp girl determined to lose her virginity in
Little Darlings, but her acting skills paled beside those of her co-star,
Kristy McNichol. As O'Neal got older, the roles became less interesting and fewer in number. Though she didn't act much in the '90s, O'Neal managed to keep her name in the public eye through her marriage to tennis star John McEnroe. The couple had three children together, but the marriage ended in divorce in 1992. In the early 2000s, O'Neal found moderate success on the small screen, appearing on such shows as
Sex and the City,
Rescue Me, and
Wicked Wicked Games, and even competed on the enormously popular ballroom-dancing competitive reality series
Dancing with the Stars in 2006. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide