Facts
Drew Barrymore rode a career rollercoaster spanning two decades before the age of 25. The product of an acting dynasty that runs
from great-great-grandmother Louisa Lane Drew
through grandfather John Barrymore,
the youngest Barrymore showed
promise right from the start and
appeared in TV commercials before reaching the age of one. While her
lineage was responsible for some notice,
the saccharine-free sweetness of her
performance as little Gertie in the
1982 classic ET, The Extra-Terrestrial
won Barrymore acclaim reserved for the truly
talented. Her watchability propelled many a
subsequent film, including the otherwise
unremarkable
Stephen King
adaptations Firestarter (1984) and
Cat's Eye (1985).
A victim of 1980s Hollywood lifestyle, Barrymore
had too much too soon, and began to attract less
attention for her acting than for the increasingly
sordid tabloid stories about her pre-adolescent
addictions to drugs and alcohol. After
undergoing rehab and--another Barrymore
tradition--publishing a memoir, Little Girl Lost
(1989), the resilient teen made an impressive comeback in the early 90s, riding a wave of celebrity and controversy.
Still possessing the angelic glow of
her childhood, but with an added air of
trouble, Barrymore portrayed
Lolita-like teens in Poison Ivy
(1992), Guncrazy (1992) and the ABC-TV
movie The Amy Fisher Story (1993), based
on the sordid case of the Long Island
teenager who shot the wife of her
former lover, all films boosted by her
confident performances.
The actress returned to big-budgeted features
with 1994's disappointing Western Bad Girls.
She was next cast alongside Whoopi Goldberg
and Mary-Louise Parker in the
touching tragicomedy Boys on the Side
(1995), a female road movie that
capitalized on Barrymore's undeniable charm,
and showcased an acting depth and assuredness
that had not previously been completely
realized.
1995 saw her take on two other disparate
roles, first playing a suicidal teen
opposite Chris O'Donnell in the
sweetly acted if critically
panned Mad Love, followed by
a cameo role as the glitzy but
inherently childlike femme
fatale Sugar in Batman Returns,
a Marilyn Monroe
inspired character that it seemed Barrymore
was born to play. This role reteamed her
with Joel Schumacher, a big supporter of hers
who gave her a break on the enjoyable 2000 Malibu Road,
a short-lived trashy soap on CBS in 1992.
During her post-rehab comeback, Barrymore
reappeared in the gossip columns with
colorful extracurricular antics.
Unlike her previous drug related escapades, the young woman seemed much more in control of every situation, with some spontaneous free-spirited
nudity ranking as the most
shocking of her activities. Among the more memorable
capers was a birthday dance for
bemused talk show host David Letterman
which culminated in her flashing her
breasts for Dave's eyes only. Barrymore
additionally garnered much newsprint by
stripping on stage at a trendy NYC performance
space and posing for Playboy.
In another movie star rite-of-passage,
she endured a month-long marriage to
a Welsh bar owner. Audiences responded positively to her carefree spirit and the harmless stunts that peppered the actress' road to adulthood.
Blonde and beautiful, with a warm, open
smile and a somewhat devilish
fire in her eyes, Barrymore
certainly looks like the perfect American icon,
a fact not lost on director Wes Craven
who hired her for a pivotal role in his tongue-in-cheek
slasher flick Scream
(1996). As the biggest name in
the cast, Barrymore brilliantly
opted for the role of the first victim,
helping to establish the film as a new
thriller experience, bucking the preset conventions
of the horror genre. She followed with a turn
in the ensemble of Woody Allen's odd
musical Everyone Says I Love You
(also 1996), gracefully and sympathetically
portraying a New York City daughter of
privilege, reminding audiences and co-stars alike of her Hollywood royalty roots. (Although unlike her co-stars, her singing voice was
dubbed by a professional.)
Barrymore had a popular hit
with 1998's The Wedding Singer, perfectly
playing the sweetly captivating Julia
opposite Adam Sandler
in this enjoyable 1980s-set romantic comedy. That same year,
the actress happily took on Cinderella in Ever After,
embroidering the story with a female empowering modern
sensibility. Barrymore was
thrilled with the character, a smart,
sensitive, but staunch young woman
dealing with family issues, and the
structure of the film, which differed
from the traditional beautiful girl
with ugly oppressors saved
by a fairy godmother story. The result was a charming
and affirming romance, with Barrymore
proving more than capable of carrying a film
as the primary star. The quirky comedy Home Fries
(also 1998) came next, starring the actress as a pregnant
fast food worker who falls in love with the unborn
child's adult would-be stepbrother (played by
Barrymore's then-companion Luke Wilson).
The actress veritably lit up the screen with
her inimitable spirit and radiance.
A sharp and thoughtful businesswoman as well,
her Flower Films (formed in 1994)
secured a deal with Fox 2000
that led to the charming 1999 comedy Never Been Kissed,
in which she essayed a twentysomething reporter
posing as a high school student
for an undercover assignment.
Under her banner Flower Films
productions, Barrymore joined forces
with Cameron Diaz and
Lucy Liu in a big screen version of the
70s campy TV series Charlie's Angels (2000).
A box-office hit, the film was, in the
words of one critic, "an appealing mix of sexy,
tongue-in-cheek fun; high-energy action;
slick production values; and more
chick-flick worthy outfits/hairdos than you
can bat an eyelash at." The following year, Barrymore
undertook her most demanding role to date, portraying a
teenager who gets pregnant, eventually
marries and then raises her child
as a single mother in Riding in Cars with Boys.
Playing a character that aged from 16 to her
mid-30s, she offered a strong turn
that showed a previously untapped range and depth.
Barrymore has also displayed
a certain savvy behind the scenes,
serving as a producer on several projects
via her company, Flower Films,
with her partner Nancy Juvonen.
Along with producing and developing her
own starring vehicles -- including Never Been Kissed,
Charlie's Angels and a remake
of Barbarella -- she also shepherded the
much-admired Donnie Darko (2001) in which
she had a small role.
In 2002, Barrymore co-starred
with Julia Roberts in
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, directed by
George Clooney, delivering a more womanly performance as Penny, the somewhat fictionalized
girlfriend of real-life game show producer Chuck Barris.
Displaying her typical warmth and patented
adorable qualities, Barrymore was also
mature, real and vulnerable. She next reunited with
Diaz and Liu for the
sequel Charlie's
Angels: Full Throttle (2003). The trio demostrated, once
again, their expertise as masters of espionage,
martial arts, and disguise, and as producer of
the film Barrymore scored a major
buzz-building coup by personally luring
Hollywood expatriate Demi Moore
out of semi-retirement to play the
movie's villainess. That same year, Barrymore
also produced and co-starred in the broad
comedy Duplex opposite Ben Stiller,
playing an upwardly mobile couple whose
homeowning dreams become a nightmare when they encounter the seemingly sweet old lady next door.
In 2004, just days after becoming the sixth member of her famed family to receive a star of Hollywood's Walk of Fame, Barrymore
was reunited on-screen with her Wedding Singer
co-star Sandler in 50 First Dates,
a screwy romantic comedy that
cast her as Lucy Whitmore, a woman
who suffers from a disorder that eliminates
her short term memory each day, forcing
a smitten veterinarian (Sandler)
to win her heart anew every 24 hours.
An actress who spent an inordinate percentage
of her life in the public eye, Drew Barrymore
has endured various stages and incarnations that have
been the subject of much talk. From sparkling child star
to unemployed premature party girl to
adolescent rehab survivor playing bad girl
roles to free spirit re-ascending the Hollywood
ladder, her life and career have certainly
proved her versatile. Her latest status, as genuinely
content and grounded young woman, whose talent,
uncommon likability and healthy ambition make
for a comfortable fit as a compassionate
and compelling leading lady.
Again wearing the hats of both producer
and star, Barrymore returned to the romantic comedy
genre again for Fever Pitch (2005),
playing a corporate climber whose idyllic
romance with a schoolteacher (Jimmy Fallon) is
threatened by his obessessive devotion
to the Boston Red Sox.
The film, directed by the Farrelly brothers
from the Nick Hornby novel, was a winsome, appealing
effort that showcased both stars warm-hearted charm.
Next she generously made an all-important appearance
in tyro filmmaker Brian Herzlinger's
shameless My Date With Drew (2005),
a documentary chronicling his attempts
to meet Barrymore, a supposed
lifelong crush, in 30 days before having to
return the video camera he purchased--the film's
attempts to be goofily romantic were undermined
by the real objects of Herzlinger's
infatuation: himself and his nascent film career.
{ M A I L I N G A D D R E S S E S }
Drew Barrymore
c/o Flower Films
9220 Sunset Blvd., #309
Los Angeles, CA 90069
USA
Drew Barrymore
c/o PMK/HBH
700 N. San Vincente Blvd., Ste. G910
Hollywood, CA 90069-5061
USA
{ G A L L E R Y }
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