Moore, Demi 1962–

views updated May 18 2018

MOORE, Demi 1962–

PERSONAL

Original name, Demetria Gene Guynes; born November 11, 1962, in Roswell, NM; daughter of Charles Harmon and Virginia King Guynes (some sources cite first name as Victoria); married Freddy Moore (a musician), 1980 (divorced, c. 1984); married Bruce Willis (an actor and producer), November 21, 1987 (divorced, October 18, 2000); children: (second marriage) Rumer Glenn, Scout LaRue, Tallulah Belle. Education: Studied acting with Zina Provendie. Avocational Interests: Collecting dolls, shopping, soccer.

Addresses:

Agent—Creative Artists Agency, 9830 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, CA 90212. Manager—Jason Weinberg, Untitled Entertainment, 8436 West Third St., Suite 650, Los Angeles, CA 90048. Publicist—PMK/HBH Public Relations, 700 San Vicente Blvd., Suite G910, West Hollywood, CA 90069 (some sources cite 8500 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 700, Beverly Hills, CA 90211).

Career:

Actress and producer. Rufglen Films, founder and producer, 1991; Moving Pictures (production company), owner; voice–over artist for commercials; model; costume designer for the theatre. Planet Hollywood (restaurants), co–owner. Worked for a collection agency in Los Angeles. CityKids Foundation, national spokesperson. Some sources cite Moore as a songwriter.

Awards, Honors:

Named one of the most "promising new actors of 1986," by John Willis's "Screen World," 1986; Theatre World Award, 1987, for The Early Girl; Saturn Award, best actress, Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror Films, and Golden Globe Award nomination, best performance by an actress in a musical or comedy, both 1991, for Ghost; People's Choice Award, favorite actress in a dramatic motion picture, Proctor & Gamble Productions, 1993; MTV Movie Award nomination, best female performance, 1993, for A Few Good Men; MTV Movie Award, best kiss (with Woody Harrelson), and MTV Movie Award nominations, best female performance and most desirable female, all 1994, for Indecent Proposal; named ShoWest female star of the year, National Association of Theatre Owners, 1995; MTV Movie Award nominations, best villain and most desirable female, both 1995, for Disclosure; MTV Movie Award nomination, most desirable female, 1996, for The Scarlet Letter; Emmy Award nominations, President's Award and outstanding made for television movie, and Golden Globe Award nomination, best performance by an actress in a television miniseries or movie made for television, all 1997, for If These Walls Could Talk; MTV Movie Award nomination (with Viggo Mortensen), best fight, 1998, for G.I. Jane; DVD Premiere Award nomination (with Ritsuko Notani), best animated character performance, DVD Exclusive awards, 2003, for The Hunchback of Notre Dame II; Mexican MTV Movie Award, sexiest female villain, and MTV Movie Award nomination, best villain, both 2004, for Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle.

CREDITS

Film Appearances:

Corri, Choices, 1981.

Patricia Welles, Parasite, Embassy Pictures, 1981.

(Uncredited) New intern, Young Doctors in Love, Twentieth Century–Fox, 1982.

Laura Victor, No Small Affair, Columbia, 1984.

Nicole "Nikki" Hollis, Blame It on Rio, Twentieth Century–Fox, 1984.

Jules Jacoby, St. Elmo's Fire, Columbia, 1985.

Cassandra Eldrich, One Crazy Summer (also known as Greetings from Nantucket), Warner Bros., 1986.

Debbie Sullivan, About Last Night (also known as Sexual Perversity in Chicago), TriStar, 1986.

Karen Simmons, Wisdom, Twentieth Century–Fox, 1986.

Abby Quinn, The Seventh Sign, TriStar, 1988.

Molly, We're No Angels, Paramount, 1989.

Molly Jensen, Ghost, Paramount, 1990.

Cynthia Kellogg, Mortal Thoughts, Columbia, 1991.

Diane Lightston, Nothing but Trouble, Warner Bros., 1991.

Marina Lemke, The Butcher's Wife, Paramount, 1991.

Lieutenant commander JoAnne Galloway, A Few Good Men, Columbia, 1992.

Diana Murphy, Indecent Proposal, Paramount, 1993.

Meredith Johnson, Disclosure, Warner Bros., 1994.

A Century of Cinema (documentary), 1994.

Hester Prynne, The Scarlet Letter, Buena Vista, 1995.

Samantha Albertson, Now and Then (also known as The Gaslight Addition), New Line Cinema, 1995.

Your Studio and You (short film), Universal, 1995.

Annie Laird, The Juror, Columbia, 1996.

Erin Grant, Striptease, Columbia, 1996.

(Uncredited) Voice of Dallas Grimes, Beavis and Butt–Head Do America (animated), Paramount, 1996.

Voice of Esmeralda, The Hunchback of Notre Dame (animated; also known as The Hunchback), Buena Vista, 1996.

Helen, Deconstructing Harry, Fine Line Features, 1997.

(Uncredited) Herself, I Think I Cannes (also known as All Access), BuyIndies.com, 1997.

Helen, Deconstructing Harry, Fine Line Features, 1997.

Lieutenant Jordan O'Neil, G.I. Jane (also known as In Pursuit of Honor, A Matter of Honor, Navy Cross, and Undisclosed), Buena Vista, 1997.

Maria/Martha "Marty" Talmadge, Passion of Mind, Paramount, 2000.

Code of Conduct (short documentary film), 2001.

Voice of Esmeralda, The Hunchback of Notre Dame II (animated), Buena Vista Home Video/Walt Disney Home Video, 2002.

Madison Lee, Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle, Columbia, 2003.

Rachel Carson, Half Light, Lakeshore International, 2005.

Film Producer:

(With others) Mortal Thoughts, Columbia, 1991.

Now and Then (also known as The Gaslight Addition), New Line Cinema, 1995.

(With others) Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, New Line Cinema, 1997.

G.I. Jane (also known as In Pursuit of Honor, A Matter of Honor, Navy Cross, and Undisclosed), Buena Vista, 1997.

Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (also known as Austin Powers 2: The Spy Who Shagged Me), New Line Cinema, 1999.

Austin Powers in Goldmember (also known as Austin Powers: Goldmember), New Line Cinema, 2002.

Slugger, Miramax, 2002.

Television Appearances; Series:

Jackie Templeton, General Hospital, ABC, 1982–83.

Television Appearances; Miniseries:

I Love the '70s, VH1, 2003.

Television Appearances; Movies:

Claire Donnelly, "1952," If These Walls Could Talk, HBO, 1996.

Janie, Destination Anywhere, VH1, 1997.

U–Z–Onesa, The Magic 7 (animated), 2005.

Television Appearances; Specials:

Nancy, Bedrooms, HBO, 1984.

Sandy Darden, Judge Reinhold and Demi Moore in The New Homeowners' Guide to Happiness, Cinemax, 1987.

Ron Reagan Is the President's Son, 1988.

Entertainers 91: The Top 20 of the Year, ABC, 1991.

First Person with Maria Shriver, NBC, 1991.

Herself, Hollywood's Most Powerful Women, E! Entertainment Television, 1995.

Planet Hollywood Comes Home, ABC, 1995.

Herself, The Barbara Walters Special, ABC, 1996.

Host, CityKids All Star Celebration (also known as All Star CityKids Celebration), ABC, 1996.

Herself, The Making of Disney's "The Hunchback of Notre Dame," ABC, 1996.

Disney's Most Unlikely Heroes, ABC, 1996.

Hollywood & Vinyl: Disney's 101 Greatest Musical Moments, VH1, 1998.

Herself, Charlie's Angels Uncensored, MTV, 2003.

Herself, The Making of "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle," HBO, 2003.

(In archive footage) Celebrity Naked Ambition, Channel 5 (England), 2003.

(In archive footage) MTV Bash: Carson Daly, MTV, 2003.

(In archive footage) Herself, E! 101 Most Starlicious Makeovers, E! Entertainment Television, 2004.

(In archive footage) Die geschichte des erotischen Films, 2004.

Television Appearances; Awards Presentations:

Presenter, The 61st Annual Academy Awards Presentation, ABC, 1989.

Presenter, The 1992 MTV Movie Awards, MTV, 1992.

Presenter, The 64th Annual Academy Awards Presentation, ABC, 1992.

Presenter, The 49th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards, CBS, 1997.

The 69th Annual Academy Awards, ABC, 1997.

VH1 97 Fashion Awards, VH1, 1997.

The 2003 MTV Movie Awards, MTV, 2003.

Television Appearances; Episodic:

Holly Trumbull, "Max," The Master (also known as Master Ninja I), NBC, 1984.

Guest host, Saturday Night Live (also known as NBC's "Saturday Night," Saturday Night, and SNL), NBC, 1988.

Woman in elevator, "When Girls Collide," Moonlighting, ABC, 1989.

Cathy Marno, "Dead Right," Tales from the Crypt (also known as HBO's "Tales from the Crypt"), HBO, 1990.

Guest, Late Night with David Letterman, NBC, 1990, 1991.

Guest, The Late Show with David Letterman (also known as The Late Show), CBS, multiple appearances, 1993–2003.

Guest, The Rosie O'Donnell Show, syndicated, 1996, 1997.

(Uncredited) Sample lady, "The Puppy Episode: Parts 1 &2," Ellen (also known as These Friends of Mine), ABC, 1997.

Guest, Clive Anderson All Talk, 1997.

Guest, Lo mas plus (also known as Lo + plus), 1997.

Herself, "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle," HBO First Look, HBO, 2003.

Sissy Palmer–Ginsburg, "Women and Children First," Will & Grace, NBC, 2003.

Guest, Extra (also known as Extra: The Entertainment Magazine), syndicated, 2003.

(In archive footage) "Ashton Kutcher," Love Chain, E! Entertainment Television, 2003.

(In archive footage) Celebrities Uncensored, E! Entertainment Television, 2003, 2004.

Herself, Demi Moore: The E! True Hollywood Story, E! Entertainment Television, 2004.

(Uncredited) Herself, Saturday Night Live (also known as NBC's "Saturday Night," Saturday Night, and SNL), NBC, 2005.

Appeared in episodes of Kaz, CBS; and Vega$, ABC.

Television Executive Producer:

If These Walls Could Talk (movie), HBO, 1996.

CityKids All Star Celebration (special; also known as All Star CityKids Celebration), ABC, 1996.

Stage Appearances:

Lily, The Early Girl, Circle Repertory Company, New York City, 1987.

RECORDINGS

Videos:

Hollywood's Hottest (documentary), Foglight Entertainment/Insomnia Media Group, 2003.

Music Videos:

John Parr, "St. Elmo's Fire (Man in Motion)," 1985.

Jon Bon Jovi, "Ugly," 1998.

OTHER SOURCES

Books:

International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, Volume 3: Actors and Actresses, fourth edition, St. James Press, 2000.

Newsmakers 91, Issue 4, Gale, 1991.

St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, St. James Press, 2000.

Periodicals:

Cosmopolitan, December, 1990, p. 204; March, 1997.

Daily News, March 31, 1988, pp. 51, 61.

Empire, Issue 48, 1993, pp. 64–71; Issue 88, 1996, pp. 94–100.

Entertainment Weekly, July 12, 1996; June 20, 2003, pp. 32–33.

InStyle, March, 1996, pp. 88–93.

Interview, July, 1996.

Movieline, January/February, 1993.

Newsweek, June 23, 2003, p. 62.

New Woman, October, 1996.

New York Newsday, April 18, 1991, p. 72.

People Weekly, May 6, 1996; April 19, 1999, pp. 116–17; September 6, 1999, p. 108; November 6, 2000, p. 70; April 23, 2001, p. 88; September 2, 2002, p. 54; November 4, 2002, p. 102; June 16, 2003, p. 108.

Premiere, April, 1991, pp. 56–60, 62.

Prevue, May, 1991, pp. 18–19, 57; October, 1991, p. 46.

US, May, 1993, p. 31.

Vanity Fair, August, 1991.

Washington Post, June 27, 2003, pp. C1–C2.

Moore, Demi

views updated May 21 2018

MOORE, Demi



Nationality: American. Born: Demetria Guynes in Roswell, New Mexico, 11 November 1962. Education: Left school at age 16. Family: Married 1) Freddy Moore, 1980 (divorced 1984); 2) the actor Bruce Willis, 1987 (separated 1998), daughters: Rumer Glenn, Scout Larue, and Tallulah Belle. Career: 1981—film debut in Choices; 1982–83—played Jackie Templeton in TV daytime drama General Hospital; 1984—in TV series The Master; 1987—stage role in The Early Girl; on cover of August 1991 issue of Vanity Fair, nude and pregnant, again on cover of August 1992 issue, nude and painted. Awards: People's Choice Award, Favorite Actress in a Movie Drama, 1996. Agent: Ron Meyer, Creative Artists Agency, 9830 Wilshire Boulevard, Beverly Hills, CA 90212, U.S.A.


Films as Actress:

1981

Choices (Narizzano)

1982

Young Doctors in Love (Garry Marshall) (cameo); Parasite (Band) (as Patricia Welles)




1984

No Small Affair (Schatzberg) (as Laura Victor); Blame It on Rio (Donen) (as Nicole Hollis)

1985

St. Elmo's Fire (Schumacher) (as Jules)

1986

Wisdom (Estevez) (as Karen Simmons); One Crazy Summer (Savage Steve Holland) (as Cassandra); About Last Night . . . (Zwick) (as Debbie)

1988

The Seventh Sign (Schultz) (as Abby Quinn)

1989

We're No Angels (Neil Jordan) (as Molly)

1990

Ghost (Jerry Zucker) (as Molly Jensen)

1991

Nothing but Trouble (Aykroyd) (as Diane Lightston); Mortal Thoughts (Rudolph) (as Cynthia Kellogg, + co-pr); The Butcher's Wife (Terry Hughes) (as Marina)

1992

A Few Good Men (Rob Reiner) (as Lt. Cmdr. JoAnne Galloway)

1993

Indecent Proposal (Lyne) (as Diana Murphy)

1994

Disclosure (Levinson) (as Meredith Johnson)

1995

The Scarlet Letter (Brian Gibson) (as Hester Prynne); Now and Then (Glatter) (as Samantha, + co-pr)

1996

The Juror (Brian Gibson) (as Annie Laird); Striptease (Andrew Bergman) (as Erin Grant); The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Truesdale and Kirk Wise—animation) (as voice of Esmerelda); If These Walls Could Talk (Cher, Savoca—for TV) (+ exec pr) (as Claire); Beavis and Butthead Do America (Judge) (as Dallas Grimes's uncredited voice)

1997

G. I. Jane (Ridley Scott) (as Lt. Jordan O'Neill) (+ pr); Deconstructing Harry (Allen) (as Helen); Destination Anywhere (Pellington) (as Janie)

2000

Passion of Mind (Berliner) (as Marty/Marie)



Films as Producer:

1991

Mortal Thoughts (co-pr)

1995

Now and Then

1997

Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (co-pr)

1999

Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (co-pr)



Publications


By MOORE: articles—

"Demi's Big Moment," interview with Nancy Collins, in Vanity Fair (New York), August 1991.

"Demi's Body Language," interview with Jennet Conant, in Vanity Fair (New York), August 1992.

"The Last Pinup," interview with Michael Angeli, in Esquire (New York), May 1993.

"Table Talk," panel discussion with Sally Field, Jodie Foster, and Nancy Griffin, in Premiere (New York), Winter 1993 (Special Issue: Women in Hollywood).

Interview with Mim Udovitch, in Rolling Stone (New York), 9 February 1995.

"Demi-Tough," interview with Tad Friend, in Vogue (New York), October 1995.

"Demi No Dummy," interview with H. Rubenstein, in Interview, July 1996.

"You're Really Going to Ask Me That? It Is Truly a Beyond Offensive Question," interview with Andrew Duncan, in Radio Times (London), 8 November 1997.

On MOORE: books—

Bona, Danien, Starring Demi Moore As Hester Prynne: Hollywood's All-Time Worst Casting Blunders, Carol Publishing Group, 1996.


On MOORE: articles—

"Demi Moore: The Cool Beauty on ABC-TV's Sizzling Soap, General Hospital," in Harper's Bazaar (New York), June 1982.

Kaye, Elizabeth, "Ordinary People," in Rolling Stone (New York), 26 September 1985.

Skow, John, "Greetings to the Class of '86," in Time (New York), 26 May 1986.

Park, Jeannie, "They Heard It through the Grapevine," in People Weekly (New York), 12 November 1990.

Clark, John, filmography in Premiere (New York), January 1991.

Abramowitz, Rachel, "Reason to Believe," in Premiere (New York), April 1991.

Current Biography 1993, New York, 1993.

Gelman-Waxner, Libby, "A Decent Proposal," in Premiere (New York), July 1993.

Bennetts, Leslie, "Demi's State of Grace," in Vanity Fair (New York), December 1993.

Gelman-Waxner, Libby, "Brunets Have More Fun," in Premiere (New York), February 1995.

Cerio, Gregory, "Demi Moore," in People Weekly (New York), 8 May 1995.

Millea, Holly, "Anywhere but Here," in Premiere (New York), September 1995.

Walls, Jeannette, "Get Me Retrial!," in Esquire (New York), November 1995.

Schaefer, Karl-Heinz, in Cinema (Germany), no. 4, 1996.

Greene, R., "Demi-goddess," in Boxoffice (Chicago), May 1996.

Michiels, Dirk, "Durf or Talent?" in Film en Televisie (Brussels), September 1996.

Eimer, David, "For a Few Dollars Moore!" in Time Out (London), 4 September 1996.

Lippert, B., "Demi-feminism," in New York Magazine, 25 August 1997.

Williams, Linda Ruth, and Robert Ashley, "Body Talk: G.I. Jane," in Sight and Sound (London), November 1997.

Schneider, Kevin S. "Turning Point," in People Weekly, 6 September 1999.


* * *

Demi Moore's steady rise to superstar status by the early 1990s may appear surprising when the number of unsuccessful films she had made is compared to the hits, but her great popularity and increased power in Hollywood are undeniable. By 1996's Striptease, she could command a woman's-salary-record of $12.5 million, a figure which might look foolish after the box-office disappointments of The Juror and The Scarlet Letter, and especially Striptease itself. Nevertheless, Moore's potential to deliver hit films still makes her one of the few female stars in contemporary Hollywood to have films custom-tailored to her desires. Her increased activity as a producer has also allowed her to play a significant role behind the scenes.

After an unremarkable film debut, Moore was noticed on the popular television soap opera General Hospital (which led to her cameo in the parody Young Doctors in Love), and then identified as one of Hollywood's 1980s "brat pack" of young actors, most notably through her role in the Big Chill-imitation St. Elmo's Fire. She finally achieved widespread recognition in Ghost, a huge hit in which her ability to generate audience sympathy while retaining her independence and strength established her popular image; while her co-stars worked with the special effects, Moore provided realistic emotional grounding for the story at the heart of the film's supernatural nonsense. Taking advantage of her new on-screen prominence, she began to take greater control of her career behind the scenes, co-producing Mortal Thoughts, in which she co-starred with husband Bruce Willis. A Few Good Men elevated Moore into the company of two male superstars, Jack Nicholson and Tom Cruise, but could not find much to do with her character.

Alongside her early television and film career, Moore's early marriage and divorce, drug problems, and brief engagement to Emilio Estevez (her co-star and director of the dreadful Wisdom) kept her frequently in the gossip columns. Her marriage to fellow superstar Bruce Willis in 1987, their public appearances at the openings of Planet Hollywood restaurants (of which they are co-owners), and especially her nude portraits on the cover of Vanity Fair—first in the eighth month of pregnancy, later with her figure regained and clothing only painted on—generated even more offscreen attention that continued into the late 1990s with her separation from Bruce Willis. Such activities have allowed Moore to successfully negotiate a range of otherwise contradictory identities: she appears as "the last pinup," an unapologetically sexy woman in a "postfeminist" age, as well as an ideal mother, supportive spouse, and shrewd businesswoman, whose advice and personal experiences are regularly featured in popular women's magazines. Indecent Proposal perhaps exploited the fantasies underlying these tensions most explicitly, with Moore playing a loyal wife who might nevertheless be purchased by millionaire Robert Redford for at least one night of sexual play. Her role in Disclosure as an aggressive businesswoman who sexually exploits male colleague Michael Douglas dealt with similar contradictions, but with a more distastefully reactionary twist.

The Scarlet Letter was a much-derided mistake, with Moore justifying the absurd changes in Hawthorne's classic plot by insisting that most people had not read the book, and Now and Then (her second co-production), while more successful, misled fans somewhat, since Moore and her adult co-stars appear only briefly in a film devoted to flashbacks of their characters as children. Advance publicity for Striptease suggested that Moore's erotic dancing would be the film's principal draw, with display of her body once again possibly diverting attention from whatever acting skills her role may demonstrate (yet another nude portrait for the film's poster created yet another minor controversy). But, in the end, the film did not draw much of an audience for any reason. In the unexceptional but commercially successful military drama G. I. Jane, the camera, for a change, emphasized Moore's impressively muscular body, along with the unusual attraction of her shaved head. Moore also played a small part in a Woody Allen film, but only her distinctive, husky voice, was featured in the Disney animated adaptation of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, and more briefly in an uncredited vocal cameo—along with Bruce Willis—in the MTV-derived Beavis and Butthead Do America. Following her separation from Willis (and the breakup of the Planet Hollywood chain), Moore has almost disappeared from the public eye, though from time to time her plans to open a doll museum to display her own large collection are reported. However, in an industry that has always rewarded male stars with higher salaries and greater career control, Moore remains in an unusual position to decide her future direction as a performer and producer. Her determination to succeed seems unshakable, but the wisdom of her choices remains to be seen; in any case, there is little question that the rise, fall, or steady continuation of her career will be fully documented by an attentive media.

—Corey K. Creekmur