Karen Allen

Actress

Birthday October 5, 1951

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Carrollton, Illinois, U.S.

Age 72 years old

Nationality United States

#5047 Most Popular

1951

Karen Jane Allen (born October 5, 1951) is an American film and stage actress.

Allen was born on October 5, 1951, in Carrollton, Illinois, to Ruth Patricia ( Howell) (1927–2020), a university professor, and Carroll Thompson Allen (1925–2015), an FBI agent.

She is of English, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh descent.

Her father's job forced the family to move often.

1974

She attended George Washington University and began to study and perform with the experimental company, the Washington Theatre Laboratory, in Washington, D.C. In 1974, Allen joined Shakespeare & Company in Massachusetts.

Three years later, she moved back to New York City and studied at the Lee Strasberg Theater Institute.

1978

She made her film debut in the comedy film Animal House (1978), which was soon followed by a small role in Woody Allen's romantic comedy-drama Manhattan (1979) and a co-lead role in Philip Kaufman's coming-of-age film The Wanderers (1979), before co-starring opposite Al Pacino in William Friedkin's crime thriller Cruising (1980).

Allen made her major film debut in 1978 in National Lampoon's Animal House.

1979

Her next two film appearances were in The Wanderers, in 1979, and A Small Circle of Friends in 1980, where she played one of three radical college students during the 1960s.

She also appeared (as a guest star) in the 1979 pilot episode of the long-running CBS series Knots Landing.

She had a small role as a television actor in Woody Allen's film Manhattan (1979), before being cast as the love interest of Al Pacino in William Friedkin's controversial film Cruising (1980).

1981

Her critical and commercial breakthrough came when she portrayed Marion Ravenwood opposite Harrison Ford in Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), for which she won the Saturn Award for Best Actress.

Her career-changing role came with the blockbuster movie Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), directed by Steven Spielberg, in which she played Marion Ravenwood, the love interest of Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford).

Allen won the Saturn Award for Best Actress for her performance.

It began in 1981, when she appeared in the play Two for the Seesaw at the Berkshire Theater Festival in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

1982

She later co-starred in Shoot the Moon (1982), Starman (1984), for which she was again nominated for the Saturn Award for Best Actress, and Scrooged (1988).

After a few minor films, including leading roles in the dramatic thriller Split Image (1982), directed by Ted Kotcheff, and the Paris-set romantic drama Until September (1984), directed by Richard Marquand, as well as other stage appearances, she co-starred with Jeff Bridges in John Carpenter's science-fiction film Starman (1984).

Allen debuted on Broadway in the 1982 production The Monday After The Miracle.

1983

In 1983, she played the lead in the off-Broadway play Extremities, a physically demanding role about a woman who turns the tables on a would-be rapist who attacks her.

1986

The film was a critical success, and later spawned the short-lived Starman television series in 1986.

Allen's performance in the film earned her another nomination for the Saturn Award for Best Actress.

1987

She has also received recognition for her work in The Glass Menagerie (1987), Year by the Sea (2016), and Colewell (2019).

"I grew up moving almost every year and so I was always the new kid in school and always, in a way, was deprived of ever really having any lasting friendships", Allen said in 1987.

Although Allen says her father was very much involved in the family, she felt that she and her two sisters grew up in a very female-dominated household.

After she graduated from DuVal High School, in Lanham, Maryland, at 17, she moved to New York City to study art and design at Fashion Institute of Technology for two years.

Allen later ran a boutique on the University of Maryland campus and spent time traveling through South and Central Asia.

She often took breaks from movie roles to concentrate on stage acting; Allen appeared as Laura in the Paul Newman–directed film version of the Tennessee Williams play The Glass Menagerie, with John Malkovich and Joanne Woodward, in 1987.

1988

In 1988, Allen returned to the big screen as Bill Murray's long-lost love, Claire, in the Christmas comedy Scrooged.

While the film initially earned a mixed response from critics upon its release, it was a major box office success.

The film has since earned a cult following and is regarded as a Christmas classic.

1990

In 1990, she portrayed the doomed crew member Christa McAuliffe in the television movie Challenger, based on the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.

1992

Subsequently, she appeared in Spike Lee's Malcolm X (1992), in a small supporting role in The Perfect Storm (2000) and In the Bedroom (2001).

1994

She also starred in the short-lived series The Road Home (1994), and portrayed Dr. Clare Burton in the video game Ripper (1996).

1996

She made guest appearances on Law & Order (1996) and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (2001).

2008

She reprised her role as Marion Ravenwood in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008) and Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023).

Allen reprised her best-known role as Marion Ravenwood for the 2008 sequel Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, in which she renews her relationship with Indiana Jones and reveals to him that they have a son named Henry Jones III, who named himself Mutt Williams, played by Shia LaBeouf.

The film was a critical and commercial success.

2012

Allen starred in the American premiere of Jon Fosse's A Summer Day at the Cherry Lane Theater in New York City, which opened in October 2012.

Allen has a long-standing relationship with the Berkshire Theater Group.

2014

In 2014 she played the role of Betty Lowe in "Unfinished Business", the 13th episode of the 4th season of the CBS police procedural drama Blue Bloods.