Theresa Russell

Actress

Birthday March 20, 1957

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace San Diego, California, U.S.

Age 66 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.67 m

#19388 Most Popular

1957

Theresa Lynn Russell ( Paup; born March 20, 1957) is an American actress whose career spans over four decades.

Her filmography includes over 50 feature films, ranging from mainstream to independent and experimental films.

Born in San Diego, Russell was raised in the Los Angeles suburb of Burbank, where she had a turbulent upbringing marked by poverty, and dropped out of high school at age 16.

Russell subsequently began modeling, which brought her to the attention of film producer Sam Spiegel.

1975

Through her modeling work, Russell met photographer Peter Douglas, son of Kirk Douglas, who introduced her to film producer Sam Spiegel in 1975.

At the time, Spiegel was beginning production of a film adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Last Tycoon, directed by Elia Kazan and adapted for the screen by Harold Pinter.

Spiegel suggested that Russell audition for the role of Cecilia Brady, the daughter of a studio executive (played by Robert Mitchum), a part in which she was ultimately cast.

In a retrospective interview, Russell commented on the experience with ambivalence, saying: "Sam [Spiegel] loved to be seen with child-girls on his arm. I was 16 years old and still living at home, and he took me to the Bistro and tried to stick his tongue down my throat. He thought he could buy and sell people."

Kazan corroborated this, recalling: "Sam suggested her. I had strong reservations, saw some values but more drawbacks. It was obvious to me, and later conversations with Theresa verified this, that Sam had, for a long time, tried to gentle her into his bed."

According to Russell, prior to shooting the film, Spiegel attempted to have her sign a contract placing her under his control for a nine-year period.

"I was not a bimbo," she recalled.

"I called a lawyer. Sam was furious. He said he would see to it that I got no billing in the movie. And to this day, if you ever see any advertising for The Last Tycoon, my name is in teensy-weensy type. I was completely left out of the publicity for the movie. He was unrelenting. I asked him, 'If I sign your contract, what if I want to do some role in some other picture?' He said, 'You'll have to come to my boat in the South of France.' Yeah, and what happens then?"

The following year, after completing The Last Tycoon, Russell was cast as a troubled young woman who becomes associated with a criminal (played by Dustin Hoffman) in the drama Straight Time.

Vincent Canby of The New York Times praised Russell in his review of the film, writing: "Miss Russell, who was so good in The Last Tycoon, is an extremely appealing actress, with a kind of contemporary authority, but she looks so classy, so understated-chic, that she suggests an upper-class girl whose path would cross Max's only at the beach, or maybe at a singles bar."

1976

Through Spiegel, she was cast in Elia Kazan's The Last Tycoon (1976), playing the daughter of a prominent film executive.

1978

In 1978, Russell starred opposite Dustin Hoffman in the critically-acclaimed crime drama Straight Time.

1980

Her next role was a lead in English filmmaker Nicolas Roeg's controversial thriller Bad Timing (1980), which earned critical praise.

Russell continued to collaborate with Roeg throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s, appearing in a Roeg-directed segment of the anthology film Aria (1987), as well as the features Track 29 (1989) and Cold Heaven (1991).

1982

Russell and Roeg began a romance while shooting the film, and it marked one of six projects they would collaborate on following their 1982 marriage.

The single appears on the band's 1982 album, It's Hard.

Russell was born in San Diego, California, the eldest of three children to teenage mother Carole Platt (née Mall) and Jerry Russell Paup.

When she was five years old, Russell's parents divorced, and her father relocated to Mexico.

Her mother subsequently remarried, and moved the family to Los Angeles County, where Russell was raised primarily in Burbank.

Through her mother's marriage to her stepfather, she has two half-siblings.

Russell has said she grew up in poverty, and that at times her family required food stamps to survive.

She had a turbulent relationship with her stepfather, whom she described as "hideous", "incapable" and "an asshole," and by age 13, she had begun experimenting with recreational drugs.

1983

She next appeared in Roeg's drama Eureka (1983), followed by the John Byrum-directed The Razor's Edge (1984).

1985

Russell portrayed Marilyn Monroe in Roeg's experimental alternate history film Insignificance (1985), followed by a lead role as a serial killer in Bob Rafelson's neo-noir film Black Widow (1987), which garnered her significant commercial attention.

1989

Other roles from this time included the crime dramas Physical Evidence (1989) and Impulse (1990).

1990

After appearing in a number of independent films in the mid-1990s, Russell had a supporting role in the commercially successful neo-noir Wild Things (1998), and the critically-acclaimed drama The Believer (2001).

1991

In 1991, Russell starred as a prostitute in Ken Russell's satirical drama Whore, followed by Steven Soderbergh's experimental black-and-white feature, Kafka, co-starring Jeremy Irons.

Despite her early struggles, Russell commented in 1991: "I hate it when actors talk about what a hard time they had as kids. That was just my life. It wasn't horrible. When you're free, white, and over 21, how hard can it be? Get over it."

At age 14, while a student at Burbank High School, Russell was approached while walking on a street in Los Angeles by a photographer who suggested she model.

Suspecting the photographer merely wanted to exploit her, Russell requested that he meet her mother first, to which he obliged.

She subsequently began modeling for a fashion photographer who was a friend of her mother.

"I ended up having what I realise now was a long, almost like a Lolita/Humbert Humbert relationship with him—without the sex. He was madly in love with me and took pictures of me a lot. He would come round and we would go off and shoot pictures up in the mountains."

Russell dropped out of high school at 16 and moved in with a 28-year-old boyfriend who worked as a primal scream therapist, whom she later described as "one of the most fucked-up people I have ever met."

She enrolled at the Lee Strasberg Institute in West Hollywood to study acting at age 17.

2005

In 2005, she had a supporting role on the HBO miniseries Empire Falls, followed by a minor part in Sam Raimi's Spider-Man 3 (2007).

The song "Athena" by the rock group The Who, was written about a chance meeting with Pete Townshend, who was smitten and rejected by her.