Debra Winger
Debra Winger | |
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File:Debrawinger1984.jpg
Winger in a 1984 studio portrait
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Born | Debra Lynn Winger[1] May 16, 1955 Cleveland Heights, Ohio, U.S. |
Alma mater | California State University, Northridge |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1976–present |
Spouse(s) | Timothy Hutton (m. 1986; div. 1990) Arliss Howard (m. 1996) |
Children | 2 |
Debra Lynn Winger (born May 16, 1955) is an American actress. She starred in the films An Officer and a Gentleman (1982), Terms of Endearment (1983), and Shadowlands (1993), each of which earned her a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. She won the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress for Terms of Endearment, and the Tokyo International Film Festival Award for Best Actress for A Dangerous Woman (1993). Her other film roles include Urban Cowboy (1980), Legal Eagles (1986), Black Widow (1987), Betrayed (1988), The Sheltering Sky (1990), Forget Paris (1995), and Rachel Getting Married (2008). In 2012, she made her Broadway debut in the original production of the David Mamet play The Anarchist. In 2014, she received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Transilvania International Film Festival.[2]
She starred as a series regular in the Netflix original television series The Ranch (2016–2020).
Contents
Early years
Winger was born in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, into an Orthodox Jewish family, to Robert Winger, a meat packer, and Ruth (née Felder), an office manager.[3][4][5] Over the years, she told many interviewers that she volunteered on an Israeli kibbutz, sometimes even saying she had trained with the Israel Defense Forces,[6] but in a 2008 interview she said she was merely on a typical youth tour that visited the kibbutz.[7] At the age of 18, after returning to the United States, she was involved in a car accident and suffered a cerebral hemorrhage; as a result, she was left partially paralyzed and blind for 10 months, having initially been told that she would never see again. With time on her hands to think about her life, she decided that, if she recovered, she would move to California and become an actress.[8]
Career
Acting
Winger's first acting role was as "Debbie" in the 1976 sexploitation film Slumber Party '57. Her next role was as Diana Prince's younger sister Drusilla (Wonder Girl) in three episodes of ABC's TV series, Wonder Woman. The producers had wanted her to appear more often, but she refused, fearing that the role would hurt her fledgling career. This was followed by a guest role in Season 4 of the TV drama Police Woman in 1978.[9] Played a supporting role in Willard Huyck's iconic “students in Paris” film “French Postcards” 1979.
Her first major role was in Thank God It's Friday, followed by her role in Urban Cowboy in 1980 with John Travolta, for which she received a BAFTA nomination and a pair of Golden Globe nominations (for Best Performance by an Actress and Best New Star). In 1982 she co-starred with Nick Nolte in Cannery Row and with Richard Gere in An Officer and a Gentleman, for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress. She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress twice more: for Terms of Endearment in 1983 (which was awarded to her co-star, Shirley MacLaine, who played her mother in the film) and for Shadowlands in 1993, for which she also received her second BAFTA nomination. Her performance in A Dangerous Woman earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress.[10]
Over the years Winger acquired a reputation for being outspoken and difficult to work with.[11][12][13] She has expressed her dislike of An Officer and a Gentleman, for which she refused to do any publicity,[13] and several of her other films, and has been dismissive of some of her co-stars and directors. When Barbara Walters interviewed Bette Davis in 1986, Davis said "I see a great deal of myself in Debra Winger."
Winger was going to play Peggy Sue in the film Peggy Sue Got Married but was forced to back out just before production began when she injured her back in a bicycle accident. The role went to Kathleen Turner. The injury affected Winger's ability to work for several months afterward. Winger was cast in the motion picture A League of Their Own but dropped out and was replaced by Geena Davis. It was later reported that the reason Winger dropped out of the film was her refusal to work with recording artist Madonna, whom Winger did not consider a serious actress.[14] Other starring roles during this period included Legal Eagles, Made in Heaven, Everybody Wins, The Sheltering Sky, Leap of Faith, Black Widow, Betrayed, Wilder Napalm, and A Dangerous Woman.
In 1995 Winger decided to take a hiatus from acting. In 2002 she said, "I wanted out for years. I got sick of hearing myself say I wanted to quit. It's like opening an interview with 'I hate interviews!' Well, get out! I stopped reading scripts and stopped caring. People said, 'We miss you so much.' But in the last six years, tell me a film that I should have been in. The few I can think of, the actress was so perfect".[15] After making Forget Paris in 1995 she was absent from the screen for six years before returning in 2001 with Big Bad Love, written and directed by her husband, Arliss Howard, and also marking Winger's debut as a producer.[16]
During her film hiatus, Winger had the female lead in the American Repertory Theater's stage production of Anton Chekhov's play Ivanov from November 1999 to January 2000.[17]
In 2001 a critically acclaimed documentary film titled Searching for Debra Winger was made by Rosanna Arquette and released in 2002 after Winger returned to film acting. She subsequently starred in the films Radio, Eulogy, Sometimes in April and received positive reviews for portraying Anne Hathaway's estranged mother in Rachel Getting Married.[18]
Winger earned an Emmy Award nomination for her title role in the television film Dawn Anna in 2005, directed by Arliss Howard. In 2010 she returned to television, making a guest appearance as a high school principal in an episode of Law & Order.[19] She also joined the cast of HBO's In Treatment as one of the three patients featured in the third season.[20]
In 2013 she starred in three episodes of In the Woods,[21] the first installment of Jennifer Elster's multimedia, experimental film series The Being Experience, also including: Terrence Howard, Dave Matthews, Rufus Wainwright, Karen Black, Will Shortz, Liya Kebede, Questlove, Famke Janssen, Moby, Gale Harold, Paz de la Huerta, Jorgen Leth, Rosie Perez, Aubrey de Grey, and Alan Cumming.[22]
From 2016 to 2020, Winger starred opposite Sam Elliott and Ashton Kutcher in the Netflix multi-cam comedy The Ranch as Maggie.
In 2017, she had a cameo as Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan in the TV miniseries When We Rise.[23] The same year, she starred in her first romantic lead after many years in The Lovers.[24] She has continued to acquire roles in other feature films, such as Tiger City, scheduled for release in 2018.[25]
Other pursuits
In 1995 Winger performed in The Wizard of Oz in Concert: Dreams Come True a television musical performance of the popular 1939 MGM film at Lincoln Center to benefit the Children's Defense Fund. Her roles in that television special were the "Cyclone" narrator and the Wicked Witch of the West. It was originally broadcast on both TBS and TNT.
During her hiatus from the film industry, Winger spent a semester as a teaching fellow at Harvard University.[26] In 2008 Winger wrote a book based on her personal recollections titled Undiscovered.[27] She has shown her support for reconciliation between Arabs and Jews in Israel by visiting the bilingual Hand in Hand schools (Galilee Jewish-Arab School, Gesher al HaWadi School) where, in 2008, she stated she would "dedicate the next bit of my life to these schools".[28]
As 2009 president of the Zurich Film Festival jury, Winger joined other members of the Hollywood film community to speak out against the arrest and prosecution of director Roman Polanski who was convicted of raping a 13-year-old girl in the 1970s, criticizing Switzerland's government for "philistine collusion" in arresting him so many years later, as he was en route to attend the Zurich festival.[29]
In 2010 Debra Winger was co-executive producer of the Academy Award-nominated documentary, Gasland.[30] She was also the executive producer of the 2012 documentary Bel Borba Aqui about the life and works of Brazilian graphic artist Bel Borba.[31][32]
Personal life
Winger's three-year relationship with actor Andrew Rubin ended in 1980.[33] From 1983 to 1985 Winger dated Bob Kerrey, at the time the Governor of Nebraska, whom she met while filming Terms of Endearment in Lincoln, Nebraska.[34] Winger has also dated her Cannery Row and Everybody Wins co-star Nick Nolte.[35]
From 1986 to 1990 she was married to actor Timothy Hutton with whom she had a son, Noah Hutton, a documentary filmmaker born in 1987. The marriage ended in divorce.[36][37]
In 1996 she married actor/director Arliss Howard, whom she met on the set of the film Wilder Napalm. Their son, Gideon Babe Ruth Howard (known as Babe), was born in 1997. She is stepmother to Sam Howard, Arliss's son from his prior marriage.[36][37]
Filmography
Film
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1976–1977 | Wonder Woman | Drusilla / Wonder Girl | 3 episodes: "The Feminum Mystique" (Parts 1 & 2), "Wonder Woman in Hollywood" |
1977 | Szysznyk | Jenny | Episode: "Run, Jenny, Run" |
Tattletales | Herself | 5 episodes | |
1978 | Special Olympics | Sherrie Hensley | TV movie |
Police Woman | Phyllis Baxter | Episode: "Battered Teachers" | |
James at 16 | Alicia | Episode: "Hunter Country" | |
2005 | Dawn Anna | Dawn Anna | TV movie Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress – Miniseries or a Movie |
Sometimes in April | Prudence Bushnell | TV movie | |
2010 | Law & Order | Mrs. Woodside | Episode: "Boy on Fire" |
In Treatment | Frances | 7 episodes | |
2014 | The Red Tent | Rebecca | 2 episodes |
2016–2020 | The Ranch | Maggie Bennett | Main role |
2018 | Patriot | Bernice Tavner | Main role (season 2) |
2021 | Mr. Corman | Ruth Corman |
References
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- ↑ Debra Winger : Dangerous Woman Archived November 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Time, article by Richard Corliss and Elizabeth L. Bland, January 24, 1994
- ↑ Debra Winger: a star is re-born Archived December 3, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Daily Telegraph, December 19, 2008
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ Does Debra Winger Still Have Legs? Archived February 25, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, New York, article by Holly Millea, February 25, 2002
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- ↑ Matheson, Whitney, "Moby, Questlove, others endure puzzling 'Experience'" Archived April 15, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, "USA TODAY", June 17, 2013
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- ↑ 36.0 36.1 Rachel Cooke "The interview: Debra Winger" Archived April 27, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, "The Observer", December 28, 2008. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
- ↑ 37.0 37.1 "Debra Winger: The return of a class act" Archived June 7, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, Gaynor Flynn, The Independent, Friday, October 24, 2008. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
- ↑ Brode, Douglas. Fantastic Planets, Forbidden Zones, and Lost Continents. University of Texas Press (2015). p. 215
External links
- Debra Winger at the Internet Movie Database
- Transcript of Radio 4 interview
- Texas Monthly Talks: Debra Winger, video posted on November 3, 2008 on YouTube
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- 1955 births
- 20th-century American actresses
- 21st-century American actresses
- Actresses from Cleveland
- American film actresses
- American television actresses
- California State University, Northridge alumni
- Harvard Fellows
- Jewish American actresses
- Living people
- Audiobook narrators