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Ellen Barkin

Ellen Barkin

Ellen Barkin was born into a working-class Jewish family in South Bronx, NY. Her father was a salesman for Fuller Brush who also worked as an usher at Yankee Stadium; her mother was an administrative assistant at Jamaica Hospital. Always a rebellious child, Barkin once protested her parents' refusal to let her go to Woodstock by staying up all night dropping acid. At 15, she spent a great deal of time hanging out in Greenwich Village and, on a lark, auditioned for the High School of Performing Arts. Though accepted, her teachers felt her chances at succeeding were slim at best, citing that she had "a little talent, but no spark." After studying at the school for three years, Barkin moved on to Hunter College, where she worked as a waitress to pay her tuition while studying history and drama. She left college wanting to be an Egyptologist, but instead decided to pursue acting. Though it took no small amount of time to get her first break in "Irish Coffee," the roles started flooding in. After bit parts in such impressive film fare as "Diner" (1982), "Tender Mercies" (1983) and "Eddie and the Cruisers" (1983), Barkin landed her first major lead in "The Big Easy" (1987), portraying an uptight, recent Northern import to the New Orleans District Attorney's office who falls in love with - against her better judgment - a homegrown local cop-cum-ladies' man (Dennis Quaid), she is forced to eventually prosecute. Despite her initial reservations, Quaid's character finally turns her on and the resultant sex scene, while not tremendously explicit, was certainly a temperature raiser, assuring audiences of even steamier roles to come. Although she missed the mark with her sexy firebrand in "Johnny Handsome" (1989), creating a truly despicable femme gang member, Barkin was in top form as the hard-bitten, voraciously carnal suspect romantically linked to weary, bourbon-slugging cop Al Pacino in "Sea of Love" (1989). Concealing her emotional vulnerability beneath her big-city single woman's armor, she matched Pacino stride for stride, with the two presenting a realistic portrayal of an uncertain couple, while the steamy sex scenes between them raised her bombshell quotient exponentially. Unfortunately, Barkin's tour de force performance was one she would find difficult to top. Her marriage to actor Gabriel Byrne - whom she had met while filming "Siesta" (1987) - and subsequent exploration of motherhood removed her from the loop and hurt her career. Although she was the bright point of Blake Edwards' otherwise flat sex farce "Switch" (1991), there was nothing she could do for the ill-conceived "Man Trouble" (1992), which wasted the talents of everybody involved, including star Jack Nicholson, director Bob Rafelson and screenwriter Carole Eastman. She had her best role since "Sea of Love" in "This Boy's Life" (1993), playing the put-upon wife of Robert De Niro - what basically amounted to a more grown-up version of her "Diner" role - but her hot-and-heavy sex with Laurence Fishburne in "Bad Company" (1995), was the only thing that stood out amidst the never-ending series of double-crosses culminating in a flat ending.Barkin did not quite cut it as a scruffy Calamity Jane in Walter Hill's artless Western, "Wild Bill" (1995), though she was fine in her small role in Tony Scott's sports thriller "The Fan" (1996), a film that ultimately squandered the talents of Robert De Niro, Wesley Snipes and John Leguizamo. She appeared in the gangster comedy "Mad Dog Time" (1996), which put her in close proximity to ex-husband Byrne, then had a cameo as a waitress in Terry Gilliam's "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" (1998). But a return to television provided her best opportunity in ages. Sharing the screen with producer Oprah Winfrey, she earned an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress playing the embittered mother of two who turns to the bottle to ease the pain of a tragic past in ABC's "Before Women Had Wings" (1997). Some of her earlier TV movies were "We're Fighting Back" (CBS, 1981), James Cagney's swan song, "Terrible Joe Morgan" (CBS, 1984), "The Princess Who Never Laughed" (Showtime, 1986), and "Clinton and Nadine" (HBO, 1988), in which she starred opposite Andy Garcia.In "Drop Dead Gorgeous" (1999), a mockumentary about a small town beauty pageant showcasing teenage innocence that goes horribly awry amidst back-stabbing rivals, Barkin played the chain-smoking, beer-swilling mother of one of the top contestants (Kirsten Dunst) who once competed for the prize herself. Then after an appearance as a blind prostitute in the straight-to-video adventure drama, "The White River Kid" (1999), she played the host of a big New York talk show in the by-the-book romantic comedy "Someone Like You" (2001), starring Ashley Judd and Hugh Jackman. Barkin was the unhappy mother of a high school cheerleader (Monica Keena) who plots the death of her drunken husband only to be beaten to the punch by her raped daughter in the "Crime and Punishment in Suburbia" (2000), a loose adaptation of Fyodor Dostoevsky's masterwork on murder and redemption. By this time, Barkin had married business tycoon Ron Perelman in 2000 - his fourth and her second - which ended as badly for him as could possibly be imagined. Though it was reported their five-year marriage was a rocky one, due to her traveling for her career and both being hot tempered, Perelman was taken to task by the media when he filed for divorce in 2006 just days before a clause in their prenuptial agreement would have increased her alimony. Still, Barkin received between $2-3 million per year for a total payout that some sources cited as high as $65 million. In 2007, Barkin filed a lawsuit for $3.4 million in payments promised for an investment in her production company, Applehead Pictures. Perelman countersued, but was ultimately forced to pay Barkin $4.3 million.After a turn as a bio tech executive who fires a whistleblower (Anthony Mackie) in the Spike Lee misfire "She Hate Me" (2004), Barkin played a mom who forces her unwilling daughter to have an abortion in "Palindromes" (2005), another offering from Todd Solondz. In "Trust the Man" (2006), Barkin gave one of the few funny turns in a lackluster romantic comedy about decaying relationships, playing a hotshot publisher who comes on to the long-suffering girlfriend (Maggie Gyllenhaal) of a ne'er-do-well slacker (Billy Crudup) unable to commit to marriage and having a family. An opportunity to reunite Barkin and Pacino in "Ocean's Thirteen" (2007) was grossly wasted in an otherwise entertaining movie. Barkin provided much needed estrogen as the rapacious and impervious assistant to a Las Vegas casino mogul (Pacino) about to get his comeuppance from Danny Ocean (George Clooney) and company, after double-crossing Reuben Tishkoff (Elliott Gould) and leaving the old school con artist in the hospital. She next played a hard-edged federal agent who butts heads with an undercover narcotics officer (Don Cheadle) in "Brooklyn's Finest" (2009), before co-starring in the straight-to-DVD action comedy "Operation: Endgame" (2010) and Joel Schumacher's maligned indie drama "Twelve" (2010). After starring in the festival-bound drama "Shit Year" (2011), Barkin delivered an acclaimed performance as a high-strung mother who confronts her unpleasant past at her son's wedding in "Another Happy Day" (2011). Following an uproarious guest turn in the spring of 2012 as an unscrupulous real estate rival of Phil Dunphy's on the hit sitcom "Modern Family" (ABC, 2009-), Barkin returned to network television as a series regular on the similarly themed comedy "The New Normal" (NBC, 2012-13). As the bigoted, conservative mother and grandmother to Georgia King and young Bebe Wood, respectively, Barkin's character provided a comedic counterpoint to a successful gay couple (Justin Bartha and Andrew Rannells), who enlist King's character's services in acting as a surrogate mother. Even before its premiere, the sitcom stirred up controversy, when a Mormon-owned network affiliate in Utah refused to broadcast the show, due to its gay-friendly content. Always outspoken, Barkin - whose often outrageous Twitter posts had recently given the 58-year-old star a new generation of fans - vigorously took to the blogosphere to defend the new show and the rights of gays and lesbians, pointing to the irony of increasingly graphic content being deemed appropriate for primetime television, "but watching two men kiss each other and cry because they've decided to raise a child together is not OK."
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