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Martha Plimpton

Martha Plimpton

Martha Campbell Plimpton was born in New York City, NY. Through her father, she was part of the sprawling family acting dynasty that included paternal grandfather John Carradine; uncles Robert, Bruce and David Carradine; half-uncle Michael Bowen; and cousins Ever and Calista Carradine. Other relatives included author, writer and occasional actor George Plimpton, who was a cousin, as was cartoonist Bill Plympton. Her mother was actress Shelley Plimpton, who met her father while both were in the original Broadway production of "Hair." Their union was short-lived; Carradine, then only 19, returned to Los Angeles shortly after his daughter's birth, leaving her to be raised by her mother in a small two-bedroom apartment on the Upper West Side. Though they were not close during her childhood, Carradine and Plimpton did build a relationship in later years.She first stood on stage with her mother during a curtain call for the Broadway production of "The Leaf People"; her professional debut came at the age of nine in an avant-garde musical version of "The Haggadah." While attending the Professional Children's School in Manhattan, Plimpton began working as a model, most notably for Calvin Klein. In 1981, she landed her screen debut in Alan J. Pakula's financial thriller, "Rollover," as the oldest daughter of Macon McCalman's character. Two years later, she was top billed as a teenaged girl who meets her ex-con father (Tommy Lee Jones) for the first time in "The River Rat" (1984). The tomboyish role would largely define her screen persona for the next few years, and encompass her best-known feature film performance, that of Stephanie "Stef" Steinbrenner, who joins a group of fellow outcast teens in a search for hidden pirate treasure in the Stephen Spielberg-produced/Richard Donner-directed "The Goonies." A much-loved childhood favorite for a generation of viewers, its popularity and influence surpassed much of Plimpton's other work, including her award-winning stage roles; reportedly, during a production of "Hedda Gabler," she was interrupted by an audience member who shouted out the film's title.Despite the enduring legacy of "The Goonies," Plimpton soon developed a reputation among critics and audiences as an effortlessly mature performer, adept at tackling challenging roles for top directors. She was a precocious missionary's daughter who flirted with River Phoenix in Peter Weir's "The Mosquito Coast" (1986), then shifted gears to play an abrasive, drug-addicted city teen whose manipulative ways with Cajun relatives come to a disastrous end in Andrei Konchalevsky's "Shy People" (1987), which earned her an Independent Spirit Award nomination. The following year, she played Gena Rowland's neglected stepdaughter in Woody Allen's dramatic "Another Woman" (1988), before portraying love interest to Phoenix in Sidney Lumet's "Running on Empty" (1988). Plimpton later shaved her head to play a cancer patient in the German film "Silence Like Glass" (1989) before again shifting gears taking a hilarious turn as a teenage mother in Ron Howard's "Parenthood" (1989). For several years during this period, Plimpton was engaged in a tumultuous relationship with her "Mosquito Coast" star and kindred spirit, of sorts, River Phoenix. Though devoted to the purity of his ideals, his mounting drug addiction proved too difficult to overcome. The pair would remain friends until his untimely overdose death in October 1993. The 1990s saw Plimpton move out of adolescent and teen roles and into more adult projects. Her unique looks often cast her as women operating on the fringes: "Inside Monkey Zetterland" (1992), written and directed by her "Goonies" co-star Steve Antin, cast her as a lesbian terrorist posing as a heterosexual housewife while publishing a newsletter than outed closeted gays, while Stevie in "I Shot Andy Warhol" (1996) was a friend and associate of Valerie Solanas, who penned the anti-male "SCUM Manifesto" before attempting to murder the pop artist. In Tim Blake Nelson's "Eye of God" (1997), she was a naïve young Southern woman who married her prison pen pal, while the indie comedy "Music from Another Room" (1998) cast her as yet another misanthropic women; this time the creator of a theater project called "Actors Without Dicks."Despite the apparent typecasting, Plimpton's talents also carried her to a wide variety of roles, several of which allowed her to display a knack for dry comedy. In John Waters' "Pecker" (1998), she was the gleeful emcee of a go-go contest at a gay club, while 1993's "Samatha" gave her a rare lead as a talented violinist who upsets her comfortable life by searching for her birth parents. However, drama was her forte, and she excelled as serious professionals, like New Yorker co-founder Jane Grant in "Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle" (1994) and in "The Defenders: Payback" (Showtime, 1997), a TV movie revival of the 1961-65 legal series (CBS) as original cast member E.G. Marshall's granddaughter, who followed him into the profession. Plimpton's presence on stage during this period also grew exponentially, with several acclaimed turns for Chicago's famed Steppenwolf Theatre Company among her credits.Gradually, theater came to dominate Plimpton's acting efforts; her film career was relegated to a few well-regarded indie projects, including "200 Cigarettes" (1999) and "The Sleepy Time Gal" (2001), which received a Grand Jury Prize nomination at the Cannes Film Festival. There was also another leading role, albeit a little-seen one in "Marvelous" (2006), a drama about a woman (Plimpton) who emerged from a painful divorce with the ability to heal people. However, if fans wanted to see Plimpton outside of these limited venues, they needed to visit a theater; there, they could see her give powerful performances in "Hedda Gabler," Shakespeare's "Cymbeline" and "A Midsummer Night's Dream" among many others. She soon became one of the New York stage's leading lights, with Tony nominations in 2007 and 2008 for the epic "Coast of Utopia," which also earned her a Drama Desk Award, and "Top Girls." In 2008, she also surprised many by tackling her first musical, "Pal Joey," which brought her a third Tony nomination for her performance as the veteran chorus girl, Gladys Bumps, which also required her to perform a burlesque routine each night. This led to an acclaimed one-woman show, "Martha Plimpton Sings?" (2010), for Lincoln Center's American Songbook program, as well as duets with singer Lucy Wainwright Roche on her EP, 8 More (2008). In addition to her acting career, Plimpton dabbled in screenwriting with an episode of "7th Heaven" (The WB, 1996-2007). She also sat on the board of directors for The Players, the century-old New York social club for actors.When not on stage, Plimpton was a frequent guest star on episodic television, where she essayed an array of memorable women, notable either for their power or vulnerability. She was a heroin-addicted waitress who found herself pregnant on four episodes of "ER" (NBC, 1994-2009), then received an Emmy nomination for another drug-addicted role, this time on "Law and Order: Special Victims Unit" (NBC, 1999-) as an assault victim who is accused of murdering her infant sister. On the other end of the spectrum was her mysterious secret agent on the short-lived science fiction series "Surface" (NBC, 2005-06) and Lake Bell's big-hearted boss on "How to Make It in America" (HBO, 2010-11). That same year, she signed on to play the world-weary, chain-smoking mom of clueless teen father Lucas Neff on the comedy series "Raising Hope" (Fox, 2010-14), a role that earned her an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series. In 2012, Plimpton earned an Emmy - this time as a guest actress in a drama - for her role as an opposing counselor opposite Julianna Marguiles on "The Good Wife" (CBS, 2009-16) She next appeared on TV in the sitcom "The Real O'Neals" (ABC 2016-) as Eileen O'Neal, the stern but loving matriarch of a family suddenly roiled by the exposure of multiple family secrets.
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