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Ashley Judd.
The daughter of country-music superstar Naomi Judd and
the younger half-sister of singer Wynonna Judd, Judd was born in Los
Angeles, on April 19, 1968. A single parent, her mother supported Judd
and her sister by taking odd jobs in California and Kentucky. The actress
spent her first 13 years shuttling between the two states and attended
12 different schools, often living in poverty in remote areas of Kentucky.
With no external sources of entertainment, Judd read books and amused
herself by pretending to be various characters while her sister and
mother whiled away the time singing. Their singing paid off; after Naomi
and Wynonna Judd became country-music sensations, the family was finally
able to leave their financial hardship in the past. Judd went on to
attend the University of Kentucky, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in 1990
with a degree in French. The actress' first major film role was in the hit independent
drama Ruby in Paradise (1993). She garnered considerable acclaim for
her subtle, realistic portrayal of a spoiled Tennessee heiress who runs
away to sell tourist trinkets in a ramshackle resort, winning Best Actress
at the 1994 Independent Spirit Awards. After filming Oliver Stone's
Natural Born Killers, only to have her scenes end up on the cutting-room
floor, Judd next found acclaim with her turn in the 1995 film Smoke,
in which she played the pregnant, drug-addicted daughter of Harvey Keitel
and Stockard Channing. The same year, she appeared in the much-lauded
Heat, then went on to star with Mira Sorvino in Following a substantial role as Matthew McConaughey's wife in Joel Schumacher's adaptation of John Grisham's A Time to Kill in 1996, and a lead in the crime film A Normal Life (also 1996), Judd starred in the 1997 thriller Kiss the Girls. The film received mixed reviews but did decent business at the box office, further increasing Judd's glowing star wattage. She landed another lead role the following year, in the well-received drama Simon Birch and, in 1999, could be seen starring in Bruce Beresford's Double Jeopardy as an ex-convict planning revenge on those who framed her for a crime she did not commit. The film was a substantial box-office hit, further cementing Judd's arrival as a major Hollywood star. Switching gears in 2000, Judd starred as a friend and mentor to a pregnant 17-year-old (Natalie Portman) in Where the Heart Is. This was followed by the 2001 romantic-comedy Someone Like You and 2002's High Crimes, which saw Judd reteamed with Kiss the Girls costar Morgan Freeman. While High Crimes failed to make much money, that same year Judd scored at the box-office with The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood and wowed critics with a supporting role in the Academy Award nominated Frida. Judd didn't turn up again until 2004's Twisted, a crime
thriller about a female homicide detective who finds herself at the
center of a series of murders. Next up, Judd starred alongside Kevin
Kline in De-Lovely, a musical biography of Cole Porter. |
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