Winona Ryder


Actor
Winona Ryder

About

Also Known As
Winona Laura Horowitz
Birth Place
Winona, Minnesota, USA
Born
October 29, 1971

Biography

An icon of 1990s film, actress Winona Ryder first earned a loyal following for giving unusual depth and inner life to teen characters in films like "Heathers" (1989) and "Edward Scissorhands" (1990). Her enormous, expressive brown eyes and a radiance that reminded early champion Tim Burton of the "timeless old movie stars" went on to become a favorite element in period dramas like "Bram ...

Family & Companions

Johnny Depp
Companion
Actor. Born on June 9, 1963; engaged to be married as of February 1990; had "Winona Forever" tatooed on his arm (since partially removed); separated in 1993; Ryder later said of their breakup: "I was just really young. I don't know what his excuse is, but that's mine".
David Pirner
Companion
Musician. Lead singer for the Minneapolis-based grunge rock group Soul Asylum; together from 1993 to 1996.
Matt Damon
Companion
Actor. Introduced by Gwyneth Paltrow at a New Year's Eve party on December 31, 1997; separated in April 2000.
Jimmy Fallon
Companion
Actor, comedian. Reportedly dated in spring 2001.

Biography

An icon of 1990s film, actress Winona Ryder first earned a loyal following for giving unusual depth and inner life to teen characters in films like "Heathers" (1989) and "Edward Scissorhands" (1990). Her enormous, expressive brown eyes and a radiance that reminded early champion Tim Burton of the "timeless old movie stars" went on to become a favorite element in period dramas like "Bram Stoker's Dracula" (1992), "The Age of Innocence" (1994) and "The Crucible" (1996), as well as the perfect angst-ridden teen in films like "Reality Bites." After a break of several years, Ryder returned with a string of independent films in 2007 and scored a major coup when cast in the role of Spock's mother in J.J. Abrams reimagined film franchise, "Star Trek" (2009), followed by a turn as an over-the-hill ballerina in Darren Aronofsky's "Black Swan" (2010), and, several years later, an acclaimed starring role in the breakout Netflix series "Stranger Things" ( 2016- ). Ryder had successfully made the difficult segue from film ingénue to seasoned actress, so rarely achieved in an unforgiving industry.

Winona Laura Horowitz was born near Winona, MN, on Oct. 29, 1971. The child of counterculture writers Michael Horowitz and Cynthia Palmer Horowitz, the young girl grew up surrounded by some of the brightest literary lights of the era, with Timothy Leary for a godfather and regular visits with poets Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti. The family relocated to San Francisco soon after Ryder was born and moved onto a commune in Northern California's Mendocino County when she was 10. There she cohabitated with seven other families on a farm without electricity or running water, though her mother used to screen movies in a nearby barn. It was there that Ryder was first inspired to act by watching the films of John Cassavetes - not your usual entertainment for 10 year olds. Nudity, free love, and drag queens were as much a part of her every day life as trips to the outhouse, and when the family moved to a more traditional living situation in the San Francisco suburb of Petaluma, an outcast Ryder with her strange clothes and permissive parents found herself longing to fit in.

An unwelcome arrival at Kenilworth Middle School was followed by the decision to home-school Ryder, an avid reader and naturally curious 12-year-old who was wise beyond her years. To add spice to her home study program, her parents enrolled her in acting classes at San Francisco's American Conservatory Theatre. The following year, Ryder performed a favorite monologue from J.D. Salinger's "Franny & Zooey" when she was spotted by a talent scout and screen tested for a role in "Desert Bloom" (1986). The film role went to Annabeth Gish, but the audition tape found its way to director David Seltzer, who cast her as best friend of a young Corey Haim as "Lucas" (1986) in the now classic teen film. "Lucas" was literally the debut of Winona Ryder, who adopted her professional surname from 1960s rock group Mitch Ryder and Detroit Wheels.

With her flexible home-schooling schedule enabling her to pursue further acting work, Ryder followed up with a role as a Texas teenager torn between her grandfather (Jason Robards) and her mother (Jane Alexander) in "Square Dance" (1987), walking away with the best reviews in the film. Her personal experience as a suburban reject was a handy reference point in Tim Burton's, "Beetlejuice" (1988), a breakout part that won her significant audience and critical recognition. Ryder nailed her supporting role as a morose, black-clad teen thoroughly alienated from her yuppie parents; nearly stealing the film from co-stars Michael Keaton, Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis with her perfectly deadpan vocal delivery. Further solidifying her reputation as a queen of teen inner turmoil, she defied her agent and took a leading role in the dark comedy "Heathers" (1989), deftly negotiating complex terrain as her character evolved from passive hanger-on to murderer with a conscience, all the while retaining the audience's affection.

Ryder banked on her doe-eyed innocence and pulled off a heroic feat of naiveté in "Great Balls of Fire!" (1989), playing the 13-year-old bride of famed piano man Jerry Lee Lewis (Dennis Quaid). The following year, she graduated from Petaluma High School with a 4.0 grade point average and appeared as the offbeat but intelligent Dinky in "Welcome Home, Roxy Carmichael" (1990). Ryder reteamed with Burton (and shared the screen with future boyfriend Johnny Depp) to deliver a naturalistic portrait of a young woman at first repulsed then later drawn to the freakish but gentle "Edward Scissorhands" (1990). Although the director did not depict her as thoroughly disaffected, he certainly took ample shots himself at the cookie-cutter conformity of suburban existence. Ryder again called on her own background to inform her portrayal of Cher's eldest daughter in "Mermaids" (1990), her character dreaming of structured nunhood as an escape from the unconventional lifestyle of her mother. Ryder received the film's best notices and picked up her first acting award from the National Board of Review.

The success of "Edward Scissorhands" put breakout stars Depp and Ryder in the headlines, where the tragically hip twosome evolved into the poster couple of the early 90s. With their rumpled thrift store clothes and offbeat film choices, Ryder and Depp embodied the emerging spirit and values of alternative music and Generation X. The pair was engaged in 1990, with Depp famously receiving the tattoo "Winona Forever" on his forearm. Though still a young woman, the 19-year-old actress began to shift her career away from teen angst roles in the search for substantial young adults to embody. A mysterious illness - some called it a "nervous breakdown" - forced her out of the pivotal role of Mary Corleone in Francis Ford Coppola's "The Godfather, Part III" (1990), but upon her recovery, Jim Jarmusch tapped her to play a tomboyish cab driver in "Night on Earth" (1991). Ryder was sadly unconvincing in the feminist renegade role created for her, but fared better in another attempt to go against type in Coppola's "Bram Stoker's Dracula" (1992). Her pale, sylph-like beauty was perfect for the period piece, and Ryder provided the film's emotional core without being overshadowed by its phantasmagoric special effects, lavish production design and showier co-stars - most of whom were annihilated by critics for their camping overacting - i.e. Keanu Reeves and Gary Oldman.

Martin Scorsese recruited Ryder for his remake of "The Age of Innocence" (1993), in which she built on the air of sophistication developed opposite Anthony Hopkins in "Dracula," swooshing around in hooped dresses and earning an Oscar nomination for portraying the demure yet strong-willed May Welland, whose fiancé (Daniel Day-Lewis) has fallen in love with her cousin (Michelle Pfeiffer). Later in the year, Ryder lent her star power to a sad hometown cause when 12-year-old Polly Klaas was kidnapped from her home in Petaluma, CA. Ryder helped publicize a search for the young girl and offered a $20,000 reward, but sadly Klaas was found dead several months later. In memoriam, Ryder worked hard to bring an adaptation of Klaas' favorite book, Louisa May Alcott's "Little Women" (1994), to the screen. As ringleader of the spirited "Little Women," Ryder delivered a strong performance in what was arguably one of the best screen renditions of the novel, garnering her a second Oscar nomination.

Ben Stiller's directorial debut "Reality Bites" (1994) offered Ryder the chance to lose the period garb and don jeans, playing an ambitious college grad struggling to find a medium ground between joining the corporate ranks and succumbing to cynical choices embodied by suitors Ben Stiller and Ethan Hawke. The timeless theme suffered a bit from heavy-handed hipness, but Ryder acquitted herself well and earned critical praise for her work. Offscreen, the end of Ryder and Depp's engagement and her new relationship with Soul Asylum guitar player Dave Pirner reinforced her position as the alternative "It" girl of the '90s. Ryder continued to impress, essaying a graduate student who learns about life and love in "How to Make an American Quilt" (1995) and was an excellent casting choice to voice an audio version of "The Diary of Anne Frank" for which she earned a Grammy nomination for Spoken Word Album. She tried her hand at Shakespeare, playing Lady Anne in Al Pacino's award-winning documentary "Looking for Richard" (1996), before she was again cast opposite Day-Lewis in an adaptation of Arthur Miller's stage play "The Crucible" (1996), proving her mettle as a scorned woman seeking revenge by fabricating tales of witchcraft.

Broadening her efforts to be accepted in adult roles, Ryder teamed with Sigourney Weaver to battle the monsters of the "Alien" franchise in "Alien Resurrection" (1997), but she was admittedly out of her element. Following a small but luminous role in Woody Allen's "Celebrity" (1998), Ryder saw her first executive produced feature come to fruition with "Girl, Interrupted" (1999), an adaptation based on Susanna Kaysen's memoir of her experience at a mental hospital in the 1960s. Ryder rose above the script's limitations to credibly render the rich, spoiled and confused 17-year-old lead, though Angelina Jolie trumped her as the irrepressible sociopath more responsible for Susanna's rehabilitation than the doctors. Jolie would, in fact, earn the Oscar for her role, while Ryder was not even nominated. The following year saw her star in the exorcism thriller "Lost Souls" and the woefully bad "Autumn in New York," in which she played a dying woman romanced by a playboy (Richard Gere).

In 2003, she narrated a documentary about child slavery called "The Day My God Died" (2003) but did not return to the screen in full force until she starred, in digitized form, in Richard Linklater's "A Scanner Darkly" (2006). The Philip K. Dick adaptation received limited independent release, but met with generally favorable reviews for its thought provoking portrayal of a dystopian future and for the visual impact of its rotoscoping animation technique.

Ryder inched her way back into the film world with several features in 2007, including the commandment-inspired "The Ten," in which Ryder helmed a segment devoted to "Thou shalt not steal." She reunited with "Heathers" writer-director Daniel Waters to star in "Sex and Death 101" (2007), playing a femme fatale who adds to the doubts of a commitment-fearing fiancé. In 2008, Ryder was slated to play a recent widow and love interest of the man who ghost-authored her husband's suicide letter in "The Last Word," an offbeat drama co-starring Ray Romano and Wes Bentley. She would also appear in Bret Easton Ellis' "The Informers," but her casting as Spock's human mother in J.J. Abrams feature film relaunch of "Star Trek" (2009) received the most advance press, signaling Ryder's unequivocal return to Hollywood, with all forgiven. Her comeback momentum continued when Ryder delivered a riveting performance in the title role of the biographical telepic, "When Love is Not Enough: The Lois Wilson Story" (CBS, 2010). Ryder shone as the wife of Bill Wilson, with whom she co-founded Alcoholics Anonymous and Al-Anon after years of suffering through her husband's alcohol abuse. Near the end of the year, Ryder also turned in a pivotal supporting portrayal of a prima ballerina past her prime in director Darren Aronofsky's delirious psychodrama "Black Swan" (2010). The decade ended on a high note for Ryder, when she received two Screen Actors Guild nominations - the first for her lead in "Lois Wilson" and the second as part of the ensemble cast of "Black Swan."

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

Destination Wedding (2018)
Experimenter (2015)
Homefront (2013)
Frankenweenie (2012)
Voice
The Iceman (2012)
The Stare (2012)
The Dilemma (2011)
Catch My Disease (2010)
Herself
When Love is Not Enough: The Lois Wilson Story (2010)
Black Swan (2010)
Star Trek (2009)
Stay Cool (2009)
The Private Lives of Pippa Lee (2009)
The Informers (2009)
The Last Word (2008)
Sex and Death 101 (2007)
The Ten (2007)
Darwin Awards (2006)
A Scanner Darkly (2006)
Mr. Deeds (2002)
Simone (2002)
Zoolander (2001)
Autumn in New York (2000)
Lost Souls (2000)
Girl, Interrupted (1999)
Celebrity (1998)
Alien Resurrection (1997)
The Crucible (1996)
Looking for Richard (1996)
Boys (1996)
Patty Vare
How To Make An American Quilt (1995)
Inside the Academy Awards '95 (1995)
Performer
Reality Bites (1994)
Little Women (1994)
Jo March
The House of the Spirits (1993)
The Age Of Innocence (1993)
Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992)
Elisabeta; Mina Murray
Night on Earth (1991)
Corky
Edward Scissorhands (1990)
Mermaids (1990)
Charlotte Flax
Welcome Home, Roxy Carmichael (1990)
Great Balls Of Fire (1989)
1969 (1988)
Heathers (1988)
Veronica Sawyer
Beetlejuice (1988)
Square Dance (1987)
Gemma
Lucas (1986)

Producer (Feature Film)

Girl, Interrupted (1999)
Executive Producer

Music (Feature Film)

The Take (2016)
Song
Frankenweenie (2012)
Song Performer
Reality Bites (1994)
Song Performer

Special Thanks (Feature Film)

Being John Malkovich (1999)
Special Thanks To

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

Catch My Disease (2010)
Other

Cast (Special)

Moving Image Salutes Richard Gere (2004)
The 73rd Annual Academy Awards (2001)
Presenter
Independence Day 2001 (2001)
72nd Annual Academy Awards Presentation (2000)
Presenter
The 57th Annual Golden Globe Awards (2000)
Presenter
The ShoWest Awards (1997)
Performer
The American Film Institute Salute to Martin Scorsese (1997)
Performer
Rolling Stone '93: The Year in Review (1993)
The 1990 MTV Video Music Awards (1990)
Performer
The 1989 MTV Video Music Awards (1989)
Performer

Life Events

1985

At age 13, discovered by talent scout Deborah Lucchesi who observed her performing a monologue from her favorite author J.D. Salinger's "Franny & Zooey" at San Francisco's American Conservatory Theatre

1986

Film acting debut, "Lucas"; film shot during her eighth-grade summer vacation

1987

Co-starred with veterans Jason Robards and Jane Alexander in "Square Dance"

1988

Took the forgettable "1969" just to get out of her home town of Petaluma

1988

Won attention for her supporting role as the Edward Gorey-esque Lydia in Tim Burton's "Beetlejuice"

1989

Played Jerry Lee Lewis' 13-year-old bride (and second cousin) Myra in "Great Balls of Fire!"

1989

Starred in the cult hit "Heathers"; first film with friend Denise Di Novi as producer

1990

Replaced by Coppola's daughter Sofia in the role of Mary Corleone in Francis Ford Coppola's "The Godfather, Part III" after she dropped out due to a respiratory illness

1990

Portrayed the meek, religious daughter of a promiscuous mom (Cher) in the coming-of-age drama "Mermaids"

1990

Co-starred with then-fiancé Johnny Depp in Burton's "Edward Scissorhands"; produced by Di Novi

1992

Starred in Coppola's "Bram Stoker's Dracula"; brought Coppola Jim Hart's script, interesting him in the project

1993

Earned an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actress for her performance in Martin Scorsese's "The Age of Innocence"

1994

Made TV acting debut with voice role on "The Simpsons" (Fox)

1994

Earned a Best Actress Oscar nomination for her portrayal of Jo March in the remake of "Little Women"; produced by Di Novi

1994

Made singing debut in Ben Stiller's "Reality Bites"; her involvement as star enabled the project to attract financing

1995

Starred in Jocelyn Moorhouse's "How to Make an American Quilt" opposite Ellen Burstyn and Anne Bancroft

1996

Starred opposite Daniel Day-Lewis in "The Crucible," playing his spurned lover who set the witch trials in motion

1997

Landed first action hero role in "Alien Resurrection"

1998

Acted in Woody Allen's "Celebrity" as an actress/waitress who gets involved with Kenneth Branagh

1999

Executive produced and co-starred with Angelina Jolie in "Girl, Interrupted"

2000

Played a dying woman romanced by a playboy (Richard Gere) in "Autumn in New York"

2000

Received star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame (October)

2001

Arrested and charged with shoplifiting over $5,500 worth of merchandise from Saks Fifth Avenue in Beverly Hills, CA

2002

Spoofed arrest with appearance on "Saturday Night Live" (NBC) and on the cover of <i>W</i> Magazine

2002

Acted opposite Adam Sandler in "Mr. Deeds," a loose remake of "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town" (1936)

2006

Starred in Richard Linklater's "A Scanner Darkly," adapted from the novel by Philip K. Dick

2008

Re-teamed with "Heathers" screenwriter Daniel Waters for the surreal black comedy "Sex and Death 101"

2009

Cast as a newscaster in "The Informers," an adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis' short stories

2009

Co-starred with Alan Arkin and Robin Wright Penn in "The Private Lives of Pippa Lee," written and directed by Rebecca Miller

2009

Portrayed Spock's mother Amanda Grayson in J. J. Abrams's "Star Trek"

2010

Portrayed an aging prima ballerina in Darren Aronofsky's "Black Swan"

2010

Portrayed the co-founder of Al-Anon in CBS biopic "When Love Is Not Enough: The Lois Wilson Story"

2011

Co-starred with Vince Vaughn and Kevin James in "The Dilemma"

2011

Nominated for the 2011 Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries ("When Love Is Not Enough: The Lois Wilson Story")

2012

Reunited with director Tim Burton to voice Elsa Van Helsing in animated film "Frankenweenie"

2013

Landed a supporting role in the crime drama "Homefront"

2013

Starred in two episodes of the Comedy Central series "Drunk History"

2015

Played Sasha Menkin Milgram in the biographical drama "Experimenter"

2015

Nabbed a supporting role on the HBO mini-series "Show Me a Hero"

2016

Was cast as the lead on Netflix's 80s-themed series "Stranger Things"

Videos

Movie Clip

Little Women (1994) -- (Movie Clip) I'm Hopelessly Flawed Now working as a governess in New York and fresh off another publisher’s rejection of her stories, Jo March (Winona Ryder) collides with fellow boarding-house resident, Gabriel Byrne as German immigrant philosopher Friedrich Bhaer, a propitious moment, as in the Louisa May Alcott novel, in Little Women, 1994.
Little Women (1994) -- (Movie Clip) We've Been Expectorating You! With Winona Ryder narrating as Jo March, and language, including from young Amy (Kirsten Dunst), straight from the Louisa May Alcott novel, director Gillian Armstrong begins her widely praised adaptation, with Trini Alvarado as Meg, Claire Danes as Meg, and Susan Sarandon as Marmee, in Little Women, 1994.
Little Women (1994) -- (Movie Clip) I Never Know The Rules Evading a less interesting beau, Winona Ryder as Jo March at a society party in Civil War-era Concord, Mass., bumps (as will be her habit) into Christian Bale, as “Laurie,” the handsome, mysterious and affluent new neighbor who has fascinated her and her sisters, including Meg (Trini Alvarado), in director Gillian Armstrong’s Little Women, 1994.
Little Women (1994) -- (Movie Clip) The Most Elegant Family In Concord Reading together from magazine serials, using their adopted performance names, in what they consider the “March Family Theater,” sisters Jo, Meg, Beth and Amy (Winona Ryder, Trini Alvarado, Claire Danes and Kirsten Dunst) speculate about the future and their new neighbor (Christian Bale), in Little Women, 1994.
Age Of Innocence, The (1993) -- (Movie Clip) Their Strong Right Hand Newland Archer (Daniel Day-Lewis) in a more cordial parting with Countess Ellen (Michelle Pfeiffer), with May (Winona Ryder) and her mother (Geraldine Chaplin), Joanne Woodward narrates to his dinner, with his mother and sister (Sian Phillips, Carolyn Farina) and Jackson (Alec McCowen), in Martin Scorsese’s The Age Of Innocence, 1993.
Age Of Innocence, The (1993) -- (Movie Clip) The Talk Will Be Of Little Else Martin Scorsese’s opening, shooting at the Philadelphia Academy Of Music, introducing Newland Archer (Daniel Day-Lewis), gossips Lefferts and Jackson (Richard E. Grant, Alec McCowen), May (Winona Ryder), Mrs Welland (Geraldine Chaplin) and Countess Olenska (Michelle Pfeiffer), in The Age Of Innocence, 1993.
Age Of Innocence, The (1993) -- (Movie Clip) Shattered By A Whisper From the opening opera sequence, with one of a series of single takes as remarkable as any by director Martin Scorsese and cinematographer Michael Ballhaus, with Joanne Woodward’s enthralling narration from the Edith Wharton novel, following Archer (Daniel Day-Lewis), in The Age Of Innocence, 1993.
Night On Earth (1991) -- (Movie Clip) Open, Good Old World Tom Waits’ bumpy original theme song from his soundtrack, director Jim Jarmusch’s quasi-animated opening, and landing on the first clock and city, Los Angeles, in the five-vignette feature Night On Earth, 1991, starring Winona Ryder, Gena Rowlands, Roberto Benigni, and more.
Night On Earth (1991) -- (Movie Clip) A Band Called Utensil From the Los Angeles story (from writer-director Jim Jarmusch’s five taxi-themed episodes), just-introduced movie exec Victoria (Gena Rowlands) meets foul-mouthed cabby Corky, early in Night On Earth, 1991.

Trailer

Promo

Family

Michael Horowitz
Father
Writer, editor, publisher, bookstore owner. Born c. 1939; owner of "Flashback Books" (store specializing in the writings of the counterculture); book archivist for Timothy Leary; married Ryder's mother in 1982; helped daughter select stage name (reportedly his Mitch Ryder album was playing when "Lucas" director David Seltzer called inquiring about how she wanted to be credited); originally a Brooklyn Jew and graduate of New York University.
Cindy Palmer Horowitz
Mother
Educational video producer, writer, editor. Born c. 1941; previously married with two children; wed Ryder's father in 1982.
Timothy Leary
Godfather
Psychologist, countercultural philosopher, drug guru. Born in 1920; coined phrase "Turn on, tune in, drop out" in 1960s; died in 1996.
Sunyata Palmer
Half-Sister
From mother's first marriage; born c. 1967; name comes from "The Tibetan Book of the Dead".
Jubal Palmer
Half-Brother
From mother's first marriage; born c. 1969; name came to his mother Cindy in a dream.
Yuri Horowitz
Brother
Named after first Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin; born c. 1976.
Conor Oberst
Family
Singer. Rumored to be dating as of April 2003.

Companions

Johnny Depp
Companion
Actor. Born on June 9, 1963; engaged to be married as of February 1990; had "Winona Forever" tatooed on his arm (since partially removed); separated in 1993; Ryder later said of their breakup: "I was just really young. I don't know what his excuse is, but that's mine".
David Pirner
Companion
Musician. Lead singer for the Minneapolis-based grunge rock group Soul Asylum; together from 1993 to 1996.
Matt Damon
Companion
Actor. Introduced by Gwyneth Paltrow at a New Year's Eve party on December 31, 1997; separated in April 2000.
Jimmy Fallon
Companion
Actor, comedian. Reportedly dated in spring 2001.
Peter Yorn
Companion
Musician. Reportedly dated in late 2001.
Beck
Companion
Musician. Rumored to be dating, no longer together.
Page Hamilton
Companion
Musician. Dating as of July 2003.

Bibliography