Jane Adams


Actor
Jane Adams

About

Also Known As
Poni Adams
Birth Place
Washington, Washington D.C., USA
Born
April 01, 1965

Biography

Jane Adams began her career on the New York stage, where she won a Tony Award before going on to carve out a career as a well-known independent film player and occasional character actress in mainstream Hollywood fare. Her waifish appearance led to her casting as wilting flowers and neurotic artistic types in the films "Songcatcher" (2000), "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" (2004) ...

Notes

On her decision to attend the University of Washington and study political science before concentrating on an acting career, Jane Adams told the London Evening Standard (April 19. 1999): "I wanted to be a normal person. It scared me--the whole idea of being an actor for the rest of my life. I thought, 'Please, let me just be one of the masses.'"

"'Relativity' ... was a great learning experience, just to be in front of the camera every day no matter how you're feeling, no matter what's going on, and to learn it's not something to fret about. That show was unique. Most casts aren't friendly. We became each other's lives." --Adams on working on the ABC series, "Relativity" in conversation with co-star Poppy Montgomery, quoted in Interview, April 1999.

Biography

Jane Adams began her career on the New York stage, where she won a Tony Award before going on to carve out a career as a well-known independent film player and occasional character actress in mainstream Hollywood fare. Her waifish appearance led to her casting as wilting flowers and neurotic artistic types in the films "Songcatcher" (2000), "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" (2004) and "The Anniversary Party" (2001), while her leading role on the HBO series "Hung" (HBO, 2009-11) and her run on the sitcom "Frasier" (NBC, 1993-2004) showcased her way with independent-minded "smart chicks." Throughout her career, Adams maintained an alignment with critically acclaimed filmmakers from Michel Gondry to Robert Altman to Neil Jordan, and continually offered high caliber performances that nicely balanced emotional depth with a relatable immediacy.

Born April 1, 1965, in Washington D.C., Adams grew up mainly outside of Seattle, WA, where she first became involved in school and local theater productions as a teenager. While a political science major at the University of Washington, Adams continued to appear on stage and took drama courses at Seattle's Cornish College of the Arts. When she decided to focus on acting as a professional pursuit, Adams moved to New York City and earned a drama degree from the Juilliard School while building up her resume with performances at venues including Playwrights' Horizons Theater. Adams was cast as Michael J. Fox's love interest on two episodes of the NBC sitcom "Family Ties" (NBC, 1982-89), and within a year, she appeared on movie screens as a doctor-in-training who engages in an awkward romance with a fellow student in "Vital Signs" (1990). In 1991, Adams earned critical kudos for her Broadway debut as a 29-year-old virgin in the Paul Rudnick comedy "I Hate Hamlet," after which she had an extended stage run in a National Actors Theater production of "The Crucible." Adams landed her big career break playing a murder suspect in Stephen Daldry's imaginatively staged revival of J.B. Priestley's "An Inspector Calls" in 1994 - a performance that put her on the map and earned both a Tony Award and a Drama Desk Award.

That same year, the doe-eyed actress made an impact on independent film audiences with her portrayal of bohemian artist Ruth Hale in the literary biopic "Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle" (1994), an Independent Spirit nominee for Best Film from director Alan Rudolph. In her first Hollywood production, Adams displayed her comedic gifts as Diane Keaton's gynecologist in "Father of the Bride II" (1995), then joined the ensemble of Robert Altman's paean to his hometown, "Kansas City" (1996). A profile-building run of television work followed, with Adams spending one season playing the neurotic sister of heroine Kimberly Williams on the short-lived cult favorite, "Relativity" (ABC, 1996-97), before going on to a leading role in the historical miniseries, "Liberty, The American Revolution" (PBS, 1997). The demise of that show led to a banner year for Adams on the big screen, where she gave a bravura turn as the naive youngest of a trio of sisters in "Happiness" (1998), Todd Solondz's take on the dark side of suburbia. Cast as the ironically named Joy, Adams beautifully projected her character's childlike vulnerability, garnering sympathy from viewers and helping the film win a National Board of Review Award for Best Acting by an Ensemble.

Small supporting roles in Nora Ephron's "You've Got Mail" (1998) and Lawrence Kasdan's "Mumford" (1999) followed, and in 2000, Adams charmed with her performance as a very pregnant cocktail waitress in the gem "The Wonder Boys" (2000), a Golden Globe nominee for Best Drama starring Michael Douglas as a troubled college professor. Her profile continued to rise with a leading role as the gentle schoolteacher sister of Janet McTeer's feisty and self-centered musicologist in "Songcatcher" (2000), which took home a Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. Later that year, TV viewers exalted in Adams' finely calibrated, recurring role as a neurotic plastic surgeon who embarks on an ill-fated love affair with Niles Crane (David Hyde Pierce) on the NBC sitcom, "Frasier." Adams again proved to be a scene-stealer with her performance as a fragile actress and overwhelmed new mother in the ensemble "The Anniversary Party" (2001), from Jennifer Jason Leigh and Alan Cumming. The revered indie film earned several Independent Spirit Awards, and Adams was singled out with a Chlotrudis Award nomination of her own.

Adams spent a month on primetime in the fall of 2001, playing one of three estranged daughters of a retired U.S. Senator on the short-lived drama "Citizen Baines" (CBS, 2001). Her small role as the randy assistant to the dean of Stanford University (Harold Ramis) in "Orange County" (2002) was followed by Adams' return to the New York stage in productions of "Enchanted April" and "Match." She had a brief appearance in "Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events" (2004) and from that family film hit she was back in the art film fold with "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" (2004), from Michel Gondry and Charlie Kaufman. Adams next few projects were aimed squarely at mainstream audiences - the mystery novel adaptation "Stone Cold" (CBS, 2005) and the Queen Latifah comedy vehicle "Last Holiday" (2006), where she played the lively coworker of a shy woman (Latifah) whose diagnosis of a terminal illness leads to a blowout vacation and personal transformation.

Continuing to balance her commercial outings with acclaimed dramas, Adams had back-to-back supporting roles in "Little Children" (2006), which earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Motion Picture Drama, and "The Sensation of Sight" (2006), which did well on the international film festival circuit. She was tapped by Neil Jordan to support Jodie Foster in "The Brave One" (2007), a dark, thought-provoking tale of victim-turned-vigilante, and took the lead as the matriarch of an off-beat family in the well-received "Wherever You Are" (2008), from first-time director Rob Margolies. Adams returned to television in 2009, starring as the de facto pimp of a suburban high school teacher (Thomas Jane) who forays into prostitution to make ends meet in HBO's "Hung" (2009-), earning her first Golden Globe Award nomination for her performance.

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

Brigsby Bear (2017)
Always Shine (2016)
Digging for Fire (2015)
Poltergeist (2015)
Swinging in Suburbia (2012)
All the Light in the Sky (2012)
The Lie (2011)
Silver Bullets (2011)
Restless (2011)
Calvin Marshall (2010)
Alexander the Last (2010)
Lifelines (2009)
The Wackness (2008)
Wherever You Are (2007)
The Brave One (2007)
The Brave One (2007)
Last Holiday (2006)
The Sensation of Sight (2006)
Little Children (2006)
Robert B. Parker's Stone Cold (2005)
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
Carrie [Eakin]
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events (2004)
Orange County (2002)
The Anniversary Party (2001)
Wonder Boys (2000)
Oola
Songcatcher (2000)
Elna Penleric
Rebels With A Cause (2000)
Mumford (1999)
Happiness (1998)
Music from Another Room (1998)
Irene
A Fish in the Bathtub (1998)
Day at the Beach (1997)
Kansas City (1996)
Nettie Bolt
Father of the Bride Part II (1995)
Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle (1994)
Ruth Hale
I Love Trouble (1994)
Light Sleeper (1992)
Rising Son (1990)
Vital Signs (1990)
Street Bandits (1951)
Jane Phillips
Law of the Panhandle (1950)
Margie Kendal
Outlaw Gold (1950)
Kathy Martin
The Girl from San Lorenzo (1950)
Nora Malloy
Gun Law Justice (1949)
Jane Darnton
Western Renegades (1949)
Judy Gordon
Master Minds (1949)
Nancy Marlowe
Angels in Disguise (1949)
Nurse
Batman and Robin (1949)
He Walked by Night (1948)
Nurse Scanlon
The Brute Man (1946)
Helen Day
Gunman's Code (1946)
Laura Burton
Rustler's Roundup (1946)
Josephine Fremont
Lawless Breed (1946)
Marjorie
Smooth as Silk (1946)
Susan Marlowe
A Night in Paradise (1946)
Lotus
House of Dracula (1945)
Nina
This Love of Ours (1945)
Chorus girl
Code of the Lawless (1945)
Julie Randall
Trail to Vengeance (1945)
Dorothy Jackson
Lady on a Train (1945)
Photographer
Salome, Where She Danced (1945)
Salome girl

Writer (Feature Film)

All the Light in the Sky (2012)
Screenplay
Alexander the Last (2010)
Source Material

Music (Feature Film)

Happiness (1998)
Music

Cast (Special)

Notes For My Daughter (1995)
Michelle
Dead Drunk: The Kevin Tunell Story (1993)
Taking a Stand (1989)

Cast (Short)

So You Want to Give Up Smoking (1942)

Cast (TV Mini-Series)

A Texas Funeral (2000)

Life Events

1989

Played Marty, Alex Keaton's love interest, in the NBC series "Family Ties"

1989

Made TV debut in the ABC Afterschool Special, "Taking a Stand"

1990

Film debut, "Vital Signs"

1991

Broadway debut, "I Hate Hamlet"

1994

Won acclaim (and a Tony Award) for her co-starring role in the Broadway production of "An Inspector Calls"

1995

Played a doctor in "Father of the Bride Part II," alongside Steve Martin and Diane Keaton

1996

Was an ensemble cast member of "Kansas City," directed by Robert Altman

1996

Debuted as a series regular on the ABC drama, "Relativity"

1998

Starred in the controversial feature "Happiness," directed by Todd Solondz

1999

Played the recurring role of Dr. Mel Karnofsky, who became Niles's second wife on the hit sitcom "Frasier" (NBC)

2000

Appeared in the Sundance screened "Songcatcher" as the schoolteacher sister of the lead character

2001

Cast as a neurotic actress in "The Anniversary Party"

2004

Played a close friend of Jim Carrey's in the Michel Gondry directed, "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind"; co-scripted by Gondry and Charlie Kaufman

2006

Had a small role in Todd Field's "Little Children"

2007

Co-starred with Jodie Foster in the crime drama, "The Brave One"

2009

Cast as Tanya Skagle, a wannabe pimp, in the HBO comedy series "Hung"; earned a Golden Globe nomination in 2009 for Best Supporting Actress

Family

William Adams
Father
Engineer.
Janice Adams
Mother
Administrative assistant.

Bibliography

Notes

On her decision to attend the University of Washington and study political science before concentrating on an acting career, Jane Adams told the London Evening Standard (April 19. 1999): "I wanted to be a normal person. It scared me--the whole idea of being an actor for the rest of my life. I thought, 'Please, let me just be one of the masses.'"

"'Relativity' ... was a great learning experience, just to be in front of the camera every day no matter how you're feeling, no matter what's going on, and to learn it's not something to fret about. That show was unique. Most casts aren't friendly. We became each other's lives." --Adams on working on the ABC series, "Relativity" in conversation with co-star Poppy Montgomery, quoted in Interview, April 1999.

Playwright Paul Rudnick, in whose 1981 Broadway play "I Hate Hamlet" Adams appeared, described the actress as "one of those magnificient waifs who can make fragility seem magical and demented at the same time." --From The New York Times, October 11, 1998