Ashley Judd


Actress

About

Also Known As
Ashley Tyler Ciminella
Birth Place
Los Angeles, California, USA
Born
April 19, 1968

Biography

Exhibiting both beauty and intelligence, actress Ashley Judd stepped out from the shadows of her country music star mother and sister to become one of the more sought-after female leads of the late 1990s. After a pair of early performances on the science fiction franchise "Star Trek: The Next Generation" (syndicated, 1987-1994), she landed her breakthrough role in the inspirational drama...

Family & Companions

Lyle Lovett
Companion
Actor, singer. Dated in the early 1990s.
Matthew McConaughey
Companion
Actor. Involved during filming of "A Time to Kill".
Michael Bolton
Companion
Singer. Had on-again, off-again relationship.
Brady Anderson
Companion
Professional athlete. Played centerfield with the Baltimore Orioles; no longer dating.

Bibliography

"The Judds: The True Story of Naomi, Wynonna and Ashley"
George Mair, Birch Lane Press (1998)

Notes

Described acting as "guts coming from my toenails." --From The New York Times, October 3, 1993.

Her role in "Natural Born Killers" (1994) was cut out of the final release.

Biography

Exhibiting both beauty and intelligence, actress Ashley Judd stepped out from the shadows of her country music star mother and sister to become one of the more sought-after female leads of the late 1990s. After a pair of early performances on the science fiction franchise "Star Trek: The Next Generation" (syndicated, 1987-1994), she landed her breakthrough role in the inspirational drama "Ruby in Paradise" (1993). Soon after, Judd played Val Kilmer's put-upon wife in the crime thriller "Heat" (1995), and essayed a pre-fame Marilyn Monroe in "Norma Jean & Marilyn" (HBO, 1996). However, it was as a kidnap victim who eludes her psychotic captor in "Kiss the Girls"(1997) that the actress' Hollywood stock rose dramatically. Although future projects met with varying degrees of success, Judd still managed to deliver strong performances as complex women in films like the adaptation of the best-selling novel "Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood" (2002), and the creepy-crawly horror feature "Bug" (2006).Judd published her cathartic memoir All That is Bitter & Sweet in 2011, a less-than glamorous portrait of her famous family. While not maintaining the A-list profile of film contemporaries like Sandra Bullock, Judd continued to seek out roles that were both challenging and accessible, balanced by her personal life far from the lights of Hollywood.

Born in April 9, 1968 in Granada Hills, CA to parents Michael Ciminella, Jr., an Italian-American marketing specialist in horse racing, and Naomi Judd, a then nurse but future country music star, Ashley Tyler Ciminella joined an older half-sister, Wynonna. When her parents divorced in 1972, Judd was shuttled between California, Kentucky and Tennessee, attending 12 schools in 13 years. A bookish child, she developed an early interest in performing and, goaded by her older sister, opted to try her luck in Hollywood after completing college. Working as a hostess at the popular restaurant The Ivy, Judd made industry connections and within a year, had begun to land stage and screen roles - most notably as Swoosie Kurtz's troubled daughter, Reed Halsey, on the NBC female-centric drama, "Sisters" (1991-96). Judd, however, found the small screen role frustrating and negotiated an early release from her contract. The ambitious beauty auditioned for the pivotal role of Christian Slater's girlfriend in the comedy "Kuffs" (1992), but as she told Movieline in 1997, she "thought they were boiling it down to a booby factor - choosing a pair of breasts." Her agent suggested she pass and accept instead the smaller role of a woman in a paint store. Knowing her mother would not approve of the onscreen nudity anyway, Judd took the smaller role and her career began to take shape from that point on.

After her award-winning and star-making turn as the Tennessee heiress who sets out across Florida to find herself in "Ruby in Paradise," Judd was cast as the sole survivor of a massacre who must describe in detail the traumatic event, in Oliver Stone's highly controversial film, "Natural Born Killers" (1994). Because her emoting was accompanied by graphic flashbacks, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) requested that director Stone cut the scene, deeming it too violent and disturbing. Thankfully, Stone would later restore it for the 1996 "director's cut" video release. Despite ending up on the cutting room floor, Judd continued to add to her gallery of supporting roles, including a dramatic turn as Harvey Keitel's junkie daughter in "Smoke" (1995), Val Kilmer's unfaithful wife in "Heat" (1995) and, bringing what she could to the underwritten part, a lawyer's spouse in the John Grisham-penned, "A Time to Kill" (1996). Faring better on the small screen, Judd displayed her intelligence and skill - as well as a considerable amount of flesh - as the younger incarnation of Marilyn Monroe in "Norma Jean and Marilyn," which brought her an Emmy nomination. Judd's Norma Jean more than held her own opposite Mira Sorvino's Marilyn, with the former's incandescent beauty believably representative of Hollywood's Golden Age. While Judd's next project, "Normal Life" (1996), was originally intended for theatrical release, it was relegated to HBO. Nevertheless, it contained her disturbing, impassioned portrayal of an unhinged woman who drives her caring husband to a life of crime in order to satisfy her acquisitive nature. The rather steamy sex scenes between Judd and Luke Perry, no doubt, gave Judd's mother pause.

In her first Hollywood lead, Judd was cast as a capable doctor who, having escaped from a kidnapper, agrees to help the police track down the criminal in "Kiss the Girls" (1997). Again, her native intelligence and striking beauty were used to good effect, even if the surrounding efforts were not top-drawer. She had a particular onscreen chemistry with star Morgan Freeman, no stranger as the yin to someone else's yang in suspenseful crime thrillers. Next up, the actress exhibited her sexy side as the local girl who falls for a drifter in "The Locusts" (1997) and offered a memorable, if relatively brief, turn as a single mother in the sentimental period drama, "Simon Birch" (1998). Judd returned to thrillers as an innocent woman who, after serving time for murdering her abusive husband, discovers he is still alive in "Double Jeopardy" (1999), as well as playing bad again as a suspected serial killer tracked by Ewan McGregor in the disappointing "Eye of the Beholder" (2000).

In 2001, Judd decided to step outside the genre which, in a few brief years, she had become queen of - that being, suspense thrillers - by starring as a betrayed woman who becomes obsessed with studying male behavior in the romantic comedy feature, "Someone Like You." Despite starring opposite an equally gorgeous Hugh Jackman, the mismanaged film did not ignite any special box office sparks. That same year, following a two-year engagement, Judd married her boyfriend, Indy race driver, Dario Franchitti, and settled in to domesticity while splitting time between homes in his native Scotland and her beloved Tennessee. After her marriage, Judd's Hollywood output would drop radically, but between rooting for her beloved University of Kentucky sports teams, publicly supporting her sister's very public battles with addiction, and getting the word out for causes near to her heart like AIDS, Judd did manage to pop up in the occasional film projects. A return to form in the middlebrow thriller "High Crimes" (2002), reuniting her with her "Kiss the Girls" co-star Freeman, did little to advance her career, though she did provide some fire and flavor to the softer follow-up, "Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood" (2002). Playing the flashback version of Vivi, the highly strung Ellen Burstyn character, Judd's vibrant personality leaped off the screen. She was then cast in a small but crucial supporting role as Tina Modotti, lesbian lover of famed artist Frida Kahlo, in "Frida" (2002), as a favor to Judd's longtime friend, the film's producer and star, Salma Hayek.

After a stint on Broadway in the role of Maggie in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" and a never realized flirtation with the role of "Catwoman" - thankfully later played unintentionally hilarious by Halle Berry - Judd returned to the big screen in 2004 as Linda Lee Porter, the devoted wife and muse to the great American composer/songwriter Cole Porter (Kevin Kline) in the elegant and sophisticated biopic "De-Lovely." Receiving universal praise for her role as the pained wife of a homosexual, Judd reminded moviegoers what they had been missing since her reduced workload had taken effect. Despite a happy marriage and making her voice heard on behalf of various causes, Judd would stick her toe back in the showbiz pool intermittently, appearing in her buddy Joey Lauren Adams' directorial debut, "Come Early Morning" (2006), as Lucy, a thirty-something Southern gal who searches for love; as well as in director William Friedkin's ode to horror, "Bug" (2006). Other late decade work included the little-seen illegal immigration drama "Crossing Over" (2009), co-starring Harrison Ford, and a superfluous supporting role in the cavity-inducing family comedy "Tooth Fairy" (2010), starring Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson.

In the spring of 2011 Judd published her memoir All That is Bitter & Sweet, which delved into claims of being neglected as a child by her mother, Naomi, who was busy with Wynonna pursuing country music superstardom. Also covered was the rampant drug abuse she was exposed to in their dysfunctional household and an incident of molestation the adolescent Judd suffered at the hands of a relative's husband. After starring opposite Harry Connick, Jr. and Morgan Freeman in the true-life inspired "Dolphin Tale" (2011), Judd returned to the small screen following a long absence to star in "Missing" (ABC, 2012), where she played a widowed mother and retired CIA agent who discovers that her son (Nick Eversman) has gone missing in Rome. Intending to use her skills to track him down, she instead finds her past haunting her in the form of a conspiracy involving her old agency and Interpol. Despite its strong escapist premise and favorable reviews, the show failed to attract much of a following and was canceled following the airing of its ordered 10 episodes.

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

Call Me Crazy: A Five Film (2013)
Director

Cast (Feature Film)

A Dog's Way Home (2019)
A Dog's Way Home (2019)
Good Kids (2016)
Barry (2016)
Allegiant (2016)
Insurgent (2015)
Big Stone Gap (2015)
Dolphin Tale 2 (2014)
The Identical (2014)
Divergent (2014)
Olympus Has Fallen (2013)
A Fierce Green Fire (2012)
Narrator
Dolphin Tale (2011)
Flypaper (2011)
Tooth Fairy (2010)
Helen (2009)
Call + Response (2008)
Herself
Crossing Over (2008)
Come Early Morning (2006)
Bug (2006)
De-Lovely (2004)
Linda Porter
Twisted (2004)
Frida (2002)
Tina Modotti
High Crimes (2002)
Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood (2002)
Someone Like You (2001)
Where the Heart Is (2000)
Eye of the Beholder (1999)
Double Jeopardy (1999)
Our Friend, Martin (1999)
Voice
Simon Birch (1998)
The Locusts (1997)
Kitty
Kiss the Girls (1997)
Normal Life (1996)
A Time to Kill (1996)
Norma Jean & Marilyn (1996)
Smoke (1995)
Felicity
The Passion of Darkly Noon (1995)
Callie
Heat (1995)
Natural Born Killers (1994)
Ruby in Paradise (1993)
Till Death Us Do Part (1992)
Kuffs (1991)

Music (Feature Film)

De-Lovely (2004)
Song Performer ("In The Still Of The Night"), Song Performer ("Well Did You Evah!"), Song Performer ("True Love")

Dance (Feature Film)

Frida (2002)
Tango choreography

Costume-Wardrobe (Feature Film)

Twisted (2004)
Costume Designer

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

Call + Response (2008)
Other

Cast (Special)

Intimate Portrait: Naomi Judd (2003)
The 73rd Annual Academy Awards (2001)
Presenter
We All Dream of Oz (2000)
Interviewee
The Judds Reunion: Power to Change (2000)
An All-Star Tribute to Joni Mitchell (2000)
6th Annual Blockbuster Entertainment Awards (2000)
Presenter
72nd Annual Academy Awards Presentation (2000)
Presenter
The Ryan Interview (2000)
Fredericka Rose
NetAid (1999)
VH1 Divas Live '99 (1999)
Intimate Portrait: Wynonna (1998)
Narrator
The 70th Annual Academy Awards (1998)
Presenter
The 32nd Annual Academy of Country Music Awards (1997)
Presenter
VH1 97 Fashion Awards (1997)
Host
1997 MTV Movie Awards (1997)
Presenter
Wynonna: revelations (1996)
The VH1 Fashion Awards (1996)
Presenter
The 30th Annual Academy of Country Music Awards (1995)
Presenter
The Judds: Across the Heartland (1989)

Cast (TV Mini-Series)

Naomi & Wynonna: Love Can Build A Bridge (1995)
Voice

Life Events

1972

Was living in Los Angeles, CA when father left family

1974

Her mother Naomi took Judd and her older sister Wynonna, and moved family back to rural Kentucky

1989

Appeared in variety special starring her mother and sister, "The Judds: Across the Heartland"

1990

Moved to back to Los Angeles

1991

Appeared in recurring role as Reed, the daughter of Swoosie Kurtz on NBC drama "Sisters"; left after three seasons to pursue film career

1991

Appeared in Los Angeles stage production of "Welcome Home, Soldier"

1991

Made TV debut with recurring role on syndicated series "Star Trek: The Next Generation"

1992

Landed first film role in "Kuffs"

1992

Cast in first TV movie role in "Till Death Us Do Part" (NBC)

1993

Portrayed title character and narrator of "Ruby in Paradise"

1994

Made New York stage debut in the Roundabout Theatre production of "Picnic"

1994

Appeared in Oliver Stone's "Natural Born Killers"; part was cut as MPAA deemed scene too disturbing and violent; Stone restored it for 1996 Director's Cut release

1995

Appeared in "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" music video, performed by Jerry Garcia

1995

Played Val Kilmer's straying wife in "Heat"

1996

Played the frustrated wife of a southern lawyer in "A Time to Kill"

1996

Received Emmy nomination as Norma Jean opposite Mira Sorvino as her superstar alter ego Marilyn Monroe in HBO movie "Norma Jean & Marilyn"

1996

Starred opposite Luke Perry as his self-indulgent wife in "Normal Life"

1997

Portrayed a kidnap victim who manages to escape from her captor in thriller "Kiss the Girls"; film also starred Morgan Freeman

1998

Cast in small but pivotal role as a single mother in "Simon Birch"

1999

Played a woman mistakenly sent to prison for murdering her husband in "Double Jeopardy"

2000

Played a serial killer in "Eye of the Beholder"

2001

Played lead role in romantic comedy "Someone Like You"

2002

Portrayed photographer Tina Modotti opposite Salma Hayek as "Frida"

2002

Portrayed a Young Vivi Walker in "Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood," based on best-selling novel by Rebecca Wells

2002

Re-teamed with Morgan Freeman for "High Crimes"

2003

Made Broadway debut as Maggie in "Cat On a Hot Tin Roof"

2004

Co-starred with Kevin Kline in "De-lovely," a film about legendary American composer Cole Porter

2004

Starred with Samual L. Jackson and Andy Garcia in thriller "Twister"

2006

Starred in Joey Lauren Adams' screenwriting and directing debut "Come Early Morning"

2007

Co-starred in psychological thriller "Bug"

2009

Played an immigration defense attorney in "Crossing Over," about illegal immigrants in Los Angeles

2010

Co-starred with Dwayne Johnson in "Tooth Fairy"

2011

Published memoir <i>All That Is Bitter & Sweet</i>

2011

Co-starred with Harry Connick Jr. and Morgan Freeman in family drama "Dolphin Tale"

2012

Starred as an ex-CIA agent searching for her kidnapped son on ABC's "Missing"

2013

Played the First Lady in action thriller "Olympus Has Fallen" alongside Morgan Freeman as the Speaker of the House

Family

Michael Ciminella
Father
Divorced from Naomi Judd in 1972.
Naomi Judd
Mother
Singer, author, motivational speaker, actor. Born on January 11, 1946; member of The Judds; stopped performing after being diagnosed with hepatitis; recovered.
Larry Strickland
Step-Father
Manager, former singer. Sang back up for Elvis Presley; married Naomi Judd c. 1988; she filed for divorce in August 2000.
Wynonna
Half-Sister
Singer. Former member of those singing Judds; subsequently a successful solo act; born c. 1964; married Arch Kelley III on January 20, 1996; filed for divorce in November 1998.

Companions

Lyle Lovett
Companion
Actor, singer. Dated in the early 1990s.
Matthew McConaughey
Companion
Actor. Involved during filming of "A Time to Kill".
Michael Bolton
Companion
Singer. Had on-again, off-again relationship.
Brady Anderson
Companion
Professional athlete. Played centerfield with the Baltimore Orioles; no longer dating.
Dario Franchitti
Husband
Professional race car driver. Born c. 1962; Scottish; became engaged in December 1999; married on December 12, 2001 in Scotland.

Bibliography

"The Judds: The True Story of Naomi, Wynonna and Ashley"
George Mair, Birch Lane Press (1998)

Notes

Described acting as "guts coming from my toenails." --From The New York Times, October 3, 1993.

Her role in "Natural Born Killers" (1994) was cut out of the final release.

"I was always told I was different. I was always told I was special. And I was also assured that I had a gift and a purpose. All my life, I believed that things work to good for all those who are good and who love God, and I do."---Ashley Judd quoted in US, January 1996.

"... I know when I'm working on a performance, I'll go sideways for a while before I go straight up. If I'm trying something in a take and it's not working for me, I will absolutely exhaust the idea in myself before a change will occur to me. And I almost need to do that. It's the way my neurons work. ... "---Judd quoted in Interview, September 1998.

"I have raised two very independent, strong-willed women. Wynonna and I happen to agree on issues in the entertainment industry regarding nudity, sex and violence. Ashley is much more liberal."---Naomi Judd, who favors the adoption of a code to curb what she considers excessive violence and sex in the media, on her daughters, quoted in USA Today, August 16, 1999.

"Well, being down to earth is always an objective for me. I just think it's so important to have your inner peace and your quality friendships and to love what you do. That's what my life is about."---Judd on how she handles success to E!Online January 28, 2000

"Ashley is a girl's girl. She's smart and open and doesn't seem like the type of girl who would steal your boyfriend. Men like her because she's sexy and she's not remote. She's like Sandra Bullock and Meg Ryan because she wears her heart on her sleeve. Yet, she can be wounded and recover. She's resilient."---Linda Obst, producer Cinema.com 2001

"Judd's strengths come across particularly well onscreen. She is extremely beautiful and can handle physical roles. She has a unisex quality"---Philip Kaufman who directed Ashley Judd in "Twister" to the San Francisco Chronicle March 2, 2004

"When it came down to it I was fairly nervous. I was too dumb to panic. You know, we actors have fairly healthy egos: 'Oh sure, I can do that, no problem. Gain 30 lbs., sing a song, ride a horse, jump off a building, no worries.'"---Ashley Judd, on singing in her new movie, De-Lovely to people, July 06, 2004.