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Susan Sarandon

Milestones

  • Birthplace: Jackson Heights, New York, USA
  • Birthday: October 4, 1946
  • 2009

    Returned to Broadway after more than 30 years as the elder ex-wife of a dying monarch, portrayed by Aussie actor Geoffrey Rush, in Eugene Ionesco's drama "Exit The King"

  • 2008

    Played Mom Racer in the Wachowski brothers' live action film adaptation of the 1960s Japanese series "Speed Racer"

  • 2008

    Portrayed tobacco millionairess Doris Duke in the HBO film, "Bernard and Doris"; earned Emmy, Golden Globe and SAG nominations for Best Actress in a TV-movie

  • 2007

    Co-starred opposite Tommy Lee Jones in Paul Haggis' "In the Valley of Elah"

  • 2007

    Played the evil queen in Disney's modern-day animation and live-action fairy tale, "Enchanted"

  • 2006

    Guest-starred in several episodes of Denis Leary's FX drama "Rescue Me"

  • 2005

    Co-starred as James Gandolfini's wife in "Romance & Cigarettes" directed by John Turturro; film released theatrically in 2007

  • 2005

    Played Orlando Bloom's mother in Cameron Crowe's drama "Elizabethtown"

  • 2004

    Cast as Richard Gere's wife in "Shall We Dance?" a remake of the 1996 Japanese film

  • 2004

    Starred opposite Jude Law in "Alfie" a remake of the 1966 film which starred Michael Caine

  • 2002

    Co-starred opposite Dustin Hoffman in "Moonlight Mile"

  • 2002

    Co-starred with Goldie Hawn in "The Banger Sisters"

  • 2002

    Played the title character's mother in "Igby Goes Down"; received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actress

  • 2001

    Made guest appearance in an episode of "Friends" (NBC), playing a soap opera actress; received Emmy nomination

  • 2001

    Voiced the dog Ivy in the feature "Cats & Dogs"

  • 2000

    Had cameo role as painter Alice Neel in "Joe Gould's Secret," directed by Stanley Tucci

  • 2000

    Provided the voice for Coco La Bouche in the animated film "Rugrats in Paris - The Movie"

  • 1999

    Made cameo appearance in Robbins' feature "The Cradle Will Rock"

  • 1999

    Received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

  • 1999

    Starred as a single mother of a teenager in Wayne Wang's "Anywhere But Here"

  • 1998

    Cast as a movie star married to Gene Hackman who calls upon old friend detective Paul Newman for assistance in Robert Benton's "Twilight"

  • 1998

    Co-starred with Ed Harris and Julia Roberts in the comedy-drama "Stepmom"; also served as executive producer

  • 1996

    Provided the voice of the Spider for "James and the Giant Peach"

  • 1995

    Starred in Robbins' "Dead Man Walking" opposite Sean Penn; finally won Oscar as Best Actress; Robbins' nomination as Best Director made them the first couple since Cassavetes and Rowlands to be jointly nominated for their work together

  • 1994

    Picked up a fourth Best Actress Oscar nomination for her turn as a non-nonense Southern attorney in "The Client"

  • 1994

    Portrayed the matriarch of the March family in Gillian Armstrong's "Little Women"

  • 1992

    Played small role in Robbins' feature directing debut, "Bob Roberts"

  • 1992

    Reteamed with Miller for "Lorenzo's Oil," earning her third Best Actress Academy Award nomination

  • 1991

    Co-starred with Geena Davis in the female buddy film, "Thelma & Louise," directed by Ridley Scott; earned second Best Actress Oscar nomination

  • 1991

    Made cameo appearance as herself in Robert Altman's "The Player," starring Robbins

  • 1990

    Portrayed older waitress who becomes involved with younger yuppie James Spader in "White Palace"

  • 1988

    Met companion Tim Robbins while co-starring in hit comedy "Bull Durham"

  • 1987

    First film with director George Miller, "The Witches of Eastwick"

  • 1985

    Co-starred as Edda Ciano, the dictator's daughter in the HBO miniseries "Mussolini: The Decline and Fall of Il Duce"

  • 1985

    Starred as a housewife investigating a murder in the comedy-drama "Compromising Positions"; was pregnant with first child during filming which was noticably visible in some scenes

  • 1983

    Love scene with Catherine Deneuve in Tony Scott's "The Hunger" created a minor furor

  • 1982

    Acted with John Cassavetes and wife Gena Rowlands in Paul Mazursky's "Tempest," loosely based on Shakespeare's play

  • 1982

    Starred opposite Christopher Walken in the acclaimed PBS drama "Who Am I This Time?"

  • 1980

    Off-Broadway debut in "A Coupla White Chicks Sitting Around Talking"

  • 1980

    Reteamed with Malle for "Atlantic City"; earned first Best Actress Oscar nomination playing a young casino employee who falls for older Burt Lancaster

  • 1978

    First film with director Louis Malle, "Pretty Baby," playing Brooke Shields' prostitute mother

  • 1975

    Co-starred as Janet in cult hit "The Rocky Horror Picture Show"

  • 1975

    Was leading lady to Robert Redford in "The Great Waldo Pepper"

  • 1974

    Played the fictionalized heroine in the TV dramatization "F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Last of the Belles" (ABC)

  • 1972

    Acted on the daytime soap "Search for Tomorrow"

  • 1972

    Broadway debut as Tricia Nixon in Gore Vidal's "An Evening With Richard Nixon and . . ."

  • 1970 to 1971

    First regular TV role, appeared in the ABC daytime soap, "A World Apart"

  • 1970

    Screen debut in "Joe"; had accompanied then-husband Chris Sarandon to his audition for the film; she was hired instead

  • Began career as a model with the Ford Agency

  • Born in Jackson Heights, Queens and raised in Metuchen, New Jersey

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