Michelle Pfeiffer naked

Gender: Female

Spouse: David E. Kelley (13 November 1993 - present) 2 children Peter Horton (1981 - 1989) (divorced)

Profession: Actress

Height: 5' 7" (1.71 m)

Trivia

Graduated from high school in 3 years.

Quote

"I still think people will find out that I'm really not very talented. I'm really not very good. It's all just been a big sham."
(On playing her part of Claire Spencer in What Lies Beneath)" I thought about Drew Barrymore in the first Scream - I mean, ultimately that movie was more funny than scary, but the opening sequence was quite terrifying, and she protrayed terror in a way I'd never seen an actress do."

Salary What Lies Beneath (2000) $10,500,000
Biography from Leonard Maltin's Movie Encyclopedia: It's doubtful that anyone would have chosen the California blonde from Grease 2 to become one of the movies' biggest stars and leading actresses. The preternaturally beautiful Pfeiffer, with haunting green eyes and silken blond hair, had her looks held against her during her struggle to be taken seriously. Her career began with appearances in short-lived TV comedies like "Delta House," and such films as The Hollywood Knights, Falling in Love Again (both 1980), and Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen (1981). Landing the female lead in Grease 2 (1982) should have been a plum, but the film was a flop, she was dull, and few moviegoers took notice. She had little to do but look beautiful as the wife of drug dealer Tony Montana (played by Al Pacino) in 1983's ultraviolent remake of Scarface But gradually, her parts-and her performancesgot better: in Ladyhawke and Into the Night (both 1985), and especially in Sweet Liberty (1986), delivering a multilayered, amusing performance as an eccentric actress. She then held her own alongside Cher, Susan Sarandon, and Jack Nicholson in 1987's The Witches of Eastwick but really blossomed in Jonathan Demme's lively comedy Married to the Mob (1988), in a knowing and appealing performance as a mobster's young widow. Later that year she won over most remaining skeptics in the period drama Dangerous Liaisons (1988) for which she earned her first Oscar nomination, as Best Supporting Actress.Pfeiffer cemented her newly fortified stardom with her sultry portrayal of a call girl turned torch songstress in The Fabulous Baker Boys (earning another Oscar nomination), and caused a sensation with her sexy rendition of "Makin' Whoopee" atop Jeff Bridges' piano. She was now a world-class star. She adopted a Russian accent for 1990's The Russia House and deglamorized herself for a moving performance opposite Al Pacino in 1991's Frankie and Johnny playing a lonely waitress terrified of human contact. When Annette Bening became pregnant, Pfeiffer inherited her most flamboyant role to date: Catwoman in Batman Returns (1992). Later that year she top lined Jonathan Kaplan's moving drama Love Field and scored her third Oscar nomination.In 1993 she was cast by Martin Scorsese as the slightly scandalous young woman who overwhelms Daniel Day-Lewis in the 1870s period piece The Age of Innocence then reunited with Jack Nicholson for the contemporary werewolf saga Wolf (1994).


Related Links:

The Internet Movie Database (IMDb) - Michelle Pfeiffer