Elizabeth Berkley
Elizabeth Berkley (/ˈbɜːrkli/ BURK-lee) is an American actress and producer. She played Jessie Spano in the Saved by the Bell television franchise and Nomi Malone in the 1995 Paul Verhoeven controversial film Showgirls. She had supporting roles in the box office hits The First Wives Club and Oliver Stone's Any Given Sunday, as well as in Woody Allen's period comedy The Curse of the Jade Scorpion and Dylan Kidd's critically acclaimed Roger Dodger. On television, she played Julia Winston in CSI: Miami (2008–2009), Kelly Wentworth in The L Word (2009), Shannon Titus in Titus (2001–2002) and in 2020 she reprised the role of Jessie Spano in the Saved by the Bell reboot on Peacock, for which she also served as a producer. In theatre, she appeared opposite Eddie Izzard in Peter Hall's West End production of Lenny and also in the successful Broadway comedic play Sly Fox and the acclaimed Off-Broadway production of Hurlyburly, for which she received critical acclaim.[1] She also hosted Bravo's talent show Step It Up and Dance and in 2011 she published the New York Times best-seller Ask-Elizabeth, a self-help book for adolescent girls, which drew from the workshops she conducted for her Ask-Elizabeth program. For Saved by the Bell she earned four Young Artist Award nominations and in 1996 she received a National Board of Review award for the ensemble acting in First Wives Club. In 2011 Candie's Foundation honoured her with a prize for her work raising awareness about the risks and hardships associated with teen pregnancy. Early lifeElizabeth Berkley was born in Farmington Hills, Michigan to Jere and Fred Berkley. Her mother was a gift-basket business owner and her father was a lawyer. She has an older brother, Jason.[2] Her family is Jewish and she was raised in a Conservative Jewish household, celebrating her bat mitzvah at Beth Abraham Hillel Moses in West Bloomfield.[3][4] CareerTheatre and early film and TV rolesWhile attending Cranbook Kingsbrook in Bloomfield Hills,[9] she enrolled in acting and singing classes, making her theatrical debut as Snoopy in a Cranbrook Theatre production of You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown.[8] She continued her training with the Detroit-based company Actors Alliance and starred in two plays, Twain by the Tale and Raft of the Medusa. Professional stage roles soon followed in regional theatre, earning her an Actors Equity card when she was still in middle school. She played Baby June in the musical Gypsy (Village Players, Oak Park) and Echo in Lee Blessing's Eleemosynary at the Ann Arbor Repertory theatre.[8] In 1980 she auditioned for the film version of Annie but was turned down because she was too tall.[10] She also ventured into modeling, initially doing print work for Hudson's and other regional outlets and later appearing in TV commercials for department stores in Atlanta, Milwaukee and Canada.[10] She would use her modeling income to commute to Los Angeles and New York to train with professionals, including dancer and choreographer Joe Tremaine, vocal coach Seth Riggs and Broadway Dance Center's Frank Hatchett. After writing a personal letter to TV producer Norman Lear asking him to make her a star, she received a reply from Lear's assistant, who encouraged her to reach out whenever she was in Los Angeles. Three years later, during a family vacation in California, she contacted his office and Lear helped her setting up with talent agent Judy Savage, of The Savage Agency.[11][12][13] That led to her television debut in one episode of Gimme a Break![14] and her film debut in the critically acclaimed short film Platinum Blonde, both filmed in 1986. Berkley commuted to Los Angeles on every school break and summer vacation, taking acting classes with Diana Hill and Nora Eckstein of the recently enstablished Young Actors Space and landing roles in Silver Spoons and the WonderWorks TV film Frog. Still a teenager, she joined the New Faces division of Elite Model Management in New York (alongside other up-and-coming models like Cameron Diaz)[15] after placing as a finalist in their Look of the Year contest.[16] In the fall of 1988, her family eventually relocated to Los Angeles when she was still attending North Farmington High School.[9] She signed with Elite's LA division, appeared in YM magazine's November issue as a finalist in the Cover Girl contest and guest starred in episodes of Day by Day and TV 101.[17] Saved by the Bell and TV fame (1989–1994)After losing the leading role of Rennie in Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan,[18] she auditioned for a regular role in the NBC Saturday-morning sit-com Saved by the Bell. During the final callback, the producers of the show could not decide whether to cast Tiffani-Amber Thiessen or her for the part of Kelly Kapowski.[19] In the end, Thiessen landed the role but Berkley's audition was so impressive that she was ultimately given another leading character, Jessie Spano, a civil-minded student with strong feminist views. The show debuted in August 1989 and aired on prime-time for three weeks, before relocating to its designated timeslot on Saturday morning.[20][21] It quickly turned into a fan-favorite among young audiences, and its six teenage leads became television stars, appearing in teen magazines and on mall tours all around the country.[22][23] During the show's breaks over the years, Berkley landed guest starring roles in other popular shows like Life Goes On, Married People and The Hogan Family. In 1991 she even appeared in Kathryn Bigelow's Point Break but her small role as a surf shop countergirl was later cut.[24][6] Soon after graduating from Calabasas High School, she began training with acting coach Roy London[25] and left Saved by the Bell ahead of time during its fourth and final season, along with co-star Tiffani Amber Thiessen, to focus mainly on feature films. The transition from small to big screen turned out to be a difficult one, though,[26] and Berkley worked mainly for television for the following two years, landing roles in Baywatch, Step by Step, Raven, Diagnosis: Murder, Burke's Law and Crossroads.[27] She also starred in the straight-to-video film Molly & Gina and in the TV movies Saved by the Bell: Hawaiian Style and Bandit Goes Country. In January 1993 she was featured in the Crystal Pepsi commercial that debuted during the Super Bowl XXVII.[27] During this time, she enrolled at UCLA to study English Literature.[6] Showgirls’s backlash and the beginning of film career (1995)In the spring of 1994, Carolco Pictures opened the casting for the leads in Paul Verhoeven's new film Showgirls, the script of which Berkley had retrieved months earlier while the movie was still in development.[28] Feeling a strong connection to the main character, she conducted thorough research, visiting strip clubs in Los Angeles, Las Vegas and New York, and interviewing strippers at venues such as Stringfellow's, Palomino and Scores.[29] Despite resistance from her agent at Metropolitan Talent Agency,[30] Berkley personally called Showgirls producer Charles Evans, introducing herself as Nomi.[31] At her first audition with Paul Verhoeven she told him he might as well stop looking for other actresses because there was no one else who could play that role.[32] During the extensive casting process, which saw many A-listers auditioning,[33] Berkley briefly reprised the role of Jessie Spano in Saved by the Bell – Wedding in Las Vegas before heading to Idaho to film the Disney Channel adventure movie White Wolves II: Legend of the Wild. While on location at Yellowstone National Park, she received the call that she had booked the lead in Showgirls. Verhoeven later remarked: "We didn't have any more hesitation when we met again Elizabeth Berkley.” Once the casting announcement was official, Berkley signed with Creative Artists Agency and began an intensive 12-week rehearsal period with choreographer Marguerite Derricks and the dance ensemble hired for the film.[34] During this preparation phase, she ran into Demi Moore at one of the clubs in Los Angeles, where Moore was conducting research for her role in Striptease.[35] Shooting for Showgirls commenced in Nevada in October 1994 and lasted four and a half months, concluding in March 1995. During this time, Berkley reportedly often danced for up to 16 hours a day, seven days a week, never requiring a body double.[34] In May 1995, Berkley and Paul Verhoeven attended the Cannes Film Festival to present an 8-minute preview of the film. "I was introduced at Cannes to the world as a movie actress and that was something that was very special," she recalled.[36] The movie was given a previously agreed-upon NC-17 rating in the United States (the first big-budget film to do so) and was released to 1,388 theaters in North America on September 22, 1995.[37] Despite the massive marketing campaign, Showgirls was a box office bomb during its original, theatrical run and it was widely panned by critics, garnering a level of controversy and hostile criticism rarely seen in recent cinema. Berkley's performance was particularly targeted: Todd McCarthy described it in Variety as "harsh, graceless and quickly tiresome",[38] and Barbara Shulgasser of the San Francisco Examiner, after comparing her to a Barbie doll, added: "That Berkley cannot act is indisputable".[39] Only a few critics appreciated Berkley's work: Roger Ebert in The Chicago Sun Times wrote that her "fierce energy [was] always interesting",[40] and Entertainment Weekly remarked that "the electricity of her anger" made her "a true, leonine presence". The storm of criticism that followed quickly turned into personal vilification, with reviewers going so far as labelling her a "meat puppet on a stick" or, as critic Gene Siskel stated on national television,[41] "not sexy, not particularly appealing and not attractive". Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote that Berkley displayed "the open-mouthed, vacant-eyed look of an inflatable party doll."[42] and the Chicago Tribune opined that she was "quite convincing when asked to play a girl who is not too bright". Berkley was later awarded two Razzie Awards as Worst Actress of the Year and Worst New Star.[43] A journalist whose name Berkley never revealed, began his interview asking her: “How does it feel to be a failure?”[44] Reflecting on the Showgirls backlash, the actress later commented: "There was so much cruelty around it. I was bullied. And I didn't understand why I was being blamed. The job as an actor is to fulfill the vision of the director. And I did everything I was supposed to do. No one associated with the film spoke up on my behalf to protect me. I was left out in the cold and I was a pariah in the industry I had worked so hard for."[45] Verhoeven often took responsibilities for the way Berkley's performance was perceived and criticized. Soon after the release of the film, he stated: "Certainly I am partly, or in large degree, responsible. I asked her to do it that way."[46] In an interview with Rolling Stone in 2015, he again made it explicit that he felt as if he was to blame for Berkley's performance: "People have, of course, criticized her for being over-the-top in her performance. Most of that comes from me. I pushed it in that direction. Good or not good, I was the one who asked her to exaggerate everything — every move — because that was the element of style that I thought would work for the movie."[47] Film producer Scott Rudin publicly defended her, declaring: "I was impressed with her and her professional attitude about her job. I think what she's been through must be about as hard as I can imagine anything being for an actress".[46] In the wake of the film's negative fallout, Berkley made a reportedly "tempestuous" exit from Creative Artists Agency,[48] and spent the following week meeting with ICM, William Morris Agency and United Talent Agency, ultimately signing with the latter. Willing to rehabilitate her image, she embarked alone on an international promotional across major territories, including Spain, Italy, Germany, Australia, Taiwan and Hong Kong. Resurgence, independent cinema and London's West End (1996–1999)After the controversial release of Showgirls, Berkley was met with total resistance from most filmmakers and casting directors, many of whom wouldn't even agree to meet with her.[49] Only a handful of prominent directors stepped up, expressing interest in testing her for leading roles in their upcoming films. Among them were Milos Forman (for The People vs. Larry Flynt), Oliver Stone (for U-Turn), Luc Besson (for The Fifth Element) and Michael Bay (for Armageddon). "It was inspiring, actually comforting to have them trust me and support me and embrace my work," she shared.[50] In her quest to find a follow-up project, the actress returned to acting classes with coach Howard Fine, starting again from level 1.[51] She also trained under Uta Hagen.[52] In December 1995 Sherry Lansing, chairwoman at Paramount Pictures, asked Berkley to test for a supporting role in The First Wives Club,[51] a comedy starring Diane Keaton, Goldie Hawn, and Bette Midler. After several auditions,[51] the actress eventually booked the part, the first one after the Showgirls backlash. The First Wives Club was released in September 1996 and was a surprise hit, grossing over $100m at the box office. Berkley's small role as naive actress Phoebe LaVelle earned her positive reviews and the entire cast won the National Board of Review for "Best Ensemble Performance".[53] A more substantial supporting role followed in Tom DiCillo's independent film The Real Blonde. Although DiCillo initially wanted her for the lead role of Sahara, the supermodel airhead eventually played by Bridgette Wilson, Berkley expressed her desire to play the smaller yet more intriguing part of Tina, a dark-haired Madonna body-double. The movie premiered at the Sundance Film Festival before getting a limited theatrical release on February 27, 1998. She briefly returned to television when she starred in the HBO thriller Random Encounter and in one episode of the anthology series Perversions of Science. She was also tapped as a regular cast member for the unaired ABC pilot L.A. Med[27] and voiced the title character in the animated sci-fi film Armitage III – Polymatrix. For her supporting role as a Russian girl living in Brighton Beach in Avi Nesher's independent drama Taxman, she studied with a dialogue coach at Berlitz for two months.[50] Reviews were favorable: The Hollywood Reporter appreciated the "nicely understated Elizabeth Berkley, sporting a credible Russian accent" and The San Francisco Examiner acknowledged, "Berkley, who is called on to deliver lines in Russian, seems to be out to prove that she really can act. She can". According to Variety, "the beautiful Berkley added a few moments of relief" and Box Office admired the "convincing, well-chosen cast". Berkley then starred in the psychological drama Last Call, by Chilean director Christine Lucas and in Malcolm Ingram's road movie Tail Lights Fade, but neither film was able to find theatrical distribution in the U.S. In the fall of 1998, she landed a role in Oliver Stone's football drama Any Given Sunday as Mandy, Al Pacino's high-priced call girl. The movie received mixed reviews but it was a financial success, earning $100 million worldwide. In May 1999, Sir Peter Hall cast her as Lenny Bruce's wife in his London West End production of Lenny, starring Eddie Izzard.[54] The play debuted at Queen's Theatre in July 1999 and had a limited 12-weeks run, due to Izzard's previous commitments. Berkley's portrayal of Honey Harlow (renamed Rusty Blaine in the play) impressed the critics. The Times dubbed her performance "a convincingly vulnerable portrayal"[55] and the Evening Standard described Rusty as a "dejected stripper whom Elizabeth Berkley endows with lovely erotic languor and a true dancing talent."[56] According to The Guardian, co-stars "David Ryall, Elizabeth Berkley and James Hayes lend good support"[57] and The Independent described Berkley's performance as "impressive."[58] Critical Affirmation and Broadway (2000–2007)After a recurring role in the seventh season of NYPD Blue and a co-starring part in the E! original comedy Becoming Dick, Berkley booked a supporting role in Woody Allen's period-comedy The Curse of the Jade Scorpion, which debuted at the Venice Film Festival in 2001.[59] In October 2004 she landed a role in her first Broadway show, the comedy Sly Fox.[69] Directed by Arthur Penn and starring Richard Dreyfuss and Eric Stoltz, the production opened in Broadway in April 2004, after an out-of-town tryout at the Shubert Theatre in Boston and 22 previews at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre in New York.[70] Between 2004 and 2007 she lined up some high-profile guest starring roles in the shows Without a Trace, Threshold and Law & Order: Criminal Intent and played a black widow in the TV movie Dark Beauty. In 2005 and in 2006, she appeared in the annual 24 Hour Plays in Broadway, in which six writers, six directors and 24 actors have 24 hours to write, direct, and perform six 10-minute plays.[72] Both her comedic stints impressed the critics: among them, Jason Zinoman of The New York Times (“an appealingly daffy Elizabeth Berkley Lauren” in an “excellent all-star cast”),[73] Roger Friedman of Fox News (“she held her own live on stage with Tony-winner Cady Huffman, Andrew McCarthy and Cheyenne Jackson. She's ready for SNL!”),[74] the NY Daily News (“Berkley did a Meryl Streep-worthy Spanish accent in the hilarious Toccata and Fugue”) and Theatre Mania (“Among the evening's top acting efforts, a ridiculously Spanish-accented Elizabeth Berkley”).[75] In 2006 she also starred in Douglas Carter Beane's critically acclaimed The Cartells: A Prime-Time Soap Opera, Live at Comix, opposite Joanna Gleason, Brian d’Arcy James, Pedro Pascal and David Rakoff.[76] Prime Time Success and Hiatus (2008–2019)In 2008, Berkley signed on to appear in a multi-episode arc in the sixth season of CSI: Miami, portraying Julia Winston, Horatio Caine's ex-lover and mother of his teenage son.[77] All the episodes featuring Berkley ranked in the top 10 of the Nielsen ratings chart[78] and Berkley's role ended appearing in four episodes, including the season finale, before being confirmed for the following season.[79] Commenting on the high ratings during Berkley's appearances, TV Guide noted: "CSI: Miami, it should be reminded, returned to boffo ratings these past two weeks, and in this past Tuesday's special airing gave CBS its best numbers in that 10 o'clock slot in some five years. Do not underestimate the power of the Jessie Spano fan.”[80] Due to the 2007-08 Writers Guild of America strike, which halted all scripted productions (including CSI: Miami), Berkley took on hosting duties for Bravo's reality series Step It Up and Dance, a competition featuring ten aspiring dancers competing for a cash prize of $100,000 and the opportunity to work with and perform for some of the country's top choreographers.[81] The show, shot in late 2007 in Los Angeles, premiered in April 2008 and came out as Bravo's strongest ever in its time slot (10/11 C) with 826,000 viewers.[82] The show continued to perform well throughout its run, averaging 756,000 viewers each week (of whom 522,000 were aged 18 to 49) and contributed to Bravo's highest-rated April ever.[83] During the hiatus of CSI: Miami, Berkley starred alongside David Arquette and Thomas Jane in Arquette's 3D short film The Butler's in Love, which premiered at Mann's Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles in June 2008 and opened the sixth annual HollyShorts Film Festival.[84] She also made a cameo appearance in the independent comedy Women in Trouble[85] and starred in the direct-to-video film S. Darko (the sequel to the cult hit Donnie Darko), where she played Trudy, a born-again Christian woman who becomes infatuated with her pastor. Following her successful nine-episode stint on CSI: Miami, Berkley starred in a multi-episode arc on the Showtime series The L Word during its sixth and final season. She played Kelly Wentworth, a straight woman who had a romantic relationship with Jennifer Beals' character Bette Porter, during college.[86] In August 2009, her appearance on the cover of People magazine alongside Mark-Paul Gosselaar, Mario Lopez, Lark Voorhies and Tiffani Thiessen, marked the first Saved by the Bell official reunion after the show's conclusion in 1994.[87] In 2011, shortly after completing her national tour to promote her first book Ask-Elizabeth,[88] Berkley played the lead role in the Hallmark Channel original film Lucky Christmas, about a struggling mother who wins the lottery but must recover her ticket from the glove compartment of her stolen car. The film premiered on November 12, 2011, and opened Hallmarks’ Countdown to Christmas for that year.[89] Recognizing the material's wholesome nature, The New York Times nonetheless stated: “Besides the irrational plotting, Ms. Berkley and Mr. Gray-Stanford turn out to be a surprisingly believable, appealing couple-in-the-making.” The television movie marked Berkley's last project before taking a hiatus from full-time acting, as she announced her pregnancy in early 2012. Berkley and her husband, Greg Lauren, welcomed their first child, a boy, in July 2012. In September 2013, Berkley accepted an offer to participate as a contestant in the 17th season of Dancing with the Stars, where she partnered with Valentin Chmerkovskiy.[90] Despite receiving several perfect scores from the judges, the couple was eliminated in the 9th week of competition, finishing in 6th place. Saved by the Bell Reboot and Comeback (2020-today)In September 2019, The Hollywood Reporter announced that NBCUniversal's upcoming streaming service, Peacock was teaming with Berkley and Mario Lopez for a Saved by the Bell sequel series. Both actors were set to star and also produce the new show.[95][96][97] Saved by the Bell, originally set for a summer release, faced several delays in production caused by the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States and wrapped filming in September 2020.[98] On November 25, the day the show premiered, Berkley and Lopez, alongside Mark-Paul Gosselaar and Tiffani Thiessen appeared as guests on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.[99] The show was renewed for a second season, released in November 2021, but despite the strong reviews[100][101] and the Outstanding Comedy Series award won at the 33rd GLAAD Media Awards, it was cancelled in May 2022.[102] On November 22, 2021, Berkley joined Abel "The Weeknd" Tesfaye, Lily-Rose Depp, Suzanna Son, Steve Zissis, Anne Heche, Juliebeth Gonzalez and Troye Sivan in Sam Levinson's upcoming HBO series The Idol.[103] Directed by Amy Seimetz,[104] the show began production in Los Angeles in November. Berkley played a pivotal supporting role but on April 25, 2022, with roughly 80% of the series already filmed, Variety reported that the show was set to undergo a major overhaul, with "drastic" changes in the cast and creative directions.[105] It was later announced that most of the main and supporting cast members, including Berkley, Heche, Gonzalez and Zissis were no longer part of the project, which was quickly re-written, re-cast and re-shot, with Levinson's taking over directing duties from Seimetz.[106][107] The series was widely panned upon release and was canceled after one season in August 2023.[108] In 2024 Berkley returned to the big screen, playing the opening victim in Max Minghella's Shell, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. The same year, she received three stading ovations when she introduced a sold-out, 35-mm special screening of Showgirls at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. During her speech, the actress acknowledged the importance of the queer audience: “I'm so grateful that the film has found its way not only in your hearts but especially the LGBTQ community. You stood by the film. You always believed”.[33] In September, she booked a guest-starring role in Ryan Murphy's Hulu legal drama All's Fair. Ask-ElizabethIn 2006, Berkley began facilitating small interactive self-esteem workshops with teen girls all around the United States.[109] She would guide the group in order to create a safe space for the girls and let them open up about any problem they wanted to discuss, from body image issues, dating to goals and dreams.[109] The first workshop was held in New York City but the program's popularity quickly grew. A non-profit organization was formed and a dedicated, interactive website was launched in 2007.[110] Ask-Elizabeth was also the working title of a reality series focusing on the program's success and its continued efforts to help girls throughout the country. Produced by MTV in collaboration with Berkley's newly-created company 5–6–7–8 Productions,[111] the show featured Berkley traveling around the US, examining issues and topics most important to teenaged girls. Amy Bailey, vice president of development in MTV's News and Documentaries division, said Berkley approached MTV with the idea. "She does these workshops around the country with teen girls and gets them to really open up about self-esteem and body issues", said Bailey. "We had been looking for a program that tackled the same issues, so it seemed like a perfect match."[112] Originally expected to premiere in late 2008, the series never materialized. However, in 2011, Berkley put together the 15 most frequently asked questions from the workshops and published Ask-Elizabeth through the Penguin Group.[113] Designed by Berkley and her artist husband Greg Lauren to look like a personal diary, the book was a huge success and quickly became a New York Times Bestseller.[114] Personal lifeBerkley is married to former actor, artist and fashion designer Greg Lauren, nephew of Ralph Lauren and son of Jerry Lauren, at the time executive vice president of men's design at Polo Ralph Lauren. The couple met in 2000 during a dance class and were introduced by a mutual friend.[115][116] They got engaged in 2002 and on November 1, 2003, they got married at the Esperanza Hotel in Cabo San Lucas. Berkley's dress, a silk sheath with pearled spaghetti straps, was the first wedding gown designed by Ralph Lauren.[115] She then formally changed her name to Elizabeth Berkley Lauren, and often uses it professionally as well.[117] The couple welcomed their first son, Skye Cole Lauren, in July 2012.[118] Berkley had previously dated actor and screenwriter Roger Wilson from 1997 to 1999. She is good friends with actresses Ele Keats, Jennifer Beals and Carla Gugino. Berkley is a vegetarian,[119] and she doesn't smoke or drink alcohol.[120][121] ActivismOver the years, Berkley has been an active supporter of several organizations dedicated to environmental protection, the promotion of vegetarianism, and the health of younger and older people. According to the eighth annual Sesame Place Kids Poll conducted at Sesame Place (Philadelphia) in September 1993, Elizabeth was voted second-best public person to encourage recycling, partially due to the activism of her Saved by the Bell character Jessie Spano. Basketball superstar Michael Jordan outpolled her with 33% of votes (Elizabeth was favored by 22 percent). Next came Chelsea Clinton and Vice President Al Gore.[122] FilmographyFilm
Television
Awards and nominations
References
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