Judy Davis mini-bio: Known for her intense intelligence and the range of unconventional characters she
has brought to life, Australian actress Judy Davis has had a fairly brilliant
career. Born in Perth, Western Australia, on April 23, 1955, Davis rebelled against
her Catholic upbringing by leaving home at the age of 17 to join a rock band, which
toured across Asia for six months. Upon her return to Australia, she soon gave up
her singing career to attend the Western Australia Institute of Technology and then
concentrated on another branch of performing at the National Institute of Dramatic
Art. At NIDA she trained with the likes of Mel Gibson, with whom she starred in a
school production of +Romeo and Juliet.
In her subsequent stage work, Davis gravitated toward characters whose significant
traits alternated between steel-like strength and vacillating vulnerability: She
played the title roles in +Lulu and +Piaf. In films from 1977, Davis ascended to
stardom as Sybilla Melvin in director Gillian Armstrong's My Brilliant Career
(1979), a performance that won her several awards, including the Australian and
British equivalents of the Oscar. She was likewise showered with industry and
film-festival honors for her work in Hoodwink (1981), The Winter of Our Dreams
(1982), Heatwave (1982), and Kangaroo (1984), appearing in the latter film with her
husband, Colin Friels. She was nominated for an Emmy for her portrayal of young
Golda Meir in the TV miniseries A Woman Called Golda (1982), and earned her first
Oscar nomination for her interpretation of the enigmatic Adela Quested in David
Lean's A Passage to India in 1984.
Described by one colleague as "the patron saint of modern emotions," Davis has never
done anything by halves: She was a lusty George Sand in Impromptu (1991), the junkie
wife of William Lee in Naked Lunch (1991), a bibulous, self-destructive Hollywood
ghostwriter in Barton Fink (1991), an overbearing ex-spouse in Woody Allen's
Husbands and Wives (1992) (the second of her Oscar-nominated turns), and a hostage
from Hell in The Ref (1994). Davis' films during the second half of the '90s were
marked by a notably uneven quality, and she could be seen in everything from the
wildly idiosyncratic Children of the Revolution (1996) to some other disappointing
collaborations with Allen, Deconstructing Harry (1997) and Celebrity (1998).
In 1999, Davis received another Emmy nomination for her work in Dash and Lilly, in
which she starred as Lillian Hellman opposite Sam Shepard as Dashiell Hammett.
Nonetheless, that particular award eluded her grasp.
During the first few years of the new millennium, Davis stepped down and maintained
a somewhat lower profile than in prior years, placing a much greater emphasis on
telemovies than she had in the nineties, and limiting herself to lower-profile
theatrical features. She gleaned positive notices - and won a Golden Globe - for her
portrayal of the adult Judy Garland in the telemovie Life With Judy Garland: Me and
My Shadows (2001), opposite Hugh Laurie and Victor Garber.
Two years later, Davis received yet another Golden Globe nomination (her fifth nod,
including the Garland win) for her portrayal of Nancy Reagan (opposite James Brolin
as Ronald) in the unexpectedly controversial TV biopic The Reagans.
A few scattered theatrical features highlighted this period, such as the twin 2001
releases The Man Who Sued God and Susan Seidelman's Gaudi Afternoon. Davis then
joined the ensembles of two A-list features in 2006. The Jennifer Aniston-Vince
Vaughn vehicle The Break-Up - a comedy about the constant sparring between a couple
of live-in lovers - hit cinemas in June 2006 to mixed critical receptions, and
struck gold at the box, doubtless riding high on the popularity of its twin leads.
In the picture, Davis plays Marilyn Dean, Aniston's slave-driving boss at an art
gallery. In that same year's hotly-anticipated but underperforming Marie Antoinette,
Davis put her inimitably chilly stamp on the role of La Comtesse de Noailles.
Judy Davis married Scotch actor Colin Friels (A Good Man in Africa) in 1984.