A striking brunette who has consistently delivered feisty and compelling acting turns despite the uneven quality of her projects, Annabella Sciorra perhaps is perhaps best-known as the working-class bride-to-be in Nancy Savoca's "True Love" (1989), the Caucasian Brooklynite who begins an affair with a married Black architect in Spike Lee's "Jungle Fever" (1991), and the new mother coping with the all-too-efficient nanny in "The Hand That Rocks the Cradle" (1992). Born and raised in Connecticut, Sciorra studied dance as a child and eschewed college to pursue her dream of acting. By age 20, she had founded her own small theater company and soon landed roles in NYC productions at such prestigious venues as LaMaMa and the Actors Repertory Theatre. In 1988, Sciorra landed her first prominent role, as Sophia Loren's daughter in the 1988 NBC miniseries "Mario Puzo's The Fortunate Pilgrim". The following year, moviegoers saw her as the bride in "True Love" (her countenance graced the posters for the film) and she soon landed a string of girlfriend/wife roles that she invested with skill and grace, making several of them more memorable than perhaps initially envisioned. In 1990 alone, the exotic beauty made of the most of parts like the cheating wife in "Cadillac Man", the spouse of a rogue cop (Richard Gere) in "Internal Affairs" and the lover of an ego-driven lawyer in "Reversal of Fortune". Following her back-to-back successes in "Jungle Fever" and "The Hand That Rocks the Cradle", it was expected Sciorra would become a full-fledged leading lady, but misfires like "Whispers in the Dark" (1992) and "The Night We Never Met" (1993) coupled with unfounded yet widely publicized rumors of clashes on sets (particularly with Spike Lee) combined to take the heat off her. (Indeed, a decade later, the guarded and very private Sciorra is still sometimes erroneously categorized as "cold" or "difficult".)
The actress offered a fine turn as the mother of a young AIDS patient in "The Cure" (1995) and initiated an intriguing collaboration with director Abel Ferrara. While she may clearly be one of the director's favorite performers, he did not cast her in leading roles. Instead she was relegated to supporting parts like a vampire in "The Addiction" (1995) and a Mafia wife in "The Funeral" (on which she also served as an associate producer). Sciorra earned critical praise as Robin Williams' despondent widow in the fantasy "What Dreams May Come" (1998) but had little to do as the kidnapped spouse of a contract killer in "Once in the Life" (2000). Fortunately in 2001, she found a superb outlet for her gifts when she was tapped to portray a slinky car salesperson who becomes the mistress of gangster Tony Soprano on the popular HBO drama series "The Sopranos". Her spirited and sexy performance garnered her a much deserved Emmy nod and although her affair with the Mafia chieftain had ended, the door was still open for her character to return in later episodes.
Sciorra returned to television portraying the attractive, fiery Judge Kim Vicidomini, who quickly proves that her political connections and legal savvy are an asset both in and out of the courtroom, in the short-lived CBS judicial drama "Queens Supreme" (2003) opposite Oliver Platt and Robert Loggia. Roles in the Mandy Moore First Daughter comedy "Chasing Liberty" (2004) and the telepics "The Madam's Family: The Truth About the Canal Street Brothel" (2004) and "Identity Theft: The Michelle Brown Story" (2004) followed. After a guest stint on producer Dick Wolf's "Law & Order: Trial by Jury" in 2005, the actress then signed on to play a new character, Detective Carolyn Barek, the female partner of Chris Noth's Detective Mike Logan, on Wolf's "Law & Order: Criminal Intent" (NBC, 2001 - ) when the series was largely recast in 2005.
Profession(s):
Actor, producer, screenwriter, bartender, waitress, aerobics instructor, office temp
Sometimes Credited As:
Annabella Gloria Philomena Sciorra
2006 Played DiNorscio's (Vin Diesel) tough-as-nails ex-wife in Sidney Lumet's "Find Me Guilty," which depicts the longest criminal trial in U.S. history
2006 Cast in Michael Cuesta's sophomore feature "Twelve and Holding"
2005 Joined the cast of NBC's "Law & Order: Criminal Intent," as police detective Carolyn Barek
2004 Appeared in the comedy "Chasing Liberty"
2003 Cast as Judge Kim Vicidomini in the television series "Queens Supreme"
2001 Teamed with Rosie Perez and John Leguizamo in "King of the Jungle"
2001 - 2003 Played recurring role of car saleswoman (and Tony Soprano's mistress) Gloria Trillo on the HBO series "The Sopranos"; received Emmy nomination
2001 Cast as one of the sisters of the title character in the CBS TV biopic "Jenifer", about an actress who contracts Lou Gehrig's disease and went on to co-found Project ALS
2000 Played the wife of a contract killer in "Once in the Life"
2000 Reteamed with Fisher Stevens in the digitally-shot independent film "Sam the Man"
1999 Acted opposite Fisher Stevens in "Shyster" at Naked Angels in NYC
1998 Had featured role in Ferrara's "The New Rose Hotel"
1998 Appeared as Robin Williams' wife in "What Dreams May Come"
1997 Played co-starring role in the NBC miniseries "Asteroid"
1997 Had key supporting role in "Cop Land"
1996 Debut as associate producer, Ferrara's "The Funeral"; also co-starred
1995 First collaboration with director Abel Ferrara, "The Addiction"
1995 Portrayed the mother of an AIDS-stricked child in "The Cure"
1994 Broadway debut, "Those the River Keeps" by David Rabe
1993 Was one of three people sharing a NYC apartment on alternate nights in "The Night We Never Met"
1993 Cast as Matt Dillon's ex-wife in "Mr. Wonderful", directed by Anthony Minghella
1992 Played a new mother who hires a psycho nanny in "The Hand That Rocks the Cradle"
1991 Portrayed an Italian-American woman who embarks on an affair with a married Black architect in "Jungle Fever", directed by Spike Lee
1990 Played Ron Silver's lover in "Reversal of Fortune" and Richard Gere's wife in "Internal Affairs"
1990 First film with Robin Williams, "Cadillac Man"; cast as Tim Robbins' straying spouse
1989 Feature film debut in "True Love", directed by Nancy Savoca
1988 - 1999 TV-movie debut as Sophia Loren's daughter in "Mario Puzo's The Fortunate Pilgrim" (NBC)
Studied dance as a child
Moved to Brooklyn with family at age 11
Formed The Brass Ring Theatre Company at age 20
Appeared Off-Broadway and Off-Off Broadway in "Stay With Me" at the West Bank Cafe, in "Love and Junk" at LaMaMa E.T.C. and "Trip Back Down" at the Actors Repertory Theatre
Acted in nine-minute promo trailer for "True Love"