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Using her nervously flashing squinty-eyed smile and breathy, almost girlish speaking voice to great effect, character player Dianne Wiest has proven equally adept at portraying ditsy, somewhat neurotic comic characters, classically tragic figures and maternal authority figures. Attractive but not conventionally beautiful by Hollywood standards, this stage-trained performer has had only rare screen roles that allow her to unleash the full force of her capabilities....

Filmography

Barry Munday - ( Barry's Mother / / Announced / )
Portofino - ( / / Announced / )
Passengers (Mandate Pictures) - ( - Cast / 2008 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Not Afraid, Not Afraid - ( / / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Synecdoche, New York - ( - Cast / / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Dan in Real Life - ( Nana / 2007 / Released / )
Dedication - ( Carol / 2007 / Released / )
A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints - ( Flaurie / 2006 / Released / )
Robots - ( Mrs. Copperbottom / 2005 / Released / )
Merci Docteur Rey - ( Elisabeth Beaumont / 2004 / Released / )
September - ( Stephanie / 2003 / Released / )
I Am Sam - ( Annie / 2001 / Released / )
Practical Magic - ( Aunt Jet / 1998 / Released / )
The Horse Whisperer - ( Diane Booker / 1998 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
The Associate - ( Sally / 1996 / Released / Polygram Films International )
The Birdcage - ( Louise Keeley / 1996 / Released / )
Bullets Over Broadway - ( Helen Sinclair / 1994 / Released / )
Cops and Robbersons - ( Helen Robberson / 1994 / Released / )
The Scout - ( Doctor Aaron / 1994 / Released / )
Little Man Tate - ( Dr Jane Grierson / 1991 / Released / )
Edward Scissorhands - ( Peg Boggs / 1990 / Released / Finnkino )
Cookie - ( Lenore / 1989 / Released / Greater Union Distributors )
Parenthood - ( Helen / 1989 / Released / )
Bright Lights, Big City - ( Mother / 1988 / Released / )
Radio Days - ( Aunt Bea / 1987 / Released / )
The Lost Boys - ( Lucy / 1987 / Released / )
Hannah and Her Sisters - ( Holly / 1986 / Released / )
The Purple Rose of Cairo - ( Emma / 1985 / Released / )
Falling in Love - ( Isabelle / 1984 / Released / )
Footloose - ( Vi Moore / 1984 / Released / UIP The Film Consortium )
I'm Dancing As Fast As I Can - ( Julie Addison / 1982 / Released / )
Independence Day - ( Nancy Morgan / 1982 / Released / )
It's My Turn - ( Gail / 1980 / Released / )
TV Credits
In Treatment ( 2008 / Released ): Actor
TV Episode Dr. Gina Toll

TV Episode Dr. Gina Toll

TV Episode Dr. Gina Toll

TV Episode Dr. Gina Toll

TV Episode Dr. Gina Toll

The Return of Jezebel James ( 2008 / Released ): Actor
Needles & Schlag ( 2008 )
TV Episode Talia Thomkins

Pilot ( 2008 )
TV Episode Talia Thomkins

TV Episode Talia Thomkins

National Memorial Day Concert (2007) ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
Category 6: Day of Destruction ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
The Blackwater Lightship ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
Echoes From the White House ( 2001 / Released ): Voice
Intimate Portrait: Calista Flockhart ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Law & Order: Criminal Intent ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
The 10th Kingdom ( 2000 / Released ): Actor
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
Chameleon ( 2002 )
TV Episode District Attorney Nora Lewin

Ridicule ( 2001 )
TV Episode District Attorney Nora Lewin

The Simple Life of Noah Dearborn ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
Drunks ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
Spotlight: The Birdcage ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
The 68th Annual Academy Awards ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
Inside the Academy Awards ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Avonlea ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
Law & Order ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
Patriot ( 2002 )
TV Episode District Attorney Renata Lowery

Oxymoron ( 2002 )
TV Episode District Attorney Renata Lowery

Attorney Client ( 2002 )
TV Episode District Attorney Renata Lowery

Foul Play ( 2002 )
TV Episode District Attorney Renata Lowery

Dazzled ( 2002 )
TV Episode District Attorney Renata Lowery

The Face of Rage ( 1983 / Released ): Actor
The Wall ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
Out of Our Father's House ( 1978 / Released ): Actor
Zalmen ( 1975 / Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

Using her nervously flashing squinty-eyed smile and breathy, almost girlish speaking voice to great effect, character player Dianne Wiest has proven equally adept at portraying ditsy, somewhat neurotic comic characters, classically tragic figures and maternal authority figures. Attractive but not conventionally beautiful by Hollywood standards, this stage-trained performer has had only rare screen roles that allow her to unleash the full force of her capabilities. Nevertheless, she has emerged as an actress who commands respect and admiration--and along the way netted numerous accolades and encomiums, including a pair of Best Supporting Actress Oscars.

The eldest child and only daughter of a pilot and a nurse, Wiest was an "Army brat" who grew up in several communities in the USA and Germany. While a teenager, she studied at the School of American Ballet which she abandoned at age 16 in favor of the stage. Dropping out of college, Wiest became a member of a touring Shakespeare company and eventually landed a four-year gig as a member of the Arena Stage in Washington, DC. By the mid-1970s, the actress had settled in NYC and quickly found employment in productions at the New York Shakespeare Festival's Public Theatre. Wiest broke through with a multiple award-winning comic turn in the Off-Broadway play "The Art of Dining" in 1979. Despite the lure of film work, she has constantly returned to the stage, often in dramatic fare such as playing Desdemona to James Earl Jones' "Othello" (1982) and Maggie to Frank Langella's Quentin in "After the Fall" (1984) or a Holocaust survivor in "Blue Light" (1994) or its revision "The Shawl" (1996), and almost always to unanimous praise.

In a handful of small screen productions, Wiest turned in fine work, including her moving depiction of a rape survivor in "The Face of Rage" (ABC, 1983). By this time, she had begun making inroads in features in routine roles (e.g., John Lithgow's long-suffering wife in "Footloose" 1984) but it took joining Woody Allen's unofficial stock company for her profile to rise. In "The Purple Rose of Cairo" (1985), the writer-director cast her in the small but memorable role of a hard-bitten prostitute. Wiest picked up her first Academy Award for her scene-stealing turn as Mia Farrow's younger sister, a neurotically unfocused, superficially trendy wannabe actress, in "Hannah and Her Sisters" (1986) and lent a similar garrulous charm to the maiden Aunt Bea in the nostalgic "Radio Days" (1987). In Allen's turgid "September" (also 1987), she again stood out as an unhappily married woman competing with her best friend (Farrow) for the attentions of the same man (Sam Waterston). It is doubtful that another actress could have telegraphed the character's sexual desire mixed with apprehension that Wiest so convincingly manifests.

Her work with Allen was interrupted by a motherhood—both on screen and off (the actress has two adopted daughters). After the Oscar win, Hollywood cast her in a string of maternal roles. You name it, she played it: from the clueless mom of a budding vampire in "The Lost Boys" (1987) to the sainted Madonna of "Bright Light, Big City" (1988) to the ditsy Avon Lady of "Edward Scissorhands" (1990). Ron Howard's "Parenthood" (1989) netted Wiest a second Academy Award nomination for playing the harried, divorced parent of teenagers. In the span of some seven years, only "Little Man Tate" (1991) offered a (very) slight change of pace, casting her as a caring child psychologist in conflict with the mother of boy genius.

It was Woody Allen who again provided a meaty and decidedly different character, the flamboyant, tempestuous aging actress Helen Sinclair in "Bullets Over Broadway" (1994). At first, Wiest struggled with the role and after the first dailies, offered to quit as she felt miscast. Finally, the actress was able to unlock the character by locating a distinctive vocal inflection. Using her "stage voice"--a bit deeper, more sensual, in Allen's words "more pretentious"--she was able to inhabit the skin of this oversized, slightly campy grande dame and again all but stole the film. Critics and audiences embraced the character—and her exhortation "Don't speak!" and Wiest amassed yet another set of trophies, including a second Oscar. Mike Nichols paired her with Gene Hackman as the conservative parents of a daughter marrying into an unconventional family in "The Birdcage" (1996). She added an Emmy to her collection for a 1996 guest appearance on "Avonlea" (The Disney Channel) before Robert Redford tapped into her beaming maternalism for "The Horse Whisperer" (1998). But the actress seemed to stumble a bit in her over-the-top interpretation of an eccentric training her nieces in witchcraft in "Practical Magic" (also 1998). Wiest picked up an Emmy nomination for a supporting role as a diner owner and friend to a seemingly ageless carpenter in "The Secret Life of Noah Dearborn" (CBS, 1999). The actress then was tapped to play a wicked queen who plots to usurp the throne of mythical monarchy in the lavish, big-budgeted TV miniseries "The 10th Kingdom" (NBC, 2000).

A return to the big screen found Wiest playing the agoraphobic neighbor of a mentally retarded man (Sean Penn) fighting for custody of his seven year-old daughter in “I Am Sam” (2002). In “Merci Docteur Rey” (2004), she played the opera diva mother of a gay man (Stanislas Merhar) who doesn’t know her son is gay—the farcical comedy barely made a blip on the box office radar. Meanwhile, Wiest was the voice of Mrs. Copperbottom in “Robots” (2005), a well-reviewed animated feature that depicted a world entirely inhabited by mechanical beings.


Profession(s):
Actor, director
Sometimes Credited As:
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Family
brother:Greg Wiest
brother:Don Wiest
daughter:Emily Wiest (Adopted; born c. 1987)
daughter:Lily Wiest (Adopted; born c. 1991)
Companion(s)
Sam Cohn , Companion , ```..Together in the 1980s


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Education
School of American Ballet New York, NY
University of Maryland College Park, MD BA 1969
Awards (Back to top)
Sundance Film Festival Special Jury Prize Dramatic "A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints" 2006
Emmy Award Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series "Avonlea" 1997
Screen Actors Guild Award Outstanding Performance by a Cast "The Birdcage" 1997
Academy Award Best Actress in a Supporting Role "Bullets Over Broadway" 1995
Golden Globe Award Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture "Bullets Over Broadway" 1995
Independent Spirit Award Best Supporting Female "Bullets Over Broadway" 1995
National Society of Film Critics Award Best Supporting Actress "Bullets Over Broadway" 1995
Screen Actors Guild Award Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role "Bullets Over Broadway" 1995
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award Best Supporting Actress "Bullets Over Broadway" 1994
New York Film Critics Circle Award Best Supporting Actress "Bullets Over Broadway" 1994
Academy Award Best Actress in a Supporting Role "Hannah and Her Sisters" 1987
Boston Society of Film Critics Award Best Supporting Actress "Hannah and Her Sisters" 1987
National Society of Film Critics Award Best Supporting Actress "Hannah and Her Sisters" 1987
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award Best Supporting Actress "Hannah and Her Sisters" 1986
National Board of Review Award Best Supporting Actress "Hannah and Her Sisters" 1986
New York Film Critics Circle Award Best Supporting Actress "Hannah and Her Sisters" 1986
OBIE Award Performance "Serenading Louie" and "Other Places" 1984
Clarence Derwent Award "The Art of Dining" 1980
OBIE Award Performance "The Art of Dining" 1980
Theatre World Award "The Art of Dining" 1980

Milestones (Back to top)
2008 Cast as Paul's (Gabriel Byrne) own therapist and mentor in the HBO series, "In Treatment"
2007 Played the mother of Dane Cook and Steve Carell in "Dan in Real Life"
2006 Cast in the coming-of-age drama "A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints"
2005 Voiced Mrs. Copperbottom in the animated feature "Robots"
2004 Portrayed an opera-diva mother in "Merci Docteur Rey"
2001 Played a neighbor who befriends a mentally retarded man (Sean Penn) and his daughter (Dakota Fanning) in "I Am Sam"
2000 Cast as the Evil Queen out to usurp the throne from the heir in the elaborate NBC miniseries "The 10th Kingdom"
2000 Reteamed with John Lithgow as husband and wife in the period comedy "Portofino"
2000 - 2002 Joined cast of the NBC drama series "Law & Order" as the district attorney
1999 Played the restaurant owner friend to a local craftsman (Sidney Poitier) in the CBS drama "The Simple Life of Noah Dearborn"; received Emmy nomination
1998 Portrayed the sister-in-law of Robert Redford in "The Horse Whisperer"
1997 Returned to the NY stage in "One Flea Spare" at the New York Shakespeare Festival
1996 Cast as the wife of a conservative politician in Mike Nichols' "The Bird Cage"; film loosely based on "La Cage aux Folles"
1996 Played the lead role in George Bernard Shaw's "Jitta's Atonement" at the Bershire Theater Festival; directed by and co-starred Harris Yulin
1996 Won an Emmy guest-starring on The Disney Channel's "Avonlea"
1995 Acted in the film, "Drunks"; directed by Peter Cohn (the son of Wiest's agent and former off-screen companion Sam Cohn)
1994 Acted with Harris Yulin in "Don Juan in Hell"
1994 Delivered one of her best screen performances as an over-the-hill actress in Woody Allen's "Bullets Over Broadway"; won second Best Supporting Actress Academy Award; first performer to win two Oscars
1994 Created role of a Holocaust survivor in Cynthia Ozick's play "Blue Light"; directed Sidney Lumet
1991 Portrayed the child psychologist who clashes with the mother of a genius in Jodie Foster's directorial debut "Little Man Tate"
1990 Played the Avon Lady who befriends the title character in Tim Burton's "Edward Scissorhands"
1989 Earned second Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination as the exasperated single mother in "Parenthood"
1987 Offered a lovely turn as the high-strung Aunt Bea in Allen's nostalgic "Radio Days"
1987 Played the mother of teenagers who fall prey to a gang of young vampires in Joel Schumacher's flashy "The Lost Boys"
1987 Co-starred with Ron Silver (as Polish emigres) in the play "Hunting Cockroaches"
1986 Breakthrough screen role, as the somewhat neurotic Holly in Allen's "Hannah and Her Sisters"; won Best Supporting Actress Academy Award
1985 Directed the play "Not About Heroes" featuring Edward Hermann and Dylan Baker at the Williamstown Theatre Festival; production transferred to Off-Broadway
1985 First film with director Woody Allen, "The Purple Rose of Cairo"; played a hooker
1984 Portrayed Maggie (the character based on Marilyn Monroe) opposite Frank Langella in Arthur Miller's "After the Fall"
1984 Cast as the long-suffering minister's wife in "Footloose"; first onscream teaming with John Lithgow
1983 Played the leading role of a rape victim in the ABC movie, "The Face of Rage"
1982 Network TV-movie debut in "The Wall" (CBS), a fictionalized account of the Jewish Resistance to the Nazis in the Warsaw Ghetto during WWII
1982 First featured film role, supporting Jill CLayburgh in "I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can"
1982 Returned to Broadway as Desdemona opposite James Earl Jones in "Othello"
1981 Made Broadway debut in the ill-fated "Frankenstein"
1980 Feature film debut in "It's My Turn" starring Jill Clayburgh
1980 Played title role in Long Wharf staging of "Hedda Gabler"
1979 Breakthrough stage role, "The Art of Dining"
1976 Appeared in a supporting role in the New York Shakespeare Festival production "Ashes"
1975 TV debut in a "Great Performances" (PBS) presentation of the Arena Theater's production of Elie Wiesel's "Zalmen/Zalmen, or the Madness of God"
1964 At age 16, dropped ballet in favor of acting
As a child and adolescent, moved frequently due to father's military career
Studied at the School of American Ballet in NYC as a teenager
Left college and toured with the American Shakespeare Company
Spent four years with the Arena Theater in Washington, DC; travelled to the USSR with company