Elisabeth Shue Explained

Elisabeth Shue
Birth Date:1963 10, mf=yes
Birth Place:Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.
Alma Mater:Wellesley College
Harvard University (AB)
Education:Columbia High School
Other Names:Lisa Shue
Children:3
Known For:Leaving Las Vegas
Adventures in Babysitting

The Karate Kid
Back to the Future Part II
Back to the Future Part III
The Saint
Hollow Man
The Boys
Years Active:1982 - present
Relatives:Andrew Shue (brother)

Elisabeth Shue (born October 6, 1963)[1] is an American actress. She is best known for her roles in the films The Karate Kid (1984), Adventures in Babysitting (1987), Cocktail (1988), Back to the Future Part II (1989), Back to the Future Part III (1990), Soapdish (1991), The Saint (1997), Hollow Man (2000), Piranha 3D (2010), Battle of the Sexes (2017), Death Wish (2018) and Greyhound (2020). For her performance in Leaving Las Vegas (1995), Shue was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress as well as a BAFTA, Golden Globe and SAG Award.

On television, Shue has starred as Julie Finlay in the CBS procedural forensics crime drama thriller from 2012 to 2015, Madelyn Stillwell in the Amazon Prime Video series The Boys, , and Gen V, and reprised her The Karate Kid role in the third season of Cobra Kai. Shue currently stars as Anne in the Netflix dramedy series On the Verge.

Early life and education

Shue was born on October 6, 1963,[2] in Wilmington, Delaware, the daughter of Anne Brewster (née Wells), and James William Shue,[3] a one-time congressional candidate, lawyer, and real estate developer, who was president of the International Food and Beverage Corporation. Her mother was a vice president in the private banking division of the Chemical Bank Corporation.[4] [5]

Shue grew up in South Orange, New Jersey. Her parents divorced when she was nine.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Famous birthdays for Oct. 6: Britt Ekland, Elisabeth Shue – UPI.com. UPI. March 11, 2023.
  2. Web site: Mead . Wendy . Elisabeth Shue . Biography . . March 24, 2022.
  3. http://www.ripostafh.com/obituary.aspx?MemberId=120911 Obituary for James Shue
  4. News: Weddings;Jody Buonanno, John M. Shue . The New York Times . June 4, 1995.
  5. Web site: Son to Mrs... W. Shue – Birth Notice . . 1961-09-12 . 2012-07-26.
  6. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=CSTB&p_theme=cstb&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB36D77B3CAD8B2&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D Actress in 'Babysitting' takes charge of her life
  7. News: Carr. Jay. Elisabeth Shue commutes from academe to Tinseltown. Boston Globe. 1991-05-26. 2010-07-26. November 3, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121103092710/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/boston/access/59205799.html?dids=59205799:59205799&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=May+26,+1991&author=Jay+Carr,+Globe+Staff&pub=Boston+Globe+(pre-1997+Fulltext)&desc=Elisabeth+Shue+commutes+from+academe+to+Tinseltown&pqatl=google. dead.
  8. News: Rader. Dotson. Let Yourself Feel It All. Lakeland Ledger. 1997-11-23. 2010-07-26.
  9. Web site: Elisabeth Shue Biography – Yahoo! Movies . Movies.yahoo.com . 2013-02-13 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131216090107/http://movies.yahoo.com/person/elisabeth-shue/biography.html . 2013-12-16 .
  10. Web site: Columbia High School – Library Information Technology Center. https://web.archive.org/web/20071012082359/http://www.somsd.k12.nj.us/~chslib/history/hall_of_fame.htm. dead. October 12, 2007.
  11. Shue Returns To Complete Degree. 2019-08-08. Soman. Chainani. 2000-02-02. Harvard Crimson.
  12. News: Elisabeth Shue – You can enjoy the screams and the gore and the fun. The Independent. 2010-08-13. 2011-01-28.
  13. News: Whose life is it anyway?. Los Angeles Times. 2007-05-27. 2018-08-02. Gina. Piccalo.
  14. Web site: Lyttelton. Oliver. April 13, 2012. 5 Things You Might Not Know About 'Say Anything'.
  15. Web site: Internet Broadway Database. The Broadway League. 2012-08-03.
  16. Web site: Surette . Tim . Elisabeth Shue . TV.com . 2013-02-13.
  17. Web site: Elisabeth Shue Revisits Her Past. The Independent. 2007-06-13. 2015-09-25. Bonelli, Winnie. https://web.archive.org/web/20150925144335/http://www.indyeastend.com/Articles-i-2007-06-13-68291.113117-Elisabeth-Shue-Revisits-Her-Past.html. 2015-09-25. dead.
  18. Web site: Catching Up with ... Elisabeth & Andrew Shue. People. 2007-06-11. 67. 23. 2015-09-25. Stoynoff, Natasha.
  19. Web site: Andreeva . Nellie . 'CSI's New Leading Lady: Elisabeth Shue To Replace Marg Helgenberger On CBS Series . Deadline.com . 2011-11-18. 2012-07-26.
  20. Web site: Pilots 'Beast Mode' & 'Constance' Not Going Forward At TNT. Nellie. Andreeva. May 6, 2019.
  21. Web site: Elisabeth Shue. womencelebs.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080512024800/http://www.womencelebs.com/c1/showcelebrity_categoryid-151.html. 2008-05-12.
  22. Web site: Breaking Celeb News, Entertainment News, and Celebrity Gossip. https://web.archive.org/web/20071219201139/http://www.eonline.com/celebrities/profile/index.jsp?uuid=5cd6b0c5-22c6-4612-b987-43ea2710151b. dead. December 19, 2007. E! News.
  23. Bandler, Michael J. "The Will to Win; New Jersey Monthly], December 20, 2007. Accessed December 23, 2013.[6] Shue's mother is a descendant of Pilgrim leader William Brewster while her father's family emigrated from Germany to Pennsylvania in the early 19th century.[7] [8] Shue was raised with her three brothers (William, Andrew, and John) and was very close to them. Her younger brother, Andrew, is also an actor, best known for his role as Billy Campbell in the Fox series Melrose Place. Shue graduated from Columbia High School, in 1981 in Maplewood, New Jersey, where she and Andrew were inducted into the school's Hall of Fame in 1994. Shue has two half-siblings from her father's remarriage, Jenna and Harvey Shue.[9] [10]

    After graduating from high school, Shue attended Wellesley College. She then transferred to Harvard University in 1985, from which she withdrew to pursue her acting career (she was inspired by a friend to work in television commercials as a way to pay for college) one semester short of earning her degree. Over a decade later, in 2000, Shue returned to Harvard and completed her B.A. in government.[11]

    Career

    1980s and early 1990s

    During her studies at Columbia High School and after her parents' divorce, Shue began acting in television commercials, becoming a common sight in advertisements for Burger King, also featuring future stars Sarah Michelle Gellar and Lea Thompson (whom Elisabeth would later co-star with in both television and film), DeBeers diamonds, Chewels bubble gum, and Best Foods/Hellmann's mayonnaise.[12] She had small parts, credited as Lisa Shue, in (1982) and Somewhere, Tomorrow (1983) which provided an early starring role for Sarah Jessica Parker.

    Shue made her feature film debut in 1984, when she co-starred opposite Ralph Macchio in The Karate Kid as Ali Mills, a high school cheerleader and the love interest of Macchio's main character. Shue was a series regular as the teenage daughter of a military family in the short-lived television series Call to Glory between 1984 and 1985, which she followed in 1986 starring alongside Terence Stamp in the British horror film Link. In 1987 Shue appeared in the television movie Double Switch (part of the Disney Sunday Movie series), co-starring with George Newbern, who would go on to support her in her first star vehicle, the hugely popular Adventures in Babysitting, in the same year.

    In 1988, Shue starred in Cocktail as the love interest of Tom Cruise's lead character. The following year, she starred in the short film Body Wars, which was used at Epcot in an ATLAS Simulator attraction in the Wonders of Life Pavilion until 2007. Other roles followed, including appearing as Jennifer Parker in Back to the Future Part II (1989) and Back to the Future Part III (1990), where Shue replaced Claudia Wells who declined to reprise the role from Back to the Future due to a family illness. It was around this time her older brother, William, died in an accident on a family holiday.[13] Although her career was on the rise with her playing lead roles, Shue elected to take on the smaller supporting role of Jennifer in these sequels to allow her to deal with her family loss. The sequels were filmed back to back, and Shue featured prominently in Part II, appearing in bookend pieces in the third part of the trilogy.

    Shue auditioned for the Ione Skye role in Say Anything... (1989), being a runner-up along with Jennifer Connelly.[14] In May 1990, Shue made her Broadway debut in Some American Abroad at the Lincoln Center.[15] The following year, Shue returned to cinema where she appeared in the comedies The Marrying Man with Kim Basinger and Alec Baldwin, and Soapdish with Sally Field, Robert Downey Jr., Kevin Kline, Cathy Moriarty, and Whoopi Goldberg.

    Between 1992 and 1994, Shue appeared in a variety of supporting roles in both film and television. These included the comedy Twenty Bucks (reuniting with Christopher Lloyd from Back to the Future), noir thriller The Underneath, a guest appearance in Dream On, and the romantic comedy Heart and Souls (reuniting with Robert Downey Jr.). She also returned to Broadway in 1993, performing in Tina Howe's production of Birth and After Birth.[16]

    1995 - present

    Although often cast as a girl-next-door type, in a career-defining role Shue starred as a prostitute in the 1995 film Leaving Las Vegas with Nicolas Cage. The role earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. Shue was also nominated for a BAFTA, Golden Globe and SAG Award for Best Actress, and won Best Actress at the Independent Spirit Awards, Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards and the National Society of Film Critics Awards.

    Shue's career flourished after her Oscar nomination, landing her diverse roles. She starred in The Trigger Effect in 1996. Woody Allen's Deconstructing Harry (1996) showcased her comedic abilities amongst heavyweight co-stars Billy Crystal, Demi Moore, Robin Williams and Stanley Tucci. Shue also displayed some action movie skills in the 1997 spy remake The Saint opposite Val Kilmer. The thriller Palmetto (1998) afforded her the chance to play a film noir-ish femme fatale opposite Woody Harrelson; Shue co-starred in Cousin Bette (1998) with Jessica Lange, and Paul Verhoeven's Hollow Man (2000) with Kevin Bacon proved another summer blockbuster.

    In 1999, Shue starred as the titular Molly as an autistic young woman placed into the care of her unwilling bachelor brother, played by Aaron Eckhart. Shue played a mother that reveals her dark past to her teenaged daughter in the 2001 ABC movie Oprah Winfrey Presents: Amy and Isabelle. Shue has since stated she was "extremely proud of that film, which no one ever saw, so it's a good lesson that you do work for yourself and not necessarily for the end result".

    Shue starred in Leo (2002) with Joseph Fiennes and Dennis Hopper, Mysterious Skin (2004) opposite Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Hide and Seek (2005) opposite Robert De Niro and Dakota Fanning, and Dreamer (2005) again opposite Dakota Fanning and Kurt Russell.

    In 2007, Shue and her two brothers, Andrew and John, produced Gracie. Her husband, Davis Guggenheim, also produced and directed. Shue played the mother of the main character who was loosely based on her own experiences as the only girl on a boys' soccer team. Andrew also appeared as the soccer coach, and her previous co-star from The Trigger Effect Dermot Mulroney played the father of the main character. Andrew initially conceived of it as a story about their late brother William, the oldest Shue sibling, who was the captain of the high school soccer team; he died in a freak accident while the family was on a vacation in 1988. The older brother character of Johnny was based on Will.[17] [18] Shue also starred in the little seen First Born (2007) with British actor Steven Mackintosh.

    In 2008, Shue starred in Hamlet 2 as a fictionalized version of herself. In the film, she has quit acting to become a nurse and is the favorite actress of Dana Marschz (Steve Coogan). In 2009, Shue appeared on the seventh season of HBO's Curb Your Enthusiasm as an actress competing with Cheryl Hines's character for the part of George's ex-wife for the Seinfeld reunion. That same year, she starred alongside Thomas Haden Church in Don McKay.

    In 2010, Shue starred in Piranha 3D as Sheriff Julie Forester. She also played the former groupie mother of Abigail Breslin in Janie Jones and a psychologist in Waking Madison alongside Sarah Roemer and Imogen Poots.

    In 2012, Shue appeared in three wide-release theatrical films: the thriller House at the End of the Street with Jennifer Lawrence; Curtis Hanson's Chasing Mavericks opposite Gerard Butler; and David Frankel's Hope Springs as Karen the bartender in a cameo scene with Meryl Streep.

    The year 2012 also marked Shue's return to television in a series regular role when she joined the cast of Season 12's as Julie Finlay opposite Ted Danson, and replacing Marg Helgenberger. Finlay is the newest CSI, who just finished anger-management classes.[19] Shue continued in the role until the end of Season 15 where her character's fate was left hanging in the balance, later revealed in the two-part 2015 TV movie wrap-up finale of the entire series to have died (Shue did not appear). During her time on the series, being a massive tennis fan as well as regular tennis player, Shue jokingly suggested to the producers they have an episode centered around a murder at a tennis tournament. In Season 13, her wish was granted, and her friends and former pros-turned commentators, 18-time Grand Slam champion Chris Evert, three-time Grand Slam winner Lindsay Davenport and two-time mixed doubles Slam champ Justin Gimelstob appeared in an episode as themselves. Shue also re-united with Back to the Future alumna Lea Thompson, who guest starred in an episode of Season 14.

    In 2014, Shue appeared as a cougar in Behaving Badly along with Selena Gomez, Nat Wolff and Heather Graham. In 2015, she guest-starred in an episode of the Patrick Stewart series Blunt Talk.

    In 2017, Shue provided a strong supporting role in Battle of the Sexes, opposite Steve Carell and Emma Stone. She had originally signed on as a tennis adviser for the film which recounts the 1973 showdown between female player Billie Jean King and former men's champ Bobby Riggs.

    In 2018, Shue co-starred in Eli Roth's remake of Death Wish opposite Bruce Willis as his ill-fated wife. In the movie, she was also re-united with Vincent D'Onofrio, who appeared in Adventures in Babysitting with her.

    In 2019, Shue took a leading role in the American superhero drama television series, The Boys, with Karl Urban and Jack Quaid, and will be playing the lead role in the TNT television pilot Constance, playing a corrupt former beauty queen. In the latter, she will also be one of the executive producers along with Robert Downey Jr. (whom she previously co-starred with in Soapdish and Heart and Souls) and his wife Susan Downey among others. Constance is not going forward to series so remains to be seen if the pilot will air as a television movie.[20]

    Shue starred in Greyhound opposite Tom Hanks, released in 2020. That same year, she reprised her Karate Kid role as Ali Mills for a guest appearance in the sequel series, Cobra Kai, alongside her original co-stars Ralph Macchio and William Zabka.

    Personal life

    Shue married film director Davis Guggenheim in 1994.[21] They have three children.[22]

    Filmography

    Film

    YearTitleRoleNotes
    1983Somewhere, TomorrowMargie
    1984Ali Mills
    1986LinkJane Chase
    1987Adventures in BabysittingChris Parker
    1988CocktailJordan Mooney
    1989Back to the Future Part IIJennifer ParkerMarlene McFly (voice)
    1990Back to the Future Part IIIJennifer Parker
    1991Adele Horner
    1991SoapdishLori Craven / "Angelique"
    1993Heart and SoulsAnne
    1993Twenty BucksEmily Adams
    1994Radio InsideNatalie
    1995Susan Crenshaw
    1995Leaving Las VegasSeraNominated for Academy Award for Best Actress
    1996Annie Kay
    1997Dr. Emma Russell
    1997Deconstructing HarryFay
    1998PalmettoMrs. Donnelly / Rhea Malroux
    1998City of AngelsPregnant womanUncredited Cameo
    1998Cousin BetteJenny Cadine
    1999MollyMolly McKay
    2000Hollow ManLinda McKay
    2002LeoMary Bloom
    2002Tuck EverlastingNarrator (voice)
    2004Mysterious SkinEllen McCormick
    2005Hide and SeekElizabeth Young
    2005DreamerLilly Crane
    2007First BornLaura
    2007GracieLindsay BowenAlso producer
    2008Hamlet 2Herself
    2009Don McKaySonny
    2010Piranha 3DJulie Forester
    2010Janie JonesMary Ann Jones
    2011Waking MadisonDr. Elizabeth Barnes
    2012Hope SpringsKaren, The Bartender
    2012House at the End of the StreetSarah Cassidy
    2012Chasing MavericksKristy Moriarity
    2014Behaving BadlyPamela Bender
    2017Battle of the SexesPriscilla Wheelan
    2018Death WishLucy Kersey
    2020GreyhoundEva Frechette
    2023The Good HalfLily Wheeland

    Television

    YearTitleRoleNotes
    1982Lynn OsborneTelevision film
    1984–1985Call to GloryJackie SarnacMain role
    1987Wonderful World of ColorKathy SheltonEpisode: "Double Switch"
    1992The General Motors Playwrights TheaterAlice AdamsEpisode: "Hale the Hero"
    1993Dream OnMaura BarishEpisode: "Oral Sex, Lies and Videotape"
    1994Blind JusticeCarolineTelevision film
    2001Amy & IsabelleIsabelle GoodrowTelevision film
    2009Curb Your EnthusiasmVirginiaEpisodes: "Officer Krupke", "Seinfeld"
    2012American Dad!Detective Lacey Sole (voice)Episode: "Less Money, Mo' Problems"
    2012–2015Julie FinlayMain role
    2015Blunt TalkSuzanne MayviewEpisode: "The Queen of Hearts"
    2019–2020The BoysMadelyn StillwellMain role (season 1), guest (season 2)
    2019ConstanceConstance YoungTelevision film
    2021Cobra KaiAli MillsGuest (season 3)
    2021On the VergeAnneMain role (season 1); also executive producer
    2022Super PumpedBonnie KalanickMain role
    2022Madelyn Stillwell (voice)Episode: "One Plus One Equals Two"
    2023Gen VMadelyn StillwellEpisode: "God U."

    Theme parks

    Awards and nominations

    YearAssociationCategoryNominated workResult
    1984 Young Artist AwardsBest Young Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture, Musical, Comedy, Adventure or DramaThe Karate Kid
    1986Saturn AwardsBest ActressLink
    1995Awards Circuit Community AwardsBest ActressLeaving Las Vegas
    Independent Spirit AwardsBest Female Lead
    Los Angeles Film Critics AssociationBest Actress
    National Society of Film CriticsBest Actress
    Academy AwardsBest Actress
    BAFTA AwardsBest Actress in a Leading Role
    Golden Globe AwardsBest Actress – Motion Picture Drama
    Screen Actors GuildOutstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role

    External links