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Sandra Bullock - Biography
Name : Sandra
Bullock
Full Name : Sandra Annette Bullock
Date of birth : 26 July 1965
Place Of Birth : Washington D.C., USA
Height : 5' 7
Weight : 120 lbs
Education : GraduatedFromWashington-Lee HS in Arlington, VA
in 1982.
Dropped out of East Carolina University
Occupation : Actress
Sign : Leo
Father : John (voice coach)
Mother : Helga (opera singer)
Sibling : Sister, Gesine
Fan Mail : Sandra Annette Bullock
c/o United Talent Agency (UTA)
9560 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 500
Beverly Hills, California 90212 |
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Sandra Bullock Detailed
Biography
Just as you'd expect of
a woman who's been invariably labeled America's newest ''sweetheart'' almost
from the moment she entered the public consciousness, actress Sandra Bullock
made it to the ball with a little help from her fairy godmother. In
Bullock's particular case, that would be a fairy godfather, in the person of
acceleration auteur Jan De Bont, who went waaay out on a limb to get the
little-known brunette cast as the female lead of his directorial debut,
1994's Speed — the film's producers had wanted (don't they always?) to
shoehorn a buxom blonde into the high-profile part. The movie was a surprise
blockbuster, critics and audiences alike raved about the li'l Miss Thang who
heroically takes the wheel of the runaway bus, and the fairy tale was
complete just nine months later when our cinematic Cinderella
single-handedly made a huge hit out of the formulaic romance While You Were
Sleeping. Perhaps Bullock herself best captured the serendipitous essence of
her big breakthrough when she said, ''Never in a million years did I think a
bus movie would open every door I ever possibly wanted to have open.''
The half-German, half-Alabaman Bullock was born in Washington, D.C., and
raised just down the road in Arlington, Va. The elder of her parents' two
daughters, she spent a great deal of her childhood touring Europe with her
mother, an acclaimed vocalist whose career in opera offered little Sandra
her first taste of showbiz. Of her earliest appearances onstage, she later
recalled, ''There's always a dirty gypsy child in every opera, and that was
me.'' Life on the road with mom began to lose its luster for the youthful
opera-tunist after she started junior high school and was awakened to the
importance of participating in the time-honored preteen ritual of ''fitting
in.'' Showing flashes of the All-American wholesomeness that would
eventually become her cinematic stock-in-trade, Bullock had fitting in down
to a science by the time she graduated from Arlington's Washington-Lee High
School, where she was a cheerleader and was voted ''Most Likely to Brighten
Your Day'' by the members of her senior class.
UST as you'd expect of a woman who's been invariably labeled America's
newest ''sweetheart'' almost from the moment she entered the public
consciousness, actress Sandra Bullock made it to the ball with a little help
from her fairy godmother. In Bullock's particular case, that would be a
fairy godfather, in the person of acceleration auteur Jan De Bont, who went
waaay out on a limb to get the little-known brunette cast as the female lead
of his directorial debut, 1994's Speed — the film's producers had wanted
(don't they always?) to shoehorn a buxom blonde into the high-profile part.
The movie was a surprise blockbuster, critics and audiences alike raved
about the li'l Miss Thang who heroically takes the wheel of the runaway bus,
and the fairy tale was complete just nine months later when our cinematic
Cinderella single-handedly made a huge hit out of the formulaic romance
While You Were Sleeping. Perhaps Bullock herself best captured the
serendipitous essence of her big breakthrough when she said, ''Never in a
million years did I think a bus movie would open every door I ever possibly
wanted to have open.''The half-German, half-Alabaman Bullock was born in
Washington, D.C., and raised just down the road in Arlington, Va. The elder
of her parents' two daughters, she spent a great deal of her childhood
touring Europe with her mother, an acclaimed vocalist whose career in opera
offered little Sandra her first taste of showbiz. Of her earliest
appearances onstage, she later recalled, ''There's always a dirty gypsy
child in every opera, and that was me.'' Life on the road with mom began to
lose its luster for the youthful opera-tunist after she started junior high
school and was awakened to the importance of participating in the
time-honored preteen ritual of ''fitting in.'' Showing flashes of the
All-American wholesomeness that would eventually become her cinematic
stock-in-trade, Bullock had fitting in down to a science by the time she
graduated from Arlington's Washington-Lee High School, where she was a
cheerleader and was voted ''Most Likely to Brighten Your Day'' by the
members of her senior class.Following high school, Bullock enrolled at East
Carolina University and immersed herself in the school's drama program. Fame
waits for no aspiring actress, however, and in 1985, when she was still
several credits away from graduation, Bullock decided it was time to get on
with the serious business of starting a career in showbiz. With the blessing
of her ever-supportive parents and a notion that opportunity awaited on (or
at least nigh unto) Broadway, she piled her possessions into a Honda Accord
and migrated to the Big Apple. Shortly following her arrival, she began
intensive acting studies under the tutelage of famed dramatician Sanford
Meisner, and glibly fibbed her way into a job tending bar. ''I said I'd
bartended,'' she later confided to one interviewer. ''How hard could it be?
You pour some rum and Coke into a glass.''
UST as you'd expect of a woman who's been invariably labeled America's
newest ''sweetheart'' almost from the moment she entered the public
consciousness, actress Sandra Bullock made it to the ball with a little help
from her fairy godmother. In Bullock's particular case, that would be a
fairy godfather, in the person of acceleration auteur Jan De Bont, who went
waaay out on a limb to get the little-known brunette cast as the female lead
of his directorial debut, 1994's Speed — the film's producers had wanted
(don't they always?) to shoehorn a buxom blonde into the high-profile part.
The movie was a surprise blockbuster, critics and audiences alike raved
about the li'l Miss Thang who heroically takes the wheel of the runaway bus,
and the fairy tale was complete just nine months later when our cinematic
Cinderella single-handedly made a huge hit out of the formulaic romance
While You Were Sleeping. Perhaps Bullock herself best captured the
serendipitous essence of her big breakthrough when she said, ''Never in a
million years did I think a bus movie would open every door I ever possibly
wanted to have open.''The half-German, half-Alabaman Bullock was born in
Washington, D.C., and raised just down the road in Arlington, Va. The elder
of her parents' two daughters, she spent a great deal of her childhood
touring Europe with her mother, an acclaimed vocalist whose career in opera
offered little Sandra her first taste of showbiz. Of her earliest
appearances onstage, she later recalled, ''There's always a dirty gypsy
child in every opera, and that was me.'' Life on the road with mom began to
lose its luster for the youthful opera-tunist after she started junior high
school and was awakened to the importance of participating in the
time-honored preteen ritual of ''fitting in.'' Showing flashes of the
All-American wholesomeness that would eventually become her cinematic
stock-in-trade, Bullock had fitting in down to a science by the time she
graduated from Arlington's Washington-Lee High School, where she was a
cheerleader and was voted ''Most Likely to Brighten Your Day'' by the
members of her senior class.Following high school, Bullock enrolled at East
Carolina University and immersed herself in the school's drama program. Fame
waits for no aspiring actress, however, and in 1985, when she was still
several credits away from graduation, Bullock decided it was time to get on
with the serious business of starting a career in showbiz. With the blessing
of her ever-supportive parents and a notion that opportunity awaited on (or
at least nigh unto) Broadway, she piled her possessions into a Honda Accord
and migrated to the Big Apple. Shortly following her arrival, she began
intensive acting studies under the tutelage of famed dramatician Sanford
Meisner, and glibly fibbed her way into a job tending bar. ''I said I'd
bartended,'' she later confided to one interviewer. ''How hard could it be?
You pour some rum and Coke into a glass.''That bit of acting ranked as the
rising thespian's most impressive performance for nearly three years, as she
dutifully made the rounds at auditions and casting calls and further
supplemented her income by taking work waiting tables. Theater critic John
Simon stamped Bullock's passport to the big time in 1988, when he included a
glowing assessment of her abilities in an otherwise scathing review of No
Time Flat, an off-Broadway production in which she'd starred as a sassy
Southern belle. With his rave review in hand, she managed to line up an
agent, and then broke into television with a small role as a
younger-generation bionic babe in 1989's Bionic Showdown: The
Six-Million-Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman.
The following year, Bullock jumped coasts to L.A. and its promise of
increased film and television opportunities, and landed her first starring
gig in the Melanie Griffith role of NBC's adaptation of the hit romantic
comedy Working Girl. The show ultimately aired just six episodes, and the
transplanted East Coast cutie spent the next several months scrambling to
find work. Eventually, she traded the stress of joblessness for the stress
of wondering by what miraculous means her career might survive 1992's Love
Potion No. 9, an embarrassingly B-grade romantic comedy about lovelorn
scientists. Though the film did nothing to improve her professional outlook,
it did introduce her to actor Tate Donovan, with whom she remained
romantically involved for the next three years.
Months of tireless auditioning paid handsome dividends in 1993, when Bullock
landed a slew of acting jobs and appeared in no fewer than five films, most
notably as an eleventh-hour replacement for Lori Petty in the role of a
plucky cop who locks lips with Sylvester Stallone in the futuristic, Joel
Silver-produced Demolition Man. Silver liked what he saw, and put in a good
word for Bullock with De Bont, a long-time big-action cinematographer who'd
been given the director's chair for the first time with Speed. The rookie
director knew he'd found the perfect romantic foil for star Keanu Reeves,
but his backers balked at the notion of casting an unknown and physically
unremarkable actress as the movie's love interest. But De Bont persevered,
and following Speed's release, Bullock's marketability went over the moon.
The success of While You Were Sleeping, released the next year, served to
cement her reputation as the hottest thing going, and she was subsequently
offered a seven-figure payday for her supporting performance in the John
Grisham adaptation A Time to Kill.
A perhaps inevitable sophomore slump began in earnest in 1996, with the
little-seen, critically reviled dark comedy Two If by Sea, which featured
Bullock in an unlikely romantic pairing with fast-talking comedian Denis
Leary, who'd also had a small role in Demolition Man. The bad press
continued with the equally ignored period romance In Love and War, which
found Bullock cast as Agnes Kurowsky, the nurse whose brief tryst with a
young Ernest Hemingway (Chris O'Donnell) provided the inspiration for A
Farewell to Arms. The final straw proved to be 1997's ill-conceived Speed 2:
Cruise Control, a monumental misfire of a seafaring sequel that not even
Bullock's reliable charm could rescue from the box-office doldrums.
UST as you'd expect of a woman who's been invariably labeled America's
newest ''sweetheart'' almost from the moment she entered the public
consciousness, actress Sandra Bullock made it to the ball with a little help
from her fairy godmother. In Bullock's particular case, that would be a
fairy godfather, in the person of acceleration auteur Jan De Bont, who went
waaay out on a limb to get the little-known brunette cast as the female lead
of his directorial debut, 1994's Speed — the film's producers had wanted
(don't they always?) to shoehorn a buxom blonde into the high-profile part.
The movie was a surprise blockbuster, critics and audiences alike raved
about the li'l Miss Thang who heroically takes the wheel of the runaway bus,
and the fairy tale was complete just nine months later when our cinematic
Cinderella single-handedly made a huge hit out of the formulaic romance
While You Were Sleeping. Perhaps Bullock herself best captured the
serendipitous essence of her big breakthrough when she said, ''Never in a
million years did I think a bus movie would open every door I ever possibly
wanted to have open.''The half-German, half-Alabaman Bullock was born in
Washington, D.C., and raised just down the road in Arlington, Va. The elder
of her parents' two daughters, she spent a great deal of her childhood
touring Europe with her mother, an acclaimed vocalist whose career in opera
offered little Sandra her first taste of showbiz. Of her earliest
appearances onstage, she later recalled, ''There's always a dirty gypsy
child in every opera, and that was me.'' Life on the road with mom began to
lose its luster for the youthful opera-tunist after she started junior high
school and was awakened to the importance of participating in the
time-honored preteen ritual of ''fitting in.'' Showing flashes of the
All-American wholesomeness that would eventually become her cinematic
stock-in-trade, Bullock had fitting in down to a science by the time she
graduated from Arlington's Washington-Lee High School, where she was a
cheerleader and was voted ''Most Likely to Brighten Your Day'' by the
members of her senior class.Following high school, Bullock enrolled at East
Carolina University and immersed herself in the school's drama program. Fame
waits for no aspiring actress, however, and in 1985, when she was still
several credits away from graduation, Bullock decided it was time to get on
with the serious business of starting a career in showbiz. With the blessing
of her ever-supportive parents and a notion that opportunity awaited on (or
at least nigh unto) Broadway, she piled her possessions into a Honda Accord
and migrated to the Big Apple. Shortly following her arrival, she began
intensive acting studies under the tutelage of famed dramatician Sanford
Meisner, and glibly fibbed her way into a job tending bar. ''I said I'd
bartended,'' she later confided to one interviewer. ''How hard could it be?
You pour some rum and Coke into a glass.''That bit of acting ranked as the
rising thespian's most impressive performance for nearly three years, as she
dutifully made the rounds at auditions and casting calls and further
supplemented her income by taking work waiting tables. Theater critic John
Simon stamped Bullock's passport to the big time in 1988, when he included a
glowing assessment of her abilities in an otherwise scathing review of No
Time Flat, an off-Broadway production in which she'd starred as a sassy
Southern belle. With his rave review in hand, she managed to line up an
agent, and then broke into television with a small role as a
younger-generation bionic babe in 1989's Bionic Showdown: The
Six-Million-Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman.The following year, Bullock
jumped coasts to L.A. and its promise of increased film and television
opportunities, and landed her first starring gig in the Melanie Griffith
role of NBC's adaptation of the hit romantic comedy Working Girl. The show
ultimately aired just six episodes, and the transplanted East Coast cutie
spent the next several months scrambling to find work. Eventually, she
traded the stress of joblessness for the stress of wondering by what
miraculous means her career might survive 1992's Love Potion No. 9, an
embarrassingly B-grade romantic comedy about lovelorn scientists. Though the
film did nothing to improve her professional outlook, it did introduce her
to actor Tate Donovan, with whom she remained romantically involved for the
next three years.Months of tireless auditioning paid handsome dividends in
1993, when Bullock landed a slew of acting jobs and appeared in no fewer
than five films, most notably as an eleventh-hour replacement for Lori Petty
in the role of a plucky cop who locks lips with Sylvester Stallone in the
futuristic, Joel Silver-produced Demolition Man. Silver liked what he saw,
and put in a good word for Bullock with De Bont, a long-time big-action
cinematographer who'd been given the director's chair for the first time
with Speed. The rookie director knew he'd found the perfect romantic foil
for star Keanu Reeves, but his backers balked at the notion of casting an
unknown and physically unremarkable actress as the movie's love interest.
But De Bont persevered, and following Speed's release, Bullock's
marketability went over the moon. The success of While You Were Sleeping,
released the next year, served to cement her reputation as the hottest thing
going, and she was subsequently offered a seven-figure payday for her
supporting performance in the John Grisham adaptation A Time to Kill.A
perhaps inevitable sophomore slump began in earnest in 1996, with the
little-seen, critically reviled dark comedy Two If by Sea, which featured
Bullock in an unlikely romantic pairing with fast-talking comedian Denis
Leary, who'd also had a small role in Demolition Man. The bad press
continued with the equally ignored period romance In Love and War, which
found Bullock cast as Agnes Kurowsky, the nurse whose brief tryst with a
young Ernest Hemingway (Chris O'Donnell) provided the inspiration for A
Farewell to Arms. The final straw proved to be 1997's ill-conceived Speed 2:
Cruise Control, a monumental misfire of a seafaring sequel that not even
Bullock's reliable charm could rescue from the box-office
doldrums.Thereafter, Bullock took matters into her own hands and established
her own production company, Fortis Films, with the extensive assistance of
her father and sister. The first title released under the Fortis imprint,
1998's Hope Floats, was a modest hit that rescued the golden girl from her
string of duds. Her resurgence continued later that same year when she
starred oppositeNicole Kidman in director Griffin Dunne's adaptation of
Alice Hoffman's Practical Magic, the story of two New England sisters who
practice magic; and lent her voice to DreamWorks' animated Moses biopic The
Prince of Egypt. Bullock's 1999 release, the screwball comedy Forces of
Nature, paired her in weather-influenced romance with Ben Affleck, and she
kicked off 2000 appearing opposite Liam Neeson in Gun Shy, a black comedy
that starred the two A-listers as an undercover federal agent (Neeson) and
nurse (Bullock) who fall in love under offbeat circumstances. Next up was 28
Days, the story of an alcoholic-addict writer who gets a second chance at
life when her partying ways land her in court-ordered rehab.
Ever since she split with the luckless Donovan (who was later dumped by
Jennifer Aniston) just prior to the filming of While You Were Sleeping,
Bullock's real-life love life has been the subject of ceaseless conjecture,
most of which, until recently, centered on her A Time to Kill co-star
Matthew McConaughey. Despite having been persistently linked together in the
press since they worked on that film, the two managed to remain coy about
their relationship, owning up to its romantic nature only after it was over.
Bullock is keeping just as mum about her current relationship with musician
Bob Schneider.
In the months ahead, Bullock will undertake a starring role in Exactly 3:30,
a romantic comedy that follows the travails of a punctuality-challenged
working woman.
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