Laura Jeanne Reese Witherspoon (born March 22, 1976), better known as
Reese Witherspoon, is an American actress and film producer. In 1998
she appeared in three major movies:
Overnight Delivery,
Pleasantville, and
Twilight. The following year, Witherspoon
appeared in the critically acclaimed
Election, which earned her a
Golden Globe nomination. 2001 marked her career's turning point with the
breakout role as "Elle Woods" in the box office hit
Legally Blonde,
and in 2002 she starred in
Sweet Home Alabama, which became her
biggest commercial film success to date. 2003 saw her return as lead actress
and executive producer of
Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde.
|

Source. |
Reese
Witherspoon at the 2005 Toronto International Film Festival.
|
In
2005, Witherspoon received worldwide attention and praise for her portrayal
of June Carter Cash in Walk the Line, which earned her an Academy
Award, Golden Globe, BAFTA, and Screen Actors Guild Award for Best Actress
in a Leading Role.
Witherspoon married actor and Cruel Intentions
co-star Ryan Phillippe in 1999; they have two children, Ava and Deacon. The
couple separated at the end of 2006 and divorced in October 2007.
Witherspoon owns a production company, Type A Films, and she is actively
involved in children's and women's advocacy organizations. She serves on the
board of the Children's Defense Fund (CDF), and was named Global Ambassador
of Avon Products in 2007, serving as honorary chair of the charitable Avon
Foundation.
Early life and
education
Witherspoon was born at the former Southern Baptist Hospital (now the
Ochsner Baptist Medical Center) in New Orleans, Louisiana, where her parents
were living while her father was a student at Tulane University medical
school.[1][2]
Her father, John Witherspoon, is a Georgia-born otolaryngologist who
previously served as a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army reserves.[3][4]
Her mother, Betty (née Reese), is from Harriman, Tennessee, has a Ph.D. in
pediatric nursing and works as a professor of nursing at Vanderbilt
University.[4][5]
Witherspoon has claimed to be a descendant of Scottish-born John
Witherspoon, the sixth president of Princeton University and a signatory of
the United States Declaration of Independence.[6][7]
This genealogical claim, however, has never been verified.[8][9]
Because Witherspoon's father worked for the U.S. military in Wiesbaden,
Germany, she lived there for four years as a small child.[5][10]
After returning to the U.S., she settled and spent her childhood in
Nashville, Tennessee,[5][10]
where she was raised as an Episcopalian.[11]
Witherspoon was selected as a fashion model for a florist's television
advertisements at age seven, which motivated her to take acting lessons.[12][13]
At age eleven she took first place in the Ten-State Talent Fair.[12][14]
Witherspoon received good grades in school;[12]
she loved reading and considered herself "a big dork who read loads of
books."[2] On mentioning
her love for books, she said, "I get crazy in a bookstore. It makes my heart
beat hard because I want to buy everything."[11]
Witherspoon attended middle school at Harding Academy and graduated from the
prestigious all-girls' Harpeth Hall School in Nashville, Tennessee, during
which time she was a cheerleader.[14][15]
She attended Stanford University as an English literature major.[16]
After completing one year of studies, she left Stanford to pursue an acting
career.[15]
Witherspoon is proud of the "definitive Southern upbringing" she
received, which, as she said, gave her "a sense of family and tradition" and
taught her about "being conscientious about people's feelings, being polite,
being responsible and never taking for granted what you have in your life."[15][17]
Witherspoon is described as a "multi-achiever" and was given the nickname
"Little Type A" by her parents.[18][19]
On discussing her early achievements, she told Interview magazine, "I
just don't see any of it as that remarkable. Maybe that's the attitude I
choose to have to keep me sane and keep my feet on the ground. I grew up in
an environment where women accomplished a lot. And if they weren't able to,
it was because they were limited by society."[4]
Acting career
Early
work (1990–1998)
In 1990, Witherspoon attended an open casting call for The Man in the
Moon with some friends, intending to audition as a bit player.[15]
She was instead cast in the lead role of Dani Trant, a 14-year-old country
girl who falls in love for the first time with her 17-year-old neighbor. Her
performance was regarded as "memorably touching" by Variety magazine,[20]
and critic Roger Ebert commented, "Her first kiss is one of the most perfect
little scenes I've ever seen in a movie."[12]
For this role, Witherspoon was nominated for the Young Artist Award Best
Young Actress.[21]
Later that year, she made her TV acting debut in the cable movie
Wildflower, directed by Diane Keaton and starring Patricia Arquette.[3][6]
In 1992, Witherspoon appeared in the TV movie Desperate Choices: To Save
My Child, portraying a critically ill young girl.[3]
In 1993, she played a young wife in the CBS mini series Return to
Lonesome Dove, and got a starring role as the leading character Nonnie
Parker, a South African girl who must cross 1,250 miles (2,000 km) of the
Kalahari, in the teen-aimed Disney film A Far Off Place.[3]
In the same year, Witherspoon had a minor role in Jack the Bear,
which garnered her the Young Artist Award for Best Youth Actress Co-star.[22]
The following year, Witherspoon acted in another leading role as Wendy
Pfister in the 1994 film S.F.W., directed by Jefery Levy.
In 1996, Witherspoon was offered parts in two major movies. She appeared
in the thriller Fear alongside Mark Wahlberg and Alyssa Milano,
playing the role of Nicole Walker, a teenage girl with a handsome boyfriend
who turns out to be a violent psychopath. She was also the leading actress
in the thriller and black comedy Freeway, starring alongside Kiefer
Sutherland and Brooke Shields. Her character, Vanessa Lutz, is a poor girl
living in Los Angeles, who, on the way to her grandmother's home in
Stockton, encounters a freeway serial killer.[15]
The film received positive reviews from the press. Among them was the San
Francisco Chronicle, with Mick LaSalle commenting, "Witherspoon, who
does a shrill Texas accent, is dazzling, utterly believable in one extreme
situation after the other."[23]
Witherspoon's performance won her the Best Actress Award at the Cognac
Police Film Festival, and firmly established her as a rising star.[15][24]
The making of the movie also gave Witherspoon significant acting experience;
as she said, "Once I overcame the hurdle of that movie – which scared me to
death – I felt like I could try anything."[16]
Following completion of Freeway in 1997, Witherspoon took a break
from acting in major movies for a year, and began dating actor Ryan
Phillippe. She returned to the screen in 1998 with major roles in three
movies, Overnight Delivery, Pleasantville and Twilight.[6][25]
In Pleasantville, Witherspoon starred alongside Tobey Maguire in a
tale about a pair of 1990s teenage siblings who are magically transported
into the setting of a 1950s television series. She portrayed the sister
Jennifer, who is mainly concerned about appearances, relationships, and
popularity. Witherspoon's performance received good reviews and garnered her
the Young Hollywood Award for Best Female Breakthrough Performance.[26]
Director Gary Ross said he firmly believed Witherspoon was going to be an
outstanding movie star.[16]
Early critical success (1999–2000)
In 1999, Witherspoon starred alongside Alessandro Nivola in the drama
thriller Best Laid Plans; she played Lissa, a woman who schemes with
her lover Nick to escape a small, dead-end town.[3]
In this same year, she co-starred with Sarah Michelle Gellar and Ryan
Phillippe in the drama film Cruel Intentions, a modern take on the
18th-century French novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses. Her performance
as Annette Hargrove was praised by the San Francisco Chronicle:
"Witherspoon is especially good in the least flashy role, and even when
called upon to make a series of cute devilish faces, she pulls it off."[27]
Coincidentally, she appeared in a music video by Marcy Playground for the
film's soundtrack. In the same year, Witherspoon and Matthew Broderick
starred in the film adaptation of the 1998 novel Election by Tom
Perrotta.[3] She
portrayed Tracy Flick, a competitive and ambitious over-achiever who runs
for student body president. She received vast critical acclaim for her
performance and won the Best Actress Award from the National Society of Film
Critics and the Online Film Critics Society, a first Golden Globe nomination
and an Independent Spirit Award nomination.[28][29]
Witherspoon also received a rank on the list of 100 Greatest Film
Performances of All Time by Premiere.[30]
Academy Award – winning director Alexander Payne praised her: "She's got
that quality that men find attractive, while women would like to be her
friend. But that's just the foundation. Nobody else is as funny or brings
such charm to things. She can do anything."[17]
In spite of her successful performance, Witherspoon noted in an interview
that she struggled to find work after completing the film, due to
typecasting.[31] When
analyzing the reasons behind her difficulty to find work, Witherspoon
commented "I think because the character I played was so extreme and sort of
shrewish – people thought that was who I was, rather than me going in and
creating a part. I would audition for things, and I'd always be the second
choice – studios never wanted to hire me, and I wasn't losing the parts to
big box office actresses but to ones who I guess people felt differently
about."[4]
In 2000, Witherspoon received a supporting role in American Psycho
and made a cameo appearance in Little Nicky.[25]
She also appeared as a guest star in season six of Friends, playing
the role of Jill Green, Rachel Green's sister.[32]
The next year, Witherspoon provided the voice of Serena in the animated film
The Trumpet of the Swan, produced by Crest Animation Productions.
Worldwide recognition (2001–2004)
2001 marked a significant turning point in Witherspoon's career, when she
starred in the feature film Legally Blonde. She portrayed Elle Woods,
a fashion merchandising major who decides to become a law student in order
to follow her ex-boyfriend to Harvard University. Speaking about Woods'
character, Witherspoon said "When I read Legally Blonde, I was like,
'She's from Beverly Hills, she's rich, she's in a sorority. She has a great
boyfriend. Oh yeah, she gets dumped. Who cares? I still hate her.' So we had
to make sure she was the kind of person you just can't hate."[17]
Legally Blonde was a box office hit, grossing US$96 million
domestically.[33]
Witherspoon's performance earned her praise from critics, as the press began
referring to her as "the new Meg Ryan".[34]
Roger Ebert commented, "Witherspoon effortlessly animated this material with
sunshine and quick wit",[35]
and Salon.com noted that "she [Witherspoon] delineates Elle's
character beautifully".[36]
Meanwhile, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer concluded, "Witherspoon is
a talented comedian who can perk up a scene just by marching in full of pep
and drive and she powers this modest little comedy almost single-handedly."[37]
For her work, Witherspoon garnered her second Golden Globe Best Actress
nomination and an MTV Movie Award for Best Comedic Performance.
Following the success of Legally Blonde, Witherspoon starred in
several roles. In 2002, Witherspoon provided the voice of the animated
character Greta Wolfcastle in The Simpsons episode The Bart Wants
What It Wants.[38] In the same
year, she portrayed Cecily in the comedy The Importance of Being Earnest,
a movie adaptation of a play by Oscar Wilde; she received a Teen Choice
Award nomination for her performance.[39][40]
Her next feature film in 2002 was Sweet Home Alabama, a movie
directed by Andy Tennant. Witherspoon, alongside Josh Lucas and Patrick
Dempsey, played Melanie Carmichael, a young fashion designer who intends to
marry a New York politician but must return to Alabama to divorce her
childhood sweetheart, from whom she has been separated for seven years.
Witherspoon regarded this as a "personal role" in that the role reminded her
of experiences she had when she moved from her hometown Nashville to Los
Angeles.[41] The movie became
Witherspoon's biggest box office hit to date, earning over $35 million in
the opening weekend and grossing over $127 million domestically in the US.[33][42]
Despite the commercial success, Sweet Home Alabama was given negative
reviews by critics. It was called "a romantic comedy so rote, dull and
predictable" by The Miami Herald,[43]
and the press widely agreed that Witherspoon was the only factor that helped
the movie attract a large audience.[44][45]
When describing Witherspoon's role in the movie, The Christian Science
Monitor concluded, "She is not the movie's main attraction, she is its
only attraction."[46]
In 2003, Witherspoon followed up the success of Legally Blonde by
starring in the sequel Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde. Her
character, Elle Woods, has become a Harvard-educated lawyer who is
determined to protect animals from cosmetics-industry science tests. The
sequel was not as financially successful as the first movie, and it
generated mostly critical reviews. USA Today considered the movie
"plodding, unfunny and almost cringe-worthy", but also noted that "Reese
Witherspoon still does a fine job portraying the fair-haired lovable
brainiac, but her top-notch comic timing is wasted on the humorless
dialogue."[47] Meanwhile,
Salon.com concluded that the sequel "calcifies everything that was
enjoyable about the first movie".[48]
Despite being panned by critics, the sequel took over $39 million in its
first five days in the U.S. box office charts and went on to gross $90
million in the US.[49]
Witherspoon received a $15 million paycheck for the role – a starting point
to make her consistently one of Hollywood's highest paid actresses from 2002
onwards.[17][50][51][52]
In 2004, Witherspoon starred in Vanity Fair, adapted from the
19th-century classic novel Vanity Fair and directed by Mira Nair.
Witherspoon's character – Becky Sharp – is a woman whose impoverished
childhood turns her into an ambitious person with a ruthless determination
to find fortune and establish herself a position in society. Witherspoon was
pregnant during the filmmaking of this movie and was therefore carefully
costumed to conceal her pregnancy.[53]
This pregnancy was not a hindrance to her work, as Witherspoon believed the
gestation had in fact helped her portrayal of Sharp's character: "I love the
luminosity that pregnancy brings, I love the fleshiness, I love the ample
bosom—it gave me much more to play with", she said.[54][55]
The film and Witherspoon's portrayal of Sharp received good reviews, as
The Hollywood Reporter wrote, "Nair's cast is splendid. Witherspoon does
justice to the juicy role by giving the part more buoyancy than
naughtiness."[56] At the same
time, The Charlotte Observer called her work "an excellent
performance that's soft around the edges" and the Los Angeles Times
concluded that Becky is "a part Reese Witherspoon was born to play".[57][58]
Walk the Line and beyond (2005–present)
In late 2004, Witherspoon began working alongside Mark Ruffalo on the
romantic comedy Just Like Heaven. Her character, Elizabeth Masterson,
is an ambitious young doctor left in a coma by a serious car accident; her
spirit returns to her old apartment where she later finds true love.[59]
Earlier that year Witherspoon was chosen to portray June Carter Cash, the
second wife of country music singer and songwriter Johnny Cash, in Walk
the Line. She never had the chance to meet Carter Cash, as Witherspoon
was filming Vanity Fair at the time Carter Cash died.[4]
Witherspoon performed her own vocals in the movie, and her songs had to be
performed in front of a live audience. When she learned that she had to
perform live, Witherspoon was so worried that she asked her lawyer to
terminate the film contract.[60]
"That was the most challenging part of the role," she later recalled in an
interview, "I'd never sung professionally."[61]
Subsequently, she had to spend six months learning how to sing for the role.[60][62]
Witherspoon's portrayal of Carter Cash was well received by critics, and
Roger Ebert wrote that her performance added "boundless energy" to the
movie.[63] She won several
awards for her performance, including the Golden Globe Award, the Screen
Actors Guild, the BAFTA and the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Lead
Role. Besides critical success in the movie industry, Witherspoon and her
co-star in Walk the Line Joaquin Phoenix received a nomination for
"collaborative video of the year" from the CMT Music Awards.[64][65]
Witherspoon expressed her passion for the movie: "I really like in this film
that it is realistic and portrays sort of a real marriage, a real
relationship where there are forbidden thoughts and fallibility. And it is
about compassion in the long haul, not just the short easy solutions to
problems."[66]
She also spoke about June Carter Cash, stating that she believed Carter Cash
was a woman ahead of her time: "I think the really remarkable thing about
her character is that she did all of these things that we sort of see as
normal things in the 1950s when it wasn't really acceptable for a woman to
be married and divorced twice and have two different children by two
different husbands and travel around in a car full of very famous musicians
all by herself. She didn't try to comply to social convention, so I think
that makes her a very modern woman."[66]
Witherspoon's first post-Oscar role came in the modern-day fairy tale
Penelope, co-starring Christina Ricci. Witherspoon played the supporting
role of Annie, the best friend of Penelope, a girl who has a curse in her
family. The film was produced by Witherspoon's company Type A Films and
premiered at the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival.[60][67]
The final release date of Penelope was delayed twice, and the movie
was then set for a February 2008 release.[68][69]
Witherspoon was back in front of the camera again in November 2006, as
shooting began for the political thriller Rendition. She starred
alongside Meryl Streep, Alan Arkin, Peter Sarsgaard, and Jake Gyllenhaal,
playing Isabella El-Ibrahim, the pregnant wife of a bombing suspect.
Rendition was released in October 2007 and marked Witherspoon's first
appearance in theaters in two years, since the 2005 release of Walk the
Line.[70] The movie
received mostly negative reviews, and was generally considered a
disappointment at the Toronto Film Festival.[71]
Witherspoon's performance was also criticized: "Reese Witherspoon is
surprisingly lifeless", USA Today wrote, "She customarily injects
energy and spirit into her parts, but here, her performance feels tamped
down."[72] In December 2007,
Witherspoon began filming the holiday comedy Four Christmases, a
story about a couple who have to spend their Christmas Day trying to visit
all four of their divorced parents, and in which she stars alongside Vince
Vaughn.[73] The film was
released in November 2008. Despite only receiving average reviews by
critics, the movie became a box office success, earning more than 120
million US dollars domestically, and US$157m worldwide.[74]
In 2009, Witherspoon took on the horror genre for the first time as a
star of Our Family Troubles, which she produced under the Type A
banner, partnering with Jennifer Simpson, co-producer of Legally Blonde 2.[75]
She also provided the voice for Susan Murphy, the main character of the
computer-animated 3-D feature film Monsters vs. Aliens, which had a
March 27, 2009 release from DreamWorks Animation.[76]
Her future projects include voicing in The Bear and the Bow, a
computer-animated 3-D film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and
distributed by Walt Disney Pictures; the film is scheduled for a release in
Christmas 2011.[77] Another
film on the slate for the future is Witherspoon in a Universal Pictures
remake of the 1939 comedy Midnight, scripted by Michael Arndt.[78]
Other projects
Witherspoon owns a production company called Type A Films. The company
was at first believed by the media to have been named after her childhood
nickname "Little Miss Type A."[18][79]
However, when asked about the company by Interview magazine, she
clarified the name's origin: "... people think I named it after myself ...
It was actually an in-joke with my family because at [age] 7 I understood
complicated medical terms, such as the difference between type A and type B
personalities. But I just wished I'd named the company Dogfood Films or Fork
or something. You carry that baggage all your life."[4]
Witherspoon is a long-time supporter of Save the Children, an
organization that helps children around the world through education, health
care, and emergency aid.[80]
She also serves on the board of the Children's Defense Fund, a child
advocacy and research group.[80]
In 2006, Witherspoon was among a group of actresses who went to New Orleans,
Louisiana in a CDF project to bring to light the needs of Hurricane Katrina
victims.[81] In this trip, she
helped open the city's first Freedom School, as she met and talked with the
children.[82]
Witherspoon later called this an experience that she would never forget.[82]
In 2007, Witherspoon made her first move into the world of endorsements,
as she signed a multi-year agreement to serve as the first Global Ambassador
of cosmetic company Avon Products.[80][83]
She acts as a spokeswoman for Avon's cosmetic products, and serves as the
honorary chair of the Avon Foundation, a charitable organization that
supports women and focuses on breast cancer research and the prevention of
domestic violence.[84][85]
Witherspoon is also committed to participating in cosmetics product
development and appearing in commercial advertisements.[84]
Explaining her motives for joining the foundation, she said, "As a woman and
a mother I care deeply about the well being of other women and children
throughout the world and through the years, I have always looked for
opportunities to make a difference."[84]
In the media
Following the successful release of Legally Blonde, Witherspoon
hosted Saturday Night Live on September 29, 2001.[86]
In 2005, she was ranked No. 5 in Teen People magazine's list of most
powerful young Hollywood actors.[87]
In 2006, Witherspoon was listed among the Time 100, a compilation of the 100
most influential people in the world, as selected annually by Time
magazine.[88] Her featured
article was written by friend and fellow co-star in the two Legally
Blonde films, Luke Wilson.[89]
In the same year, she was also selected as one of the "100 Sexiest Women In
The World" by the readers of For Him Magazine.[90]
Witherspoon has appeared on the annual Celebrity 100 list by Forbes
magazine in 2006 and 2007, at No. 75 and No. 80, respectively.[91][92]
Forbes also put her on the top ten Trustworthy Celebrities list,
according to the characters she had played on the screen.[93]
In 2006, Star fabricated a story saying Witherspoon was pregnant
with her third child, which led to Witherspoon suing the magazine's parent
company American Media Inc in Los Angeles Superior Court for privacy
violation.[94] She sought
unspecified general and punitive damages in the lawsuit, asserting that the
claim harmed her reputation because it suggested she was hiding the news
from producers of her upcoming films.[95]
Witherspoon has been featured four times in the annual "100 Most
Beautiful" issues of People magazine.[96]
In 2007, she was selected by People and the entertainment news
program Access Hollywood as one of the best dressed female stars of
the year.[97][98]
A study conducted by E-Poll Market Research showed that Witherspoon was the
most likable female celebrity of 2007.[99]
That same year, Witherspoon established herself as the highest-paid actress
in the American film industry, earning $15 to $20 million per film.[100][101]
In April 2008, Witherspoon appeared as a guest star at the 2008 charitable
campaign Idol Gives Back.[102]
Personal life
Marriage
Witherspoon met American actor Ryan Phillippe at her 21st birthday party
in March 1997, where she introduced herself to him saying "I think you're my
birthday present."[103][104]
The couple became engaged in December 1998,[105]
and married in Charleston, South Carolina on June 5, 1999 at Wide Awake
Plantation, following the release of the box office hit Cruel Intentions.[106][107][108]
They have two children: a daughter named Ava Elizabeth, born September 9,
1999,[109] and a son Deacon
Reese, born October 23, 2003.[106]
To be able to look after the children, the couple alternated shooting
schedules for their films.[104]
By 2005, in response to news reports of Witherspoon and Phillippe
receiving marriage counseling, Witherspoon stated, "We've done that in the
past, and it's always struck me as odd that people grabbed onto that story
and made it sound so negative."[110]
In December 2005, she said on The Oprah Winfrey Show, "In what
capacity is working on yourself or your marriage a bad thing? What marriage
isn't a journey? ... Nobody's perfect ... We all have our own set of
problems."[110][111]
That same month, Witherspoon also said in an interview, "I think if anybody
rests on the idea that they are perfect or their life is perfect or their
relationship is perfect and is so troubled about destroying the facade as
opposed to getting to what's real, that is troublesome."
Separation and
divorce
In October 2006, Witherspoon and Phillippe announced that they decided to
separate formally after seven years of marriage. The following month,
Witherspoon filed for divorce, citing irreconcilable differences.[112]
In her petition she sought joint legal custody of their two children and
sole physical custody, with full visitation rights for Phillippe.[112][113]
The couple had no prenuptial agreement and the couple would be entitled to
half of all assets gained during the marriage under California law, with
Witherspoon's being the more significant.[114][115]
Witherspoon requested that the court grant no spousal support for Phillippe,
which he did not contest.[112]
On May 15, 2007, Phillippe filed for joint physical custody of the couple's
children, and made no motion to block Witherspoon from seeking support from
him.[116]
In September 2007, Witherspoon spoke openly about the separation for the
first time when she told Elle magazine that it was "a difficult and
frightening experience" for her.[117]
Witherspoon and Phillippe's final divorce documents were granted by the Los
Angeles Superior Court on October 5, 2007, ending their marriage.[118][119]
Throughout 2007, there was persistent speculation in the mass media about
a romantic relationship between Witherspoon and her Rendition co-star
Jake Gyllenhaal. The pair denied the rumors while promoting Rendition
in the fall of 2007.[120]
However, after the finalization of Witherspoon's divorce in October 2007,
Gyllenhaal and Witherspoon became more open with their relationship,
particularly due to the release of paparazzi pictures that showed the couple
vacationing together in Rome.[121]
The couple has since been regularly photographed together by paparazzi.[122][123][124][125]
In March 2008, Phillippe was the first to confirm the relationship in
interviews conducted during the promotion of his latest film.[126][127]
Witherspoon personally confirmed her relationship with Gyllenhaal in an
interview for the November 2008 issue of Vogue magazine, calling her
boyfriend "very supportive".[128]
The couple was reported to have split in November 2009,[129]
but the report was jointly denied by Witherspoon and Gyllenhaal's
publicists, who declared that "they are still together."[130]
Filmography
|
Year |
Film |
Role |
| 1991 |
The Man in the Moon |
Dani Trant |
| Wildflower |
Ellie Perkins |
| 1992 |
Desperate Choices: To Save My Child |
Cassie |
| 1993 |
A Far Off Place |
Nonnie Parker |
| Jack the Bear |
Karen Morris |
| Return to Lonesome Dove |
Ferris Dunnigan |
| 1994 |
S.F.W. |
Wendy Pfister |
| 1996 |
Freeway |
Vanessa |
| Fear |
Nicole Walker |
| 1998 |
Twilight |
Mel Ames |
| Overnight Delivery |
Ivy Miller |
| Pleasantville |
Jennifer/Mary Sue |
| 1999 |
Cruel Intentions |
Annette Hargrove |
| Election |
Tracy Flick |
| Best Laid Plans |
Lissa |
| 2000 |
Little Nicky |
Holly |
| American Psycho |
Evelyn Williams |
| 2001 |
The Trumpet of the Swan |
Serena |
| Legally Blonde |
Elle Woods |
| 2002 |
The Importance of Being Earnest |
Cecily Cardew |
| Sweet Home Alabama |
Melanie Carmichael |
| 2003 |
Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde |
Elle Woods |
| 2004 |
Vanity Fair |
Becky Sharp |
| 2005 |
Walk the Line |
June Carter Cash |
| Just like Heaven |
Elizabeth Masterson |
| 2007 |
Rendition |
Isabella El-Ibrahimi |
| 2008 |
Penelope |
Annie |
| Four Christmases |
Kate |
| 2009 |
Monsters vs. Aliens |
Susan Murphy / Ginormica |
TV shows
|
Year |
Title |
Role |
Notes |
| 2000 |
King of the Hill |
Debbie |
2 episodes
voice |
| Friends |
Jill Green |
2 episodes
Nominated – American Comedy Award for Funniest Female Guest
Appearance in a TV Series |
| 2002 |
The Simpsons |
Greta Wolfcastle |
1 episode
voice |
| 2003 |
Freedom: A History of Us |
Various roles |
3 episodes |
| 2009 |
Monsters vs. Aliens: Mutant Pumpkins from Outer Space |
Susan Murphy / Ginormica |
Halloween TV Special
voice |
Discography
|
Year |
Soundtrack |
| 2005 |
Walk the Line |