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a biography
Reviewer:
Trixter
Goldie
Hawn
BORN: November 21, 1945
A
goggle-eyed, ditzy blonde, Goldie Hawn's looks alone make her
a natural for the kind of breathless comedy in which she originally
made her name. Though she has built a lucrative career with her
screen persona of a vivacious, giggly, and befuddled naif, Hawn's
onscreen antics conceal her real-life level-headedness: Beneath
the wide expanse of her blue eyes lies a shrewd, intelligent,
and multi-talented woman. Born the daughter of a musician in Washington,
D.C., Hawn grew up in a Jewish neighborhood in suburban Maryland.
At the age of three, she took her first dance lesson, and by the
age of 17, she was managing a dance studio while studying drama
at American University. In 1964, she danced professionally at
the Texas Pavilion of the New York World's Fair, and then began
appearing in chorus lines in such musicals as "Kiss Me Kate",
"Guys and Dolls", and "The Boyfriend". She eventually moved to
California, where her first break came when an agent saw her dancing
on the Andy Griffith Show and cast her in "Good Morning World",
a short-lived comedy series. From there she was cast as a dancer
in an innovative comedy-variety show hosted by comedians Dan Rowan
and Dick Martin. It was on "Laugh-In"(1968-1970) that Hawn became
popular. Originally a dancer on the show, her bikini-clad body
painted with funny slogans and designs, she was given a few lines
and proved herself a talented performer in a winning, air-headed
way.Hawn made her first foray into feature films as a dancer in
"The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band" (1968). Her
acting debut came a year later playing Walter Matthau's ditzy,
bohemian mistress in "Cactus Flower" (1969); she won an Oscar
for her role, making it an inarguably auspicious debut. Later
that year she appeared opposite Peter Sellers in "There's a Girl
in My Soup". These first two films and the subsequent Dollars
(1971) utilized Hawn's "blonde" persona, but in 1972, she hinted
that she concealed more than a talent for perkiness and comedy
when she played a young woman who helps her blind lover deal with
his past in "Butterflies Are Free". Hawn showed even more depth
as a wife who springs her husband from jail in hopes of keeping
her child in "Sugarland Express", Steven Spielberg's 1973 feature-film
directorial debut. Two years later, she starred as Warren Beatty's
girlfriend in Shampoo, further exhibiting her capacity as both
a comedic and dramatic actress.Subsequently, Hawn continued to
work steadily throughout the '80s and '90s, appearing in films
of widely varying quality. Some highlights include the successful
"Private Benjamin" (1980), for which Hawn earned her second Best
Actress Oscar nomination, "Seems Like Old Times" (1982), and "The
First Wives Club" (1996), in which she co-starred with Diane Keaton
and Bette Midler. Hawn has two children by her first husband,
comedian Bill Hudson, and one by her companion since 1986, actor
Kurt Russell. She and Russell met on the set of "Swing Shift"
(1984) and have since starred together in such films as "Overboard"
(1987).
Taken
From: All Movie Guide
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