Margot Kidder

By the time she was middle-aged, Margot Kidder's career had taken on the contours of a classic Hollywood tragedy. Hailing from Canada's Northwest Territories, she came to Los Angeles as a teen in the late 1960s, spurred by optimism, nerve and a hunger for fame. A slender, long-haired brunette with a distinctively smoky voice, Kidder quickly found work, some measure of exposure and notoriety as a political activist and proponent of drug experimentation and sexual liberation. She achieved stardom portraying Lois Lane, the tough but beautiful reporter love interest of Christopher Reeve's "Superman" in a successful series of films. Her rapid decline was accompanied by a reputation for difficult on-set behavior, a chaotic personal life, substance abuse and mental, medical and financial problems. Kidder bottomed out with an internationally publicized breakdown in the spring of 1996. By the fall of that year, she was poised to play the lead in another favorite Hollywood tale--the comeback story.

While still a student in Canada, the young Kidder wrote to director Norman Jewison who politely responded that she should give him a call if she were ever in Los Angeles. She responded by buying a plane ticket, flying to California and talking her way into an audition. Kidder made her feature debut playing a prostitute in Jewison's poorly received period newspaper comedy "Gaily, Gaily" (1969), starring Beau Bridges. She impressed the reviewer from VARIETY who wrote "Margot Kidder is Bridges' lust interest, and she's a fetching fallen angel who cries on cue and deserves better exposure, anyway you define the word." Many felt such exposure came with her very next screen appearance in "Quackser Fortune Has a Cousin in the Bronx" (1970), a warm and quirky romantic comedy set in Dublin. Kidder proved convincing as a wealthy American college girl who becomes smitten with a fellow (Gene Wilder) who sweeps up after delivery horses and sells their manure as fertilizer.

Kidder further enhanced her cult credentials with a strong performance in "Sisters" (1973), Brian De Palma's first would-be Hitchcockian thriller, as a detached Siamese twin with a murderously psychopathic sibling. That same year, Kidder followed up with another dual role in "A Quiet Day in Belfast", a little seen Canadian political drama partly filmed in Dublin. Steady work followed in films and TV as Kidder proved adept at playing kooky, eccentric or slutty. Celebrity came with "Superman" (1978) as she crafted a credible Lois Lane for 1970s Hollywood--a driven, ambitious, career woman with romantic yearnings. Despite this success, most of Kidder's subsequent non-"super" credits were less than stellar but she remained a lead for some time, playing the long-suffering co-owner of a haunted house in "The Amityville Horror" (1979); the female component of a "Jules and Jim"-like menage-a-trois in Paul Mazursky's "Willie & Phil" (1980); and a sympathetic Beverly Hills prostitute opposite embattled Vietnam vet Richard Pryor in "Some Kind of Hero" (1982).

Long plagued by mood swings and binge drinking, Kidder was first classified as manic-depressive in 1988 but rejected both the diagnosis and the treatment. Her career declined and finally crashed and burned after a 1990 car accident on the set of "Nancy Drew and Daughter", a never completed Canadian TV production. Having incurred three damaged discs in her neck but refusing surgery, Kidder was confined to a wheelchair for much of the next two years. Suits and countersuits ensued with the Canadian production company and work became scarce. She finally submitted to surgery two years later and regained the ability to walk but her insurance company would not pay for the procedure. Kidder sold her house and her jewelry and declared bankruptcy in 1992. Realizing that contemporary Hollywood had few leads for women over 40, she took small character parts where she could find them. Kidder taught acting, attempted to segue to the stage and did voice work for cartoons.

In the spring of 1996, Kidder was seen behaving erratically in public, making wild accusations and raving about a conspiracy against her before disappearing for three days. She was found hiding behind a woodpile in the backyard of a Glendale, CA, home, disheveled, dressed in rags, missing her bridgework and ranting incoherently. Suddenly the "washed-up" actress was front page news as she was confined to a county psychiatric hospital for observation. The sympathy of the world was extended to her. Old friends Christopher Reeve and Richard Pryor spoke out in her support. Broadway producer David Merrick vowed to star her in a show. Finally taking librium for her disorder and acknowledging her addictions, Kidder did a guest shot on the popular NBC sitcom "Boston Common" in the fall of 1996, which led to additional appearances later in the season.

  • Also Credited As:
    Margaret Ruth Kidder
  • Born:
    October 17, 1948 in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Acting teacher, Director, Editor, Model, Screenwriter
Family
  • Brother: John Kidder.
  • Daughter: Maggie McGuane. born c. 1975
  • Father: Kendall Kidder. explosives expert
  • Mother: Jill Kidder.
  • Sister: Annie Kidder.
Significant Others
  • Companion: Brian De Palma. had relationship in early 1970s
  • Companion: Pierre Trudeau. former Canadian Prime Minister; dated in 1981
  • Companion: Richard Pryor.
  • Companion: Steven Spielberg. had relationship in the early 1970s
Education
  • Magee Secondary School, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Milestones
  • 1969 Began seeing psychiatrists about her mood swings (date approximate)
  • 1969 Film debut in Jewison s Gaily, Gaily
  • 1970 First feature lead, Quackser Fortune Has a Cousin in the Bronx , an Irish-shot comedy starring Gene Wilder
  • 1971 TV series debut on Nichols , an NBC Western set in the early 20th century; played Ruth, the barmaid girlfriend of series star James Garner
  • 1971 TV-movie acting debut, Suddenly Single , an ABC drama about the swinging singles scene
  • 1973 Moved to Billings, MT to be with writer Tom McGuane (date approximate)
  • 1975 Appeared in 92 in the Shade , a feature written and directed by husband Tom McGuane
  • 1975 Filmmaking debut, wrote and directed the short film And Again
  • 1978 Breakthrough feature lead, played Lois Lane in Superman (reprised the role in three sequels in 1980, 1983 and 1987)
  • 1983 Portrayed Eliza Doolittle (opposite Peter O Toole s Henry Higgins) in a Showtime adaptation of George Bernard Shaw s Pygmalion
  • 1984 TV miniseries acting debut, Louisiana (Cinemax), a Franco-Canadian co-production helmed by future husband Philippe de Broca
  • 1986 Provided a voice for the children s animated feature Gobots: Battle of the Rock Lords
  • 1987 Starred on the CBS comedy-drama series Shell Game , as a con artist turned investigative journalist (series was a short-lived mid-season replacement)
  • 1988 First diagnosed with manic-depression; rejected the diagnosis and the prescribed course of treatment
  • 1990 Injured in a car accident on the set of Nancy Drew and Daughter , a Canadian cable TV production; incurred three damaged discs in her neck
  • 1990 Provided narration for The Wonderful Wizard of Oz , an HBO children s animated series based on four of the six Oz books by L. Frank Baum
  • 1992 Declared bankruptcy; sold her home and jewelry
  • 1992 Did a guest shot on an episode of HBO s Tales From the Crypt entitled Curiosity Killed
  • 1994 Provided a voice for Phantom 2040 , a syndicated cartoon sci-fi series extrapolated from Lee Falk s comic strip
  • 1994 Relocated to Prague after filming there
  • 1995 Appeared in first major theatrical role, touring in Stieglitz Loves O Keefe , as artist Georgia O Keefe
  • 1995 Completed work in Never Met Picasso , a gay-themed, low-budget independent feature that received festival screenings in 1996
  • 1995 Moved to Livingstone, Montana
  • 1996 After behaving erratically in public and subsequently disappearing for three days, found behind a woodpile in the backyard of a suburban Glendale, CA, home, ragged, dirty and babbling incoherently about a plot against her
  • 1996 Did a guest shot on the NBC sitcom Boston Common as an acting teacher; character returned in recurring status
  • Abandoning husband and daughter, moved to London where she auditioned for the part of Lois Lane in the first Superman feature
  • Appeared in the CD-ROM game Under a Killing Moon as Bartender
  • Became severely disturbed upon discovering that she had lost three years of work on her memoirs Calamities due to a computer problem
  • Changed name from Margaret to Margot
  • Confined to a county psychiatric hospital for observation; diagnosed with manic-depression and prescribed lithium
  • First screen appearance, played a troubled teen in the Canadian Broadcasting Company TV-movie, Moose Fever
  • Moved to Los Angeles at age 18
  • Refusing surgery, was often confined to a wheelchair over the next two years due to muscle spasms
  • Regained mobility after submitting to surgery
  • Ruined financially when insurance company refused to pay her bills
  • While attending the University of British Columbia, wrote to director Norman Jewison in Los Angeles; accepting Jewison s invitation to contact him if ever in town, flew to Los Angeles; persuded Jewison to let her audition

Yahoo! Movies: In Theaters - Times & Tickets - Trailers - DVD - News & Gossip - Box Office - Browse Movies - more...
Yahoo! Entertainment: Movies - Music - TV - Games - Astrology - more...

Copyright © 2009 AEC One Stop Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Portions of this page Copyright © 2009 Baseline. All rights reserved.