Hilary Swank

This brown-haired, brown-eyed actress Hilary Swank found success in Hollywood not long after unpacking her bags. The athletic native of Bellingham, Washington moved to Los Angeles when she was 16 and soon landed a guest starring role on the syndicated "Harry and the Hendersons.” She then played recurring characters on both "Evening Shade" (CBS) and "Growing Pains" (ABC) during the 1991-92 season before making her feature debut as Kristy Swanson's Valley Girl pal in "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" (1992). Swank beat out thousands of actresses for the coveted lead part of Julie in "The Next Karate Kid" (1994), a role that required her to call on her athletic prowess. It marked her most prominent role to date.

A regular on ABC's short-lived series "Camp Wilder" (1992-93), likewise on ABC's even more brief "Leaving L.A." (1997), Swank gained some notice when she joined the cast of Fox's popular "Beverly Hills, 90210" in 1997 playing a single mom who served as a love interest for Ian Ziering's character, Steve. Roles in the straight-to-video releases "Sometimes They Come Back. . . Again" (1994) and "Kounterfeit" (1997), however, did little to raise her profile, nor did her work in the telefilms "Terror in the Family" (Fox, 1996) and "Dying to Belong" (NBC, 1997).

Her lack of name recognition aided Swank in landing the career transforming role of Teena Brandon, a Nebraska woman who opts to live as a man, in "Boys Don't Cry" (1999). Based on a true story and beautifully realized by director Kimberly Peirce, the film presented numerous challenges for Swank. Having successfully passed the audition, she cut off her long hair and worked with a trainer to build the requisite muscle. As part of her extensive preparation, she created a male alter ego and spent close to a month living in that persona in Los Angeles, a move that provided the actress with plenty of first-hand research. The onscreen results were astonishing—she conveyed the swagger and fragility of the character, with many praising her performance as one of the year's best. Swank earned many accolades, including an Academy Award for Best Actress.

Now one of Hollywood's It girls, Swank fielded numerous offers, opting to take the role of an abused wife in the ensemble of Sam Raimi's Southern Gothic "The Gift" (2000) before undertaking the lead role as a French noblewoman in the period drama "The Affair of the Necklace" (2001). She continued to chose her roles carefully, next appearing in 2002's eerie Alaskan thriller "Insomnia" with Al Pacino and Robin Williams, and directed by Christopher Nolan of “Memento” (2000) fame. She was next seen alongside Aaron Eckhart in the sci-fi thriller "The Core" (2003), a contrived disaster flick about the impending destruction of the earth after its core mysteriously stops rotating. Though trailers were pulled after the Space Shuttle tragedy, the movie would have flopped regardless on its own accord.

Just as she was beginning to appear to be the recipient of an early-Oscar-win curse, Swank rebounded with a strong performance in the widely praised HBO suffragette telepic "Iron Jawed Angels" (2004)—for which she earned a Golden Globe award nomination for Best Actress in a Leading Role – Mini-Series or Television Movie. She then appeared in “Million Dollar Baby” (2004), an engrossing drama that some have called one of director Clint Eastwood's best films. As Maggie Fitzgerald, a tough and determined but undisciplined female boxer looking for someone to believe in her, Swank both carved her body into a taughtly-muscled fighting machine and wore her character's emotions openly, delivering her most compelling performance since her breakout in "Boys Don't Cry." The role earned the actress a slew of important accolades, including a Golden Globe award win for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama and a Screen Actors Guild Award triumph, culminating with her second Oscar victory for Best Actress in a Leading Role.

Swank next costarred in costar in “The Black Dahlia” (2006), Brian De Palma’s take on James Ellroy’s complicated and richly-textured noir thriller about two hard-edged cops (Josh Hartnett and Aaron Eckhart) who descend into obsession, corruption and sexual degeneracy as they investigate the brutal murder of would-be actress Elizabeth Short (Mia Kirshner), who was found tortured and vivisected in a vacant lot in Los Angeles. Swank had the unusual experience of being the femme fatale, playing the seductive Madeleine Linscott, a dead-ringer for Short who becomes the source of wild fascination for one of the detectives. She next starred in “Freedom Writers” (2007) as Erin Gruwell, a dedicated California teacher who unified her disadvantaged, racially-challenged students by having them keep journals about their troubled and often violent lives. Then in “PS, I Love You” (lensed 2006), Swank was a grieving young widow who discovers that her dead husband left a list of tasks delivered in 10 messages in order to help ease her out of grief and into a new life.

  • Also Credited As:
    Hilary Ann Swank
  • Born:
    Hilary Ann Swank on July 30, 1974 in Lincoln, Nebraska, United States
  • Job Titles:
    Actor
Family
  • Brother: Dan Swank. Born c. 1966; owns marketing company in Edmonds, WA
  • Father: Stephen Swank. Was officer in the Air National Guard; separated from Swank s mother c. 1990
  • Mother: Judy Swank. Accompanied daughter to L.A. after separating from husband c. 1990
Significant Others
  • Companion: John Campisi. Began dating shortly after separating from Lowe; the couple were spotted kissing and holding hands on August 27, 2006; confirmed they were dating in December 2006
  • Husband: Chad Lowe. met c. 1992; married on October 2, 1997; worked together on feature Quiet Days in Hollywood (shown at 1997 Cannes Festival)
Education
  • Sehome High School, Bellingham, WA
  • South Pasadena High School, South Pasadena, CA
Milestones
  • 1983 Began acting career as Mowgli in a school play of The Jungle Book
  • 1990 Moved to Los Angeles at age 16
  • 1991 Played recurring roles in ABC s Growing Pains and CBS Evening Shade
  • 1991 Landed first job as guest star in episode of the syndicated series Harry and the Hendersons
  • 1992 Had regular role in ABC s comedy series Camp Wilder
  • 1992 Portrayed Kimberly, Kristy Swanson s Valley Girl pal, in the feature Buffy the Vampire Slayer
  • 1994 Played lead in the feature The Next Karate Kid
  • 1997 Joined the cast of Beverly Hills, 90210 (FOX) as Carly Reynolds, a single mother who becomes a love interest for Steve Sanders (Ian Ziering)
  • 1997 Was regular on the short-lived ABC series Leaving L.A.
  • 1999 Offered a Oscar winning performance as Teena Brandon, a young woman undergoing a sexual identity crisis who opted to live as a man and was brutally raped and murdered when it was discovered she was born female in Boys Don t Cry
  • 2000 Cast in the Sam Raimi directed, The Gift
  • 2001 Appeared as a French noblewoman in The Affair of the Necklace
  • 2002 Co-starred with Al Pacino in the American version of Insomnia
  • 2003 Co-starred as Major Beck Childs in the sci-fi thriller The Core
  • 2004 Co-starred with Clint Eastwood in Million Dollar Baby as a woman determined to establish herself as a boxer
  • 2004 Signed to be the exclusive celebrity model of the Calvin Klein intimate apparel
  • 2004 Starred opposite Anjelica Huston and Frances O Connor in the HBO movie Iron Jawed Angels about the stuggle for womens right to vote; received Golden Globe and SAG nominations for Best Actress in a Miniseries or TV Movie
  • 2006 Cast as Josh Hartnett s love interest in The Black Dahlia, Brian De Palma s adaptation of James Ellroy s classic noir novel
  • 2006 Signed on to be the spokeswoman for a new women s fragrance launched by Guerlain
  • 2007 Co-starred as a widow whose life is turned upside down by letters left behind by her husband in P.S. I Love You
  • 2007 Played Katherine Winter, a university professor in religion-themed horror film, The Reaping
  • 2007 Starred as a inspiring teacher in the drama Freedom Writers
  • Raised in Bellingham, WA
  • Won the Best Junior Actress Award from the Bellingham Theatre Guild

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