An actress who is known as much -- if not more -- for her offscreen life
as for her onscreen performances, Anne Heche had the distinction of being
one of Hollywood's most surprising success stories and also one half of its
most famous lesbian couple. Heche's hyper-publicized former relationship with
actress and comedian Ellen DeGeneres was particularly notable, and refreshing
for its degree of openness, something that made the two women veritable poster
children for gay pride in Hollywood and elsewhere.
Born in the small town of Aurora, OH, on May 25, 1969, Heche was raised as
part of a fundamentalist Christian family. Her father, an itinerant choir
director, was constantly running from both debt and his immediate family;
the former was due to his lack of a steady job and the latter to his secret
life as a gay man. Both conditions resulted in a tumultuous childhood for
Heche, who began performing in dinner theatre at the age of 12 to help pay
her family's bills. Her life changed dramatically when she was 13 and her
father died of AIDS, something that revealed his other identity and confounded
Heche's entire family. Compounding the tragedy was her brother's death in
a car accident just months later. Following this double blow, Heche lived
with her mother in Chicago and kept acting to help pay the rent. When she
was 17, she moved to New York and was cast as identical twins on the long-running
soap opera Another World. Heche stayed with the show through 1991 and earned
a Daytime Emmy Award for her work in the process.
Following her departure from Another World, Heche struggled in obscurity
for a few years, turning up on the occasional TV show. Her fortunes began
to shift in 1996, when she had her breakthrough film role in Nicole Holofcener's
Walking and Talking, a well-received independent that co-starred Heche and
Catherine Keener as best friends experiencing various romantic ups and downs.
That same year, she had a supporting role as Demi Moore's best friend in The
Juror and although the film wasn't particularly successful, it did give Heche
greater exposure. Her exposure increased drastically when, after appearing
in Wag the Dog and as Johnny Depp's wife in Mike Newell's highly acclaimed
Donnie Brasco in 1997, she made public her relationship with Ellen DeGeneres.
Heche's disclosure came directly against the advice of her agents -- whom
she subsequently fired -- and the intense amount of hooplah surrounding it
severely compromised her casting opposite Harrison Ford in the romantic comedy
Six Days Seven Nights. Fortunately, Ford stood firm on his insistence that
Heche star with him in the film and the actress managed to weather the ridiculous
skepticism voiced by those who doubted a lesbian actress -- one who had made
a career thus far out of portraying blatantly heterosexual women -- could
convincingly play Ford's love interest. Although Six Days Seven Nights was
savaged by most critics and failed to perform as well as had been expected,
Heche earned a number of positive reviews for her performance, as well as
a choice position on many Hollywood casting lists.
She went on to give another strong performance as a lawyer in Return to
Paradise and then landed the much-sought-after role of Marion Crane in Gus
Van Sant's relentlessly publicized 1998 remake of Psycho. The film, which
also starred Vince Vaughn as Norman Bates and Julianne
Mooreas Lila Crane, turned out to be a sizable disappointment, and after
starring alongside Ed Harris in the similarly disappointing religious drama
The Third Miracle, Heche decided to try her hand at directing. She made her
directorial debut with Reaching Normal in 1999 and the following year, wrote
and directed a segment of the HBO drama If These Walls Could Talk 2 (2000).
Her segment centered on a lesbian couple willing to do anything to have a
baby and starredSharon Stoneand Ellen DeGeneres.
That same year, Heche returned to acting as one of the stars of Auggie Rose,
a drama about a man who gets the opportunity to assume a new identity.
While Heche and DeGeneres chose to amicably part ways in 2000, their high-profile
relationship left an indelible mark on US culture, helping to usher in an
era of increased tolerance toward homosexuals within mainstream America. Along
with the much publicized break-up, Heche found herself in the news for another
reason that year. Upon having an emotional breakdown, the actress was found
on a stranger's doorstep claiming to be Celestia, the daughter of God. However,
rather than shy from the controversy, Heche chose to tackle it head-on, documenting
the experience in the 2001 autobiography Call Me Crazy. After a rollercoaster
period of her personal life, Heche married camera-man Coley Laffoon in September
of 2001. The couple had their first child, a son, Homer Heche Laffoon on March
2, 2002.
While she had certainly remained in the public eye, it had been a while
since audiences had seen much acting from Heche, so it certainly pleased her
fans when she assumed a recurring role on the quirky Fox series Ally McBeal.
The following year, she appeared on the big screen in the Denzel Washington
thriller John Q. Next up for Heche is Birth withNicole
Kidman, and Sexual Life, both set for release in 2004.
|