Melissa Suzanne George was born on August 6, 1976 in Perth, Western Australia.
The 2nd of 4 children, she has 2 sisters (Kate and Marnie) and a brother (Brett).
She attended Warwick Senior High School, where she trained in modern dance,
tap, jazz, classical ballet and roller-blading. From the age of 7 until she
was 16 she skated at national and international level and represented Australia
on many occasions. While in her teens she embarked upon a modelling career,
which led to her being voted Western Australia's Teenage Model of the Year.
When the popular TV soap Home & Away conducted a nationwide search for
an actress to play the part of Angel Brooks, Melissa auditioned and, despite
having no previous acting experience, got the part. This, however, meant leaving
school and family behind and moving over 2,000 miles away to Sydney.
Melissa admits that she was thrown in at the deep end: "I hardly knew
anything when I first arrived. I had to learn how to act as I went along.
After about a year I got a grip on what acting was all about and it started
coming straight from my heart; I wasn't just saying the words any longer."
The role of Angel turned the budding young actress into one of Australia's
most popular celebrities. She twice won the Golden Logie (Australia's top
TV award) and countless other accolades for her work on the show. Thus it
was a surprise when after 3 years Melissa decided to quit, turning down a
hefty financial inducement to stay, and pursue her career elsewhere. 1995,
the previous year had been a good one. She was a household name in millions
of homes across the globe; she was nominated in the Best Actress category
in the British TV awards, the only overseas star to feature; she was chosen
to endorse many glamour and beauty products and was voted the Most Desirable
Star on British TV by ITV viewers. Leaving Home & Away was a big jump
into the unknown.
Work was sparse for a while: guest roles, an Australian film Fable and a
small but eye-catching cameo in the movie Dark City, in which she appears
nude. There were also to be disappointments. Shaun Cassidy, producer of
American Gothic and Roar (which Melissa guested in on 5 occasions) cast her
in his new project for Fox, Hollyweird, but the series never got past the
pilot episode. A further small part as the daughter of Terence Stamp's character
in The Limey kept her in the hunt and finally with the coming of the year
2000 she began to pick up meatier film and TV roles: movies Sugar and Spice
and New Port South and 2 television series: Mulholland Drive and L.A. Confidential,
taking overKim Basinger's Oscar winning role.
Her postion looked secure...
Sadly though, the curse of the TV pilot struck once more, and both Mulholland
Drive and L.A. Confidential were dropped by their respective networks, and
the release of Sugar and Spice was delayed. However, all was not lost, as
the next year Mulholland Drive was resurrected as a movie, Melissa's role
intact, and Sugar and Spice and New Port South were finally released. Then,
Melissa landed a role in her very own show - Thieves, along with Full House
star John Stamos. Although the show was cancelled after only 10 episodes,
Melissa's star was beginning to shine brightly in the USA, and pilots for
Coupling and Lost in Oz followed the next year.
It wasn't until 2003 though that Melissa's career finally began taking real
leaps. After doing a very popular guest-stint in the NBC show Friends (playing
a Lesbian nanny), Charmed (as queen of the Valkryies!) and Monk (as a murderess
actress), along with a role in the film Down with Love (a role which was initially
a lot bigger, but was trimmed due to plot changes) Melissa landed a role in
the hit series Alias - a series which started at the same time as Thieves,
but survived a similar critical bashing and has gone on to be one of the network's
most loved shows. She played the character Lauren Reed, an agent with the
Security Service who is married to one of the show's biggest stars, Michael
Vaughn (played by Michael Vartan).
Possessed of striking, seductive beauty, natural acting talent, drive and
ambition, Melissa George has what it takes to become the 21st Century's first
great screen goddess. |