MEG RYA
N's
BIOGRAPHY
"Created by SelçukOKUR"
NOT since silent screen star Mary Pickford has
the title of America's Sweetheart been given such a workout as it has in
application to Meg Ryan. Other words often invoked to describe the disarming
blonde actress: bubbly
,
screwball, perky, ethereal,charming, sparkling, whimsical, petite, and
that attribute to end all attributes, nice.While other contenders for the
sweetheart crown-say the Julia Roberts and Sandra Bullocks of Hollywood-have
had their golden-girl images tarnished by sensationalized accounts of their
off-screen conduct or by just plain bad career moves, the cutesome Ryan
has maintained her hallowed girl-next-door appeal by randishing her
fetching personality onscreen, and by living beyond reproach away from
it.
Born Margaret Mary Emily Anne Hyra in Fairfield, Connecticut in November
19, 1961 , Meg, or Peggy, as she was then called, didn't exactly have an
effervescence-inducing upbringing. When she was fifteen, her homemaker
mothe
r
Susan abandoned the family to become an actress, leaving father Harry,
a high school math teacher and coach, to raise their four children. It
was Meg, of course, who would become the actress-her and her mother's shared
love of emoting wouldn't prove enough to ameliorate their shattered relationship.
A popular, charismatic, and academically successful student at Bethel High
School, Meg enrolled at the University of Connecticut to study journalism
following graduation. Her mother helped her secure a Screen Actors Guild
card under her maiden name-Ryan-and Meg was subsequently able to pay her
tuition in large part with the money she earned from appearances in television
commercials. Two years into her degree, Ryan had the boon to earn an auspicious
feature-film debut in the supporting role of Candice Bergen's daughter
in George Cukor's Rich and Famous (198
1).
Encouraged by the experience, the then-twenty-year-old dropped out of school
and turned to the realm of television for acting jobs, first appearing
in an ABC Afterschool Special titled Amy and the Angel, and then in the
recurring role of Betsy Montgomery on the daytime drama As the World Turns.
Departing the world of soapy
intrigue after the 1984 season, Ryan relocated
to Los Angeles to film the short-lived series Wildside. Undismayed by the
failure of the small-screen effort, Ryan decided to stay on and make a
bid for movie stardom. An appearance in Amityville III: The Demon (1983)
did little to recommend her to the moviegoing public at large, but she
gained good notice for her next assignment, a solid supporting turn in
the jingoistic Tom Cruise actioner Top Gun (1986), in which she was cast
as the wife of Cruise's naval fighter co-pilot, played by Anthony Edwards.
Ryan and Edwards' ultimately tragedy-tinged fictional romance translated
into a short-term real-life relationship.
In 1989, Ryan's winsome ways were showcased to best advantage in her very
first leading role, in Rob Reiner's definitive late-eighties romantic comedy
When Harry Met
Sally . . ., which demolished box-office barriers,
thanks in no small part to Ryan's now-famous simulated-orgasm scene. The
sudden cinematic sensation had found her
stock-in-trade characterization: the slightly
befuddled, occasionally daffy, endlessly adorable, and always endearing
comic-romantic heroine. Her own private romantic life solidified when she
married Dennis Quaid, whom she had first met during filming of the
1987 sci-fi flick Innerspace; the two subsequently
became a couple when they re-teamed for the botched 1988 noir remake D.O.A.
Quaid w
illingly
underwent a stint in rehab for cocaine addiction prior to their 1991 nuptials,
and by all accounts Ryan has made him a much happier man. The couple's
son, Jack Henry, was born in 1992; the family divides its time between
a home in Santa Monica and a hundred-acre ranch in Montana that once belonged
to actor Warren Oates.
Professionally, the former high school homecoming queen reigned again in
Nora Ephron's unabashedly gimmicky button-pusher Sleepless in Seattle (1993),
in which
her hopelessly romantic Baltimore journalist discovers
fated love with continent-divided
kindred Tom Hanks, he pporting and leading dramatic
roles-like her performance as a trampy drifter in the disturbing true-life
tragedy Promised
Land
(1988); her portrayal of Jim Morrison's druggy girlfriend in The Doors
(1991); and her gut-wrenching turn as a charming alcoholic wife in When
a Man Loves a Woman (1994)-audiences have come to prefer Ryan in romantic
comedies, and her riskier, darker screen efforts tend to be eclipsed by
the sunny attractions of her more popular lightweight screen persona. Not
that all of her sentimental turns have made for blockbuster successes:
1990's chimerical fable Joe Versus the Volcano, in which she played three
different characters, missed the mark; 1992's fantasy-romance
A Prelude to a Kiss, despite its admittedly fine
performances by Ryan and co-star Alec Baldwin, was a strained effort in
the final analysis; and 1994's I.Q., in which Ryan starred as a egghead
professor estranged from the more romantic pursuits of life, fell decidedly
flat.
Ryan made a strong stake in the business side of filmmaking in 1993, when
she established her own Fox-based production company, Fandango Films
(now Prufrock Pictures). She returned to her screwball comedy roots
for her feature producing debut, 1995's only modestly entertaining French
Kiss, which partnered her with a roguish
Kevin Kline. Following a captivating
supporting turn in the hip period piece Restoration
(also 1995), the slight, prepossessing actress
convincingly portrayed a medevac helicopter pilot in Courage Under Fire
(1996), a soldierly drama that teamed her with Denzel Washington and a
then-unknown Matt Damon. Though she slightly tarnished her sweetness-and-light
reputation with her darkly waggish performance as a jilted girlfriend with
revenge on her mind in Griffin Dunne's feature-directorial debut Addicted
to Love, Ryan reaffirmed her standing as a cinematic sweetheart nonpareil
by voicing 1997's most comely animated damsel in distress, Anastasia. Ryan
then starred as a heart surgeon who discovers unearthly romance with a
beatific Nicolas Cage in City of Angels, a film loosely based on the Wim
Wenders classic Wings of Desire.
Next up for Ryan: the Warner Bros. romantic comedy You Have Mail, about
a pair of co-workers (Ryan and Tom Hanks) who unwittingly fall for
each other via an online correspondence; a remake of the 1939 classic The
Women that will partner her in onscreen back-biting and off-screen producing
with Julia Roberts; and a film adaptation of the David Rabe play Hurly-Burly,
the A-list cast of which will also include Sean Penn, Robin Penn, Kevin
Spacey, and Chazz Palminteri.
Ryan is now working on Hanging Up, a film that tells the story of three
sister after the death of their father.