Ashley Judd (born Ashley Tyler Ciminella on
April 19, 1968) is an American
actress.
She is perhaps best known for her leading roles in a series of late
1990s and early 2000s thrillers, including Kiss the Girls, Double Jeopardy and High
Crimes.
Biography
Judd was born in Granada Hills, California to
Michael Ciminella, Jr., an Italian American marketing analyst for
the horseracing industry, and Naomi
Judd, a well-known country
music singer; she has a half-sister, Wynonna
Judd,
who is also a country music singer. At the time of her birth, her
mother was working as a nurse, and wouldn't become well-known as a
singer along with her daughter Wynonna until the early 1980s. Judd's
parents divorced in 1972, and in 1974, her
mother took her back to her own native Kentucky,
where Judd grew up in poverty. The family sometimes lived without
running water, electricity, or a telephone.[1]
Judd was raised in her mother's Baptist
religion, and attended twelve schools before college. She briefly tried
modeling in Japan
during school breaks. An alumna of the sorority
Kappa Kappa Gamma at the University of Kentucky, she majored
in French and minored in anthropology,
art history, theater,
and women’s studies. She spent a semester
studying in France as part of her major, a move that mirrored
her role as Reed in the television series Sisters. She was in the UK Honors
Program and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, but did not graduate with
her class,[2]
leaving university early to drive cross-country in pursuit of an acting
career in Hollywood,
where she studied with well-respected acting teacher, Robert Carnegie,
at Playhouse West. During this time, she worked as a waitress at "The
Ivy" restaurant and lived in a Malibu, California house her sister
bought her, which burned down during the great Malibu fires.
Career
Judd began acting on television,
and appeared as Ensign Robin
Lefler, a Starfleet officer, in two 1991 episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation.
From 1991 to 1994 she had a recurrent role as Reed, the daughter of
Alex (Swoosie Kurtz), on the NBC drama Sisters. She made her feature film
debut in 1992's Kuffs, and had the starring role in 1993's independent film, Ruby in Paradise, for which she
received good reviews. She also had a role in the 1994 Oliver
Stone film Natural Born Killers,
but her scenes were cut from the version of the film released
theatrically. She gained further critical acclaim for her roles in
1995's Smoke
and Heat. She also played the role of Callie
in Philip Ridley's dark, adult fairy-tale The Passion of Darkly Noon.
By the end of the 1990s, Judd had managed to achieve
significant
fame and success as a leading actress, after leading roles in several
thrillers that performed well at the box office, including Kiss the Girls in 1997 and
1999's Double Jeopardy. Several of her
early 2000s films, including 2001's Someone Like You and 2002's High
Crimes, received only moderate reviews and mixed box office,[3]
although she did receive positive notices for her performance in the
2004 biography of Cole Porter, De-Lovely,
opposite Kevin Kline.
She is presently the magazine advertising "face" of
American Beauty, an Estee Lauder cosmetic brand sold exclusively
at Kohl's department stores, and H. Stern jewelers.
Personal life
Judd, as YouthAIDS Global Ambassador, speaks at an event in
South
Africa (January 2005)
During the 1990s, Judd dated baseball player Brady Anderson, singers Lyle
Lovett and Michael Bolton, and actors Matthew McConaughey and Robert
DeNiro. She became engaged to Scottish CART,
later IndyCar driver, Dario Franchitti, in December
1999, and the two were married at Skibo
Castle, near Dornoch, Scotland,
on December 12, 2001. She
and her husband divide their time between a home in Scotland
and their farm in Tennessee.
When in Manhattan, she attends services at a charismatic Missionary Baptist
Church. Judd regularly attends University of Kentucky basketball
games, frequently sitting next to Donna Smith (wife of former UK Coach Tubby
Smith), or in the student section. Last year, she was a guest
columnist for a local Kentucky newspaper, writing about the NCAA
Championships. She is frequently sought out for celebrity
camera shots during televised games. At the request of her cousin, she
posed for a poster wearing only a hockey
jersey for fundraising purposes for their alma
mater's hockey team. She is also an avid practitioner of yoga, cooking
and gardening.
In February 2006, Judd entered a program at Shades of Hope
Treatment Center in Buffalo Gap, Texas and stayed for 47
days.[4]
She was there because of personal issues, including depression and isolation.[5]
Judd is active in humanitarian and political causes. She was
appointed Global Ambassador for YouthAIDS, an international
organization promoting AIDS prevention and treatment, and speaks and
demonstrates at pro-choice events. On October
29, 2006,
Judd appeared at a "Women for Ford" event for Democratic Tennessee
Senate candidate Harold Ford Jr.
Selected filmography