Drew Barrymore Mr Skin

Drew Barrymore Mr Skin



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Since melting audiences' hearts - at the age of six - in Steven Spielberg's beloved sci-fi blockbuster, Инопланетянин (1982), Drew Barrymore has emerged as one of the most endearing and talented actresses of her generation. Drew Blyth Barrymore was born in Culver City, ... See full bio »
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- Episode #1.1 (2017) ... (executive producer)
  Shoot to Kill (TV Series) (executive producer)

- Dr. Oz (2021) ... (executive producer)
- Chloe Grace Moretz (2021) ... (executive producer)
 2020 Дублёрша (executive producer)

 2019 Ангелы Чарли (executive producer)

- A Specific Form of Recklessness (2019) ... (executive producer)
- The Cult of Sheila (2019) ... (executive producer)
- Zombody (2019) ... (executive producer)
- Forever! (2019) ... (executive producer)
- The Chicken and the Pear (2019) ... (executive producer)
 2018 The Black Rose Anthology (TV Series) (executive producer)

- A Life Changing Question (2017) ... (executive producer)
- Back in the Ring (2017) ... (executive producer)
- Turning the Babies (2017) ... (executive producer)
- Pump and Dump (2017) ... (executive producer)
- Pregnancy Test Result (2017) ... (executive producer)
 2017 Цирк уродов (executive producer)

 2016 В активном поиске (executive producer)

- Round 1: Scorpion Fish (2015) ... (executive producer)
- Round 1: Scungilli (2015) ... (executive producer)
- Round 1: Jellyfish (2015) ... (executive producer)
- Round 1: Turkey Parts (2015) ... (executive producer)
- Round 1: Live Soft Shell Crab (2015) ... (executive producer)
 2014/I Животное (executive producer)

 2014 Happy Camp (executive producer)

- Secrets and Skirmishes (2013) ... (executive producer)
- Hometown Advantage (2013) ... (executive producer)
- The Exes (2013) ... (executive producer)
- Family Issues (2013) ... (executive producer)
- Sister Act (2013) ... (executive producer)
- They Are Not Saints (2011) ... (executive producer)
- Royal Angels (2011) ... (executive producer)
- Black Hat Angels (2011) ... (executive producer)
- Angels in Paradise (2011) ... (executive producer)
- Angels in Chains (2011) ... (executive producer)
- The Wedding Special (2010) ... (executive producer)
- The Ring's the Thing (2010) ... (executive producer)
- Exes Is a Four Letter Word (2010) ... (executive producer)
- The Interrogation (2010) ... (executive producer)
- Temptation, Temptation (2010) ... (executive producer)
 2001 Донни Дарко (executive producer)

 2000 Ангелы Чарли (producer - produced by)

 1999 Олайв (TV Movie) (executive producer)

 1999 Нецелованная (executive producer)

Other Works:
Print ads: Miu Miu. See more »
Publicity Listings:
1 Biographical Movie | 3 Print Biographies | 22 Interviews | 45 Articles | 44 Pictorials | 122 Magazine Cover Photos | See more »
Personal Quote:
I don't want to sit around and hope good things happen. I want to make them happen. See more »
Trivia:
She is allergic to garlic, bee stings, perfume and coffee. See more »

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Barrymore at the 2014 Berlin premiere of Blended
Actress
producer
director
talk show host
entrepreneur
Drew Blythe Barrymore (born February 22, 1975)[1] is an American actress, producer, director, talk show host and entrepreneur, who is the recipient of numerous accolades, including a Golden Globe, a Screen Actors Guild Award, and a BAFTA nomination. She is a member of the Barrymore family of actors, and the granddaughter of John Barrymore.
Barrymore achieved fame as a child actress with her role in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982). Following a highly publicized childhood marked by drug and alcohol abuse,[1] she released an autobiography, Little Girl Lost, 1991 at the age of 16. She went on to appear in a string of successful films throughout the decade, including Poison Ivy (1992), Boys on the Side (1995), Mad Love (1995), Batman Forever (1995), Scream (1996), and Ever After (1998). Barrymore collaborated with Adam Sandler on three films, The Wedding Singer (1998), 50 First Dates (2004) and Blended (2014).
Barrymore's other films include Never Been Kissed (1999), Charlie's Angels (2000), Donnie Darko (2001), Riding in Cars with Boys (2001), Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2002), Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003), Fever Pitch (2005), Music and Lyrics (2007), Going the Distance (2010), Big Miracle (2012) and Miss You Already (2015). Barrymore made her directorial debut film Whip It (2009), in which she also starred. She received a SAG Award and a Golden Globe for her performance in Grey Gardens (2009). She starred in the Netflix series, Santa Clarita Diet. Since September 2020, Barrymore has hosted The Drew Barrymore Show, a syndicated talk show.
In 1995, Barrymore and Nancy Juvonen formed the production company Flower Films. They have produced several projects in which Barrymore has starred. In 2013, Barrymore launched a range of cosmetics under the Flower banner, which has grown to include lines in makeup, perfume and eyewear.[2] Her other business ventures include a range of wines[3] and a clothing line.[4] In 2015, Dutton published a collection of Barrymore's autobiographical essays in a book titled Wildflower.[5] Barrymore received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2004.
Drew Blythe Barrymore was born in Culver City, California, to American actor John Drew Barrymore and aspiring actress Jaid Barrymore (born Ildikó Jaid Makó),[6] who was born in a displaced persons camp in Brannenburg, West Germany, to Hungarian World War II refugees.[7] Barrymore is one of four children and has a half-brother, John,[8] who is also an actor. Her parents divorced in 1984, when she was nine years old.[1]
Barrymore was born into an acting family. All of her paternal great-grandparents—Maurice and Georgie Drew Barrymore, Maurice and Mae Costello (née Altschuk)—as well as her paternal grandparents, John Barrymore and Dolores Costello, were actors,[9] with John being arguably the most acclaimed actor of his generation.[1][10] Barrymore is a niece of Diana Barrymore, a grandniece of Lionel Barrymore, Ethel Barrymore, and Helene Costello,[11] and a great-great-granddaughter of Irish-born John and English-born Louisa Lane Drew, all of whom were also actors. She is a great-grandniece of Broadway idol John Drew Jr. and silent film actor, writer, and director Sidney Drew.[12]
Barrymore's godmothers are actress Sophia Loren[13] and Lee Strasberg's widow, Anna Strasberg; Barrymore described her relationship with the latter as one that "would become so important to me as a kid because she was so kind and nurturing."[14] Her godfather is director Steven Spielberg.[15][16][17][18]
Barrymore's first name, Drew, was the maiden name of her paternal great-grandmother Georgie Drew, and her middle name, Blythe, was the surname of the family first used by her great-grandfather Maurice Barrymore.[15] In her 1991 autobiography Little Girl Lost, Barrymore recounted early memories of her abusive father, who left the family when Barrymore was six months old. She and her father never had anything resembling a significant relationship and seldom spoke to each other.[19]
Barrymore grew up on Poinsettia Place in West Hollywood until the age of 7, when she moved to Sherman Oaks. In her 2015 memoir, Wildflower, she says she talks "like a valley girl" because she grew up in Sherman Oaks. She moved back to West Hollywood upon becoming emancipated at 14.[20] Barrymore attended elementary school at Fountain Day School in West Hollywood and Country School.[21]
In the wake of her sudden stardom, Barrymore endured a notoriously troubled childhood. She was a regular at the racy Studio 54 as a young girl, and her nightlife and constant partying became a popular subject with the media. She was placed in rehab at the age of 13,[1][15] and spent 18 months in an institution for the mentally ill.[22] A suicide attempt at 14 put her back in rehab, followed by a three-month stay with singer David Crosby and his wife. The stay was precipitated, Crosby said, because she "needed to be around some people that were committed to sobriety." Barrymore later described this period of her life in her autobiography, Little Girl Lost. After a successful juvenile court petition for emancipation, she moved into her own apartment at the age of 15.[19][10]
Barrymore's professional career began at eleven months, when she auditioned for a dog food commercial. She was nipped by her canine co-star, to which she merely laughed and was hired for the job. After her film debut with a small role in Altered States (1980),[1] she played Gertie in E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982). Spielberg felt that she had the right imagination for her role after she impressed him with a story that she led a punk rock band.[23] E.T. is the highest-grossing film of the 1980s and made her one of the most famous child actors of the time. Barrymore won a Young Artist Award for Best Supporting Actress.[15][24]
In the 1984 horror film adaptation of Stephen King's 1980 novel Firestarter, Barrymore played a girl with pyrokinesis who becomes the target of a secret government agency known as The Shop. The same year, she played a young girl divorcing her famous parents in Irreconcilable Differences, for which she was nominated for her first Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress.[15][25] In a review in the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert stated, "Barrymore is the right actress for this role precisely because she approaches it with such grave calm."[26]
Barrymore endured a troubled youth and continued to act intermittently during the decade. She starred in the 1985 anthology horror film Cat's Eye, also written by King. The film received positive reviews and Barrymore was nominated for a Young Artist Award for Best Leading Young Actress.[27] She starred in the 1989 romantic comedy film See You in the Morning. Vincent Canby of The New York Times criticized the "fashionable phoniness" of the film, but positively singled out Barrymore for her performance.[28] After her twelve-day rehab treatment at ASAP,[29] Barrymore starred in Far from Home (1989) as a teenager who gets stranded with her father in the small town in a remote part of the desert. The film went largely unnoticed by audiences and received negative reviews from critics, who dismissed the sexual portrayal of her role.[30]
In the early 1990s, Barrymore's rebelliousness played itself out on screen and in print. She forged an image as a manipulative teenage seductress, beginning with Poison Ivy (1992), which was a box office failure, but was popular on video and cable.[1][31] Her character "Ivy" was ranked at #6 on the list of the top 26 "bad girls" of all time by Entertainment Weekly.[32] In 1992, Barrymore was 17 when she posed nude with her then-fiancé, actor Jamie Walters, for the cover of the July issue of Interview magazine; she also appeared nude in pictures inside the issue.[33]
In the 1992 crime film Guncrazy, Barrymore played a teenager who kills her sexually abusive stepfather after he teaches her how to use a gun.[25] Variety remarked that she "pulls off impressively" her character,[34] and Barrymore was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for her performance. In 1993, she took on the role of the younger sister of a murdered ballerina in No Place to Hide and starred as a writer followed by what is apparently her evil twin in Doppelganger. Both thrillers were panned by critics and failed to find an audience.[35][36][37] She appeared in the Western comedy Bad Girls (1994), which follows four former prostitutes on the run following a justifiable homicide and prison escape. Roger Ebert, in his review for the film, wrote for Chicago Sun-Times: "What a good idea, to make a Western about four tough women. And what a sad movie."[38]
When Barrymore was 19, she posed nude for the January 1995 issue of Playboy.[39][40] Director Steven Spielberg, who is also her godfather, gave her a quilt for her 20th birthday with a note that read, "Cover yourself up."[15] Enclosed were copies of her Playboy pictures; the pictures had been altered by his art department so that she appeared fully clothed.[41]
During her appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman in 1995, Barrymore climbed onto David Letterman's desk, flashed her breasts to him and gave him a kiss on the cheek as a birthday present.[10] She modeled in a series of Guess? jeans ads during this time.[42]
In Boys on the Side (1995), Barrymore played a pregnant girl who wants to escape from her abusive boyfriend.[43] The film went little-seen in theaters but was positively received by critics.[44] In the same year, she briefly appeared in Joel Schumacher's film Batman Forever, as Sugar, a moll to Two-Face (Tommy Lee Jones).[45][46] In 1996, she made a brief but notable appearance in Wes Craven's slasher Scream. Barrymore read the film's script and was interested in being involved, approaching the production team herself to request a role. The producers were quick to take advantage of her unexpected interest, and signed her to play the lead role of Sidney Prescott, but when she was faced with unexpected commitments, she instead played the smaller role of Casey Becker and the lead role was given to Party of Five star Neve Campbell.[47] Scream was released to critical acclaim and made $173 million worldwide.[48][49] By the mid- and late 1990s, Barrymore re-established her image and continued to be a highly bankable star.[1][50]
In The Wedding Singer (1998), Barrymore played Julia Sullivan, the love interest of Robbie Hart (Adam Sandler).[51] Variety found the film to be a "spirited, funny and warm saga" that serves them up "in a new way that enhances their most winning qualities".[52] Budgeted at $18 million, the film grossed $123.3 million internationally.[53] Barrymore starred in two other 1998 film releases, Home Fries and Ever After.[54] Home Fries saw her play a pregnant woman unknowingly falling for the stepson of the deceased father of her baby. In the romantic drama Ever After, inspired by the fairy tale Cinderella, she took on the leading role; the film, which made $98 million globally,[55] served as a reminder, according to Roger Ebert, of how well "she can hold the screen and involve us in her characters".[56]
Barrymore voiced the title role of an anthropomorphic Jack Russell terrier in the television Christmas special Olive, the Other Reindeer, for which she was nominated for a Primetime Emmy.[57] After establishing Flower Films,[58] Barrymore and Nancy Juvonen produced the company's first film, Never Been Kissed (1999), in which Barrymore played an insecure copy editor for the Chicago Sun-Times enrolling in high school as part of assigned research. While reviews from critics were mixed, CNN noted: "There are two words which describe why this film works: Drew Barrymore. Her comedic timing and willingness to go all out in her quest for a laugh combine to make Never Been Kissed a gratifying movie-going experience".[59] The film was a commercial success, grossing $84.5 million.[60]
In Charlie's Angels (2000), Barrymore, Cameron Diaz and Lucy Liu played the trio of investigators in Los Angeles. The film was a major box office success and helped solidify the standing between Barrymore and the company[clarification needed].[15][61] Barrymore starred in Riding in Cars with Boys (2001), as a teenage mother in a failed marriage with the drug-addicted father (based on Beverly Donofrio's real-life story).[1] When the production of Richard Kelly's Donnie Darko was threatened, Barrymore stepped forward with financing from the company, and played the title character's English teacher. Although the film was less than successful at the box office in the wake of 9/11, it reached cult status after the DVD release, inspiring numerous websites devoted to unraveling the plot twists and meanings.[62]
In 2002, Barrymore starred with Sam Rockwell and Julia Roberts in George Clooney's directorial debut Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, based on the autobiography of television producer Chuck Barris.[63] In 2003, she reprised her role as Dylan Sanders in Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle,[1][61] and starred with Ben Stiller in Duplex. Flower Films and Happy Madison Productions produced 50 First Dates (2004), in which Barrymore took on the role of a woman with short-term memory loss, and who is the love interest of a marine veterinarian (Sandler).[64][65] Summing up Barrymore's appeal, Roger Ebert, in his review for the film, remarked that Barrymore displayed a "smiling, coy sincerity", in what he described as an "ingratiating and lovable" film.[66] 50 First Dates was a commercial success; it made US$120.9 million in North America and US$196.4 million worldwide.[67]
In the American adaptation of the 1997 eponymous British remake Fever Pitch (2005), Barrymore played the love interest of an immature school teacher (Jimmy Fallon). The film grossed a modest US$50 million worldwide and had generally favourable reviews by critics who felt it "has enough charm and on-screen chemistry between [Fallon and Barrymore] to make it a solid hit".[68] She and Hugh Grant starred in Music and Lyrics, which focuses on the relationship that evolves between a former pop music idol and an aspiring writer as they struggle to compose a song for a reigning pop diva. The romantic comedy, released in February 2007, received largely positive reviews, with The Washington Post finding the two to be "great together" in it.[69] The film was a commercial success, grossing US$145 million globally.[70][71]
Barrymore starred in Curtis Hanson's little-seen poker-themed film Lucky You later in 2007, as an aspiring singer and the subject of the affections of a talented poker player,[72][73] and also reunited with Never Been Kissed director Raja Gosnell for the commercial hit Beverly Hills Chihuahua (2008), in which she voiced the titular character, a richly pampered pet who gets dognapped in Mexico and has to escape from an evil Doberman.
In 2009, Barrymore starred in the ensemble comedy He's Just Not That Into You, which received mixed reviews, partly due to her limited time on screen,[74][75][76] while it grossed US$178 million worldwide.[77] She played the lead role of Edith Bouvier Beale, the daughter of Edith Ewing Bouvier Beale (Jessica Lange), in the HBO film Grey Gardens, directed by Michael Sucsy and based on the 1975 documentary of the same name. The television film was a huge success, winning five Primetime Emmy Awards and two Golden Globe Awards. Rolling Stone writer Peter Travels found Barrymore to be a "revelation" in her role.[78] Barrymore received a nomination for the 2009 Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie. She won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film and won the Screen Actors Guild for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Miniseries award.
Barrymore made her directorial debut with the sports dramedy Whip It (2009); she also starred opposite Elliot Page and Marcia Gay Harden in the film, about a high-schooler (Page) who ditches the teen beau
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