
| Born: | 27 February 1930 |
| Birthplace: | Thomasville, Georgia, USA |
| Spouse: | Paul Newman (1958–2008) |
| Academyawards: | Best Actress 1957 The Three Faces of Eve |
| Baftaawards: | Best Actress in a Leading Role 1973 Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams |
| Emmyawards: | Outstanding Lead Actress - Miniseries/Movie 1978 See How She Runs 1985 Do You Remember Love Outstanding Informational Special 1990 American Masters: Broadway's Dreamers: The Legacy of the Group Theatre |
| Goldenglobeawards: | Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama 1958 The Three Faces of Eve 1969 Rachel, Rachel Best Actress - Miniseries/TV Movie 1995 Breathing Lessons |
| Sagawards: | Life Achievement Award 1986 Lifetime Achievement Outstanding Actress - Miniseries/TV Movie 1994 Breathing Lessons |
| Awards: | NBR Award for Best Actress 1957 The Three Faces of Eve ; No Down Payment NYFCC Award for Best Actress 1968 Rachel, Rachel 1973 Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams 1990 Mr. and Mrs. Bridge Best Actress Award - Cannes Film Festival 1973 The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds |
Joanne Gignilliat Trimmier Woodward (born February 27, 1930) is an American Academy Award-, Golden Globe-, Emmy and Cannes award-winning actress. Woodward, widow of Paul Newman, is also a television and theatrical producer.
Woodward was born in Thomasville, Georgia, daughter of Elinor Gignilliat (née Trimmier) and Wade Woodward, Jr., who at one point was vice president of publisher Charles Scribner's Sons.[1] [2] Her middle name, "Gignilliat", originates from distant Huguenot ancestry.[3] She was influenced to become an actress by her mother's love of movies.[3] Her mother named her after Joan Crawford, using the Southern pronunciation of the name - "Joanne".[3] Attending the premiere of Gone with the Wind in Atlanta, nine-year-old Woodward rushed out into the parade of stars and sat on the lap of Laurence Olivier, star Vivien Leigh's husband. She eventually worked with Olivier in 1979, in a television production of Come Back, Little Sheba.
Woodward lived in Thomasville until she was in the second grade. Her family relocated to Marietta, Georgia. They moved once again when she was a junior in high school, after her parents divorced.[3] She graduated from Greenville High School in 1947, in Greenville, South Carolina. Woodward won many beauty contests as a teenager. She appeared in theatrical productions at Greenville High and in Greenville's Little Theatre, playing Laura Wingfield in their staging of The Glass Menagerie directed by Robert Hemphill McLane. She returned to Greenville in 1976 to play Amanda Wingfield in another Little Theatre production of The Glass Menagerie. She had also returned in 1955 for the premiere of her debut movie, Count Three And Pray, at the Paris Theatre on North Main Street. She majored in drama at Louisiana State University, where she was an initiate of Chi Omega sorority, then headed to New York City to perform on the stage.[3]
Woodward's first film was a post-Civil War western Count Three and Pray, in 1955. She continued to move between Hollywood and Broadway, eventually, understudying in the New York production of Picnic which featured Paul Newman.[3] The two were married in 1958 after their work together in the film The Long, Hot Summer. By that time, Woodward had starred in The Three Faces of Eve, for which she won the Academy Award for Best Actress.[3]
She appeared with her late husband, Paul Newman, in ten featured films:
Both appeared in the HBO miniseries Empire Falls but had no scenes together.
She starred in five films that Newman directed or produced but did not star in:
Woodward has continued to act, in such films as Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams and Philadelphia (1993) in which she played the mother to Tom Hanks' character[3] , and in television. She also appeared in the television films Sybil, opposite Sally Field, and Crisis at Central High. She was the narrator for Martin Scorsese's screen version of The Age of Innocence.
She has produced, co-produced and directed a number of TV programs. Woodward is the artistic director of the Westport Country Playhouse.[3]
Joanne had been briefly engaged to author Gore Vidal prior to marrying Paul Newman. She shared a house with Vidal in Los Angeles for a short time and remained friends. Woodward married Paul Newman on January 29, 1958. They had three daughters: Elinor Teresa (1959; known on screen as Nell Potts and generally as Nell Newman), Melissa "Lissy" Stewart (1961), and Claire "Clea" Olivia (1965). She lives in Westport, Connecticut, but, along with her late husband, has been extremely private about her personal life. Newman occasionally ventured to California, but Woodward refused to go west for many years. Her husband died of cancer on September 26, 2008, aged 83. Woodward also has two grandchildren.
In 1990, she was graduated from Sarah Lawrence College alongside her daughter, Clea.[3]
| Year | Film | Role | Other notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1955 | Count Three and Pray | Lissy | ||
| 1956 | A Kiss Before Dying | Dorothy ('Dorie') Kingship | ||
| rowspan=2 | 1957 | The Three Faces of Eve | Eve White / Eve Black / Jane | Academy Award for Best Actress
|
| No Down Payment | Leola Boone | Nominated - BAFTA Award | ||
| rowspan=2 | 1958 | The Long, Hot Summer | Clara Varner | |
| Rally 'Round the Flag, Boys! | Grace Oglethorpe Bannerman | |||
| rowspan=2 | 1959 | The Sound and the Fury | Quentin Compson/Narrator | |
| The Fugitive Kind | Carol Cutrere | |||
| 1960 | From the Terrace | Mary St. John/Mrs. Alfred Eaton | ||
| 1961 | Paris Blues | Lillian Corning | ||
| rowspan=2 | 1963 | The Stripper | Lila Green | |
| A New Kind of Love | Samantha (Sam) Blake/Mimi | Nominated - Golden Globe | ||
| 1964 | Signpost to Murder | Molly Thomas | ||
| rowspan=2 | 1966 | A Big Hand for the Little Lady | Mary | |
| A Fine Madness | Rhoda Shillitoe | |||
| 1968 | Rachel, Rachel | Rachel Cameron | Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress; Golden Globe; Nominated - BAFTA Award | |
| 1969 | Winning | Elora Capua | ||
| 1970 | WUSA | Geraldine | ||
| rowspan=2 | 1971 | They Might Be Giants | Dr. Mildred Watson | |
| All the Way Home | Mary Follet | TV | ||
| 1972 | The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds | Beatrice | Nominated - Golden Globe | |
| 1973 | Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams | Rita Walden | Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress; Nominated - Golden Globe | |
| 1975 | The Drowning Pool | Iris Devereaux | ||
| 1976 | Sybil | Dr. Cornelia Wilbur | TV; Nominated - Emmy Award | |
| 1977 | Come Back, Little Sheba | Lola Delaney | TV | |
| rowspan=3 | 1978 | See How She Runs | Betty Quinn | TV; Emmy Award |
| The End | Jessica Lawson | |||
| A Christmas to Remember | Mildred McCloud | TV | ||
| 1979 | The Streets of L.A. | Carol Schramm | TV | |
| 1980 | The Shadow Box | Beverly | TV | |
| 1981 | Crisis at Central High | Elizabeth Huckaby | TV; Nominated - Emmy Award; Nominated - Golden Globe | |
| 1982 | Candida | Candida | TV | |
| rowspan=2 | 1984 | Harry & Son | Lilly | |
| Passions | Catherine Kennerly | TV | ||
| 1985 | Do You Remember Love | Barbara Wyatt-Hollis | TV; Emmy Award; Nominated - Golden Globe | |
| 1986 | Women - for America, for the World | Short documentary | ||
| 1987 | The Glass Menagerie | Amanda Wingfield | ||
| 1990 | Mr. and Mrs. Bridge | India Bridge | Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress; Nominated - Golden Globe | |
| rowspan=4 | 1993 | Foreign Affairs | Vinnie Miner | TV |
| Blind Spot | Nell Harrington | TV; Nominated - Emmy Award | ||
| The Age of Innocence | Narrator (voice) | |||
| Philadelphia | Sarah Beckett | |||
| 1994 | Breathing Lessons | Maggie Moran | TV; Golden Globe; Nominated - Emmy Award | |
| 1996 | Even If a Hundred Ogres... | Narrator (voice) | ||
| 2005 | Empire Falls | Francine Whiting | TV; Nominated - Emmy Award; Nominated - Golden Globe | |
In 1958, Woodward won the Academy Award for Best Actress for The Three Faces of Eve.[3] She was also nominated for Best Actress in 1969 for Rachel, Rachel, in 1974 for Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams, and in 1991 for Mr. and Mrs. Bridge. She was also named Best Actress at the Cannes Film Festival in 1974 for her performance in The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds.
Woodward won two Emmy Awards for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or TV Movie, for See How She Runs (1978) as a divorced teacher who trains for a marathon, and in Do You Remember Love? (1985) as a professor who begins to suffer from Alzheimer's disease. She has been nominated an additional five times for her roles on television.
On February 9, 1960, Joanne Woodward became the first performer to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 6801 Hollywood Blvd.