Elisabeth Shue (born October 6, 1963) is an American film actress.
Biography
Elisabeth was born in Wilmington, Delaware. Her mother, Anne Harms (née
Wells), was a bank executive who was the vice president of the private
division of the Chemical Banking Corporation. Her father, James Shue, is a
lawyer and real estate developer who was the president of the International
Food and Beverage Corporation and was active in Republican politics, having
once unsuccessfully run for the U.S. Senate in New Jersey. Her younger
brother, Andrew, is also an actor.
Elisabeth grew up in Bergen and Essex counties in New Jersey. Her parents
divorced while she was in the fourth grade. Elisabeth graduated from
Columbia High School, in Maplewood, New Jersey, and attended Wellesley
College and Harvard University, from which she withdrew to pursue her acting
career. Elisabeth Shue returned to Harvard to finish her degree in
Government in 2000. Elisabeth was awarded entrance into Columbia High
School's Wall of Fame in 1994, along with her brother, the actor Andrew
Shue.
During her studies at Columbia and after her parents' divorce, she found a
way to make extra money by acting in television commercials. Elisabeth
became a common sight in ads for Burger King, DeBeers diamonds, and
Hellman's mayonnaise.

After having turned down the role of Deborah Gelly in Sergio Leone's final
film, Once Upon a Time in America, her first movie role happened in 1984,
when she co-starred in The Karate Kid as the onscreen girlfriend of Ralph
Macchio and had a role as the teenage daughter of a military family in the
short-lived series Call to Glory. She continued with Adventures in
Babysitting (her first starring role), Cocktail as the love interest of Tom
Cruise and the comedies Soapdish and The Marrying Man. Elisabeth Shue also
appeared in Back to the Future Part II and Back to the Future Part III as
Jennifer Parker, replacing original actress Claudia Wells, who declined to
reprise the role from Back to the Future due to a family illness.
Elisabeth Shue, 2007.Although often recognized for her girl next door image,
Elisabeth starred as a prostitute in the 1995 film Leaving Las Vegas with
Nicolas Cage. The role earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.
She was also nominated for a BAFTA, Golden Globe and SAG Award for Best
Actress, and won the Best Actress awards at the Independent Spirit Awards,
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards and the National Society of Film
Critics Awards.
Since then, Elisabeth Shue has starred in The Trigger Effect, The Saint,
Woody Allen's Deconstructing Harry, Palmetto, and Hollow Man. In 1999,
Elisabeth starred in Molly as an autistic young woman, who underwent an
operation that allowed her to become more "normal." She had strong
supporting roles in Hide and Seek opposite Robert De Niro and Mysterious
Skin. Elisabeth reportedly was set to co-star with Jim Carrey in The Number
23 but became pregnant just weeks before filming and ended up losing the
part to Virginia Madsen.
In 2007, Elisabeth and her two brothers produced Gracie. She had a role in
the film, which is set in 1978 and loosely based upon Elisabeth's own
experiences as the only girl on a boys soccer team.
In 2008, Elisabeth starred in Hamlet 2 as a fictionalized version of
herself; in the film, she has quit acting to become a nurse and is the
favorite actress of Dana Marschz (played by Steve Coogan).
Known among her friends and family as, "Lisa," Elisabeth is married to Davis
Guggenheim, director of the HBO TV series Deadwood, An Inconvenient Truth
and Gracie. Their son, Miles William, was born on November 11, 1997. She
gave birth to her first daughter, Stella Street, on March 19, 2001. Her
third child, Agnes Charles, was born on June 18, 2006.
Elisabeth Shue's son's middle name was in honor of her second brother
William, who died in 1988 at the age of 26 from a swimming accident while on
family vacation.
This Elisabeth Shue Biography Page is Copyright © 2004 - 2009 Chuck Ayoub