Heir
to a Hollywood dynasty, child star, prepubescent drug and alcohol abuser,
teenage sexpot, and resurrected vessel of celluloid purity, Drew Barrymore
is nothing if not the embodiment of the rise and fall of Hollywood fortunes,
self-reinvention, and the healing powers of good PR.
The
granddaughter of John Barrymore and grandniece of Ethel Barrymore and
Lionel Barrymore, Barrymore was born in Culver City, California on February
22, 1975. From there, she didn't waste much time getting in front of the
cameras, making her first commercial at nine months and her first television
movie, Suddenly Love, at the age of two. Two years later, she made her
film debut, appearing as William Hurt's daughter in Altered States (1980).
At the advanced age of seven, Barrymore became a true celebrity, thanks
to her role as the cherubic Gertie in Steven Spielberg's E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.
The huge success of that 1982 film endeared Barrymore to millions of audience
members, but following leads in two more films, Irreconcilable Differences
and Firestarter (both 1984), the young actress began to succumb to a destructive
lifestyle defined by drugs, alcohol, and too much partying. A child expected
to behave like an adult, Barrymore began drinking at the age of nine and
started taking drugs a short while later.
Unsurprisingly,
observers began writing Barrymore off as just another failed child star
when she was barely into her teens. She made a string of (largely forgettable)
movies, many of which only reinforced her image as a has-been. However,
in the middle of her teen years, Barrymore entered rehab, cleaned herself
up, and wrote an autobiography, Little Girl Lost, which detailed her travails
with drugs and alcohol. In the early 1990s, she entered another phase
in her career, gaining notoriety for playing a series of vampy, trampy
trailer-park Lolitas. In this capacity, she turned in memorable performances
in Poison Ivy (1992), the 1993 made-for-TV The Amy Fisher Story, and Batman
Forever (1995), all of which featured her pouting seductively and showing
more thigh than all the Rockettes combined. Barrymore's on-screen antics
were ably complemented by the off-screen reputation she was forming at
the time: first she could be seen posing nude with then-boyfriend Jamie
Walters on the cover of Interview magazine, then modeling for a series
of trashy Calvin Klein ads, flashing David Letterman during an appearance
on The Late Show as a "birthday present" to the host, and finally
posing nude for Playboy in 1995.
In
1996, Barrymore's image underwent an abrupt and effective transformation
from slut to sweetheart. With a brief but memorable role in Wes Craven's
Scream and a lead in Woody Allen's Everyone Says I Love You that featured
her as a Kelly Girl for the '90s, Barrymore's career received an adrenaline
shot to the heart. She began working steadily again, and she reshaped
her offscreen persona into that of a delightful and sweet-natured girl
trying to mend her ways. This new image was supported by her screen work,
much of which featured her as a chaste heroine. Her starring role as the
"real" Cinderella in Ever After (1998) was a good example, and
it had the added advantage of turning out to be a fairly solid hit. Barrymore's
other major 1998 film, The Wedding Singer, was another hit, further enhancing
her reputation as America's new sweetheart. The following year, the actress
all but put the final nail in the coffin of her wild-child reputation
of years past, starring as the nerdy, lovelorn twenty-something reporter
who bears the titular condition of Never Been Kissed.
In
2000 Barrymore underwent even another character chance, from sweetheart
to skull-cracker in the much-hyped, Matrix influenced big-screen adaptation
of Charlie's Angels. -- Rebecca Flint, All Movie Guide.