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Biography
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| Real
Name: |
Salma
Hayek-Jimenez
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| Height: |
5'2"
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| Birthplace: |
Coatzacoalcos,
Veracruz, Mexico
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| Date
of Birth: |
September
2, 1966
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| Husband/Partner: |
Still
Dating
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| Personal
Quote: |
"I
keep waiting to meet a man who has
more balls than I do."
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Widely considered to be the first
Mexican actress to become a Hollywood movie star since Dolores Del
Rio, Salma Hayek is known for bringing a fiery presence and
striking, dark-eyed beauty to the screen.
A soap star in her native Mexico,
Hayek risked her entire career to come to L.A., where she
struggled to be taken seriously. Her discovery by director Robert
Rodriguez, who cast her in his 1995 film Desperado, gave Hayek her
breakthrough, and she subsequently gained a reputation as one of
Hollywood's sexiest and busiest actresses.
The daughter of a Spanish mother
and Lebanese father, Hayek was born in Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz,
Mexico, on September 2, 1966. Raised in a devoutly Catholic
family, she was sent to a Louisiana boarding school at the age of
12.
After getting into trouble for
terrorizing the nuns, Hayek returned to Mexico, but she was
eventually sent to Houston, Texas, to live with her aunt, where
she stayed until she was 17.
She subsequently moved to Mexico
City, where she studied International Relations as a university
student, but, to the chagrin of her family, decided to drop out in
order to pursue a career as an actress. Starting out in local
theatre productions, she eventually moved to television and landed
a starring role in the popular soap opera Teresa.
The show's success made Hayek a
celebrity in her native country, but, desiring something more, she
shocked her fans by deciding to quit the show in order to pursue a
career in L.A.
After taking a year to learn
English and study acting with Stella Adler, Hayek got her first
break when Allison Anders cast her in a supporting role in Mi Vida
Loca (1993). The role allowed Hayek to obtain a Screen Actors
Guild card, and after doing so, she continued to audition until
she appeared on a Spanish-language cable access talk show that
happened to count director Robert Rodriguez amongst its viewers.
Rodriguez tracked Hayek down and promptly cast her in Desperado,
his bigger-budget 1995 sequel to El Mariachi.
The film, which also starred Antonio
Banderas, succeeded in giving the actress her own plot on
the Hollywood map, and Rodriguez again demonstrated his faith in
her when he cast her in his next project, the vampire extravaganza
From Dusk Till Dawn (1996).
Unfortunately for Hayek, the film,
which also starred George
Clooney, failed to do as well as expected, and Hayek's
next few projects were similarly lackluster. The Faculty (1998), a
teen thriller that cast Hayek as a teacher who turns into an
alien, was an exception, and Kevin Smith's Dogma (1999), which
featured her as a celestial muse, was fairly successful with
critics and audiences.
Also in 1999, Hayek had a starring
role in what was to be her biggest film to date, Barry
Sonnenfeld's Wild Wild West, which also starred Will
Smith and Kevin
Kline. Unfortunately for all involved, the film was a
turkey.
In 2000, Hayek could be seen in
smaller, edgier ventures, including the independent comedy Chain
of Fools, in which she played a centerfold-turned- cop, and Mike
Figgis' experimental Time Code, which cast her as Jeanne
Tripplehorn's lover. If these films ultimately didn't provide
Hayek with a role that would draw attention to her genuine talent,
this would soon change with the long awaited /biography of tragic
artist Frida Kahlo.
With her role as the epnoymous
character in Frida (2002), Hayek disappeared into her subject so
convincingly that not only would she return to the good graces of
critics, but earn an Oscar nomination as well. ~ Rebecca Flint,
All Movie Guide |
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