..The Real Karen Black ..
KAREN BLACK was born Karen Ziegler in 1945, and is the second daughter of Norman and Elsie Ziegler. She was raised in the Midwest in Park Ridge, Illinois. Karen's mother Elsie Reif Ziegler, was an award winning novelist, her grandfather was the renowned Arthur Ziegler, first violinist for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Seemingly born to write, her best aptitude may have been for the English language. In her fourth grade tests, she was reading and constructing sentences at Sophomore High School level. Tiring of high school, she managed to enter College by taking equivalency exams at the age of sixteen. Not only did she qualify, she rated so high that she had only one class in English required of her for college completion.
Karen followed neither inherent aptitude, however,(at least, not for a while) but turned her back on music and the written word and even college - and abruptly left for New York city and life on the stage at age seventeen, never dreaming she would end up in the movies. She wasn't long in New York before Karen hooked up with Joseph Papp , and did Shakespeare in the Park and also Olivia in "Twelfth Night" at Papp's off Broadway Heckshire House. After appearing in a few off-Broadway plays as well, she landed a lead on Broadway in the play by Mary Drayton, "The Playroom," playing an angry, jealous fifteen year old. For this role, Karen was nominated best actress for a Drama Circle Critics award. She also met and fell in love with Canadian actor PETER KASTNER, the lead in the play.
Karen was seen in "The Playroom" by someone helping FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA who put together his master's thesis, which Francis had decided would be a film entitled, "You're a Big Boy Now." Karen and Peter were requested to go meet with college student Francis Coppola and they each got the leads in Coppola's first film shot in New York City.
One of Karen's friends, even in those sixties years in New York, was HENRY JAGLOM. Henry asked if his agent friend, Kevin Casselman, wouldn't like to fly into New York to see Karen in the play. Mr. Casselman did and signed her with his L.A. agency at lunch the next day. So Karen was bound for Los Angeles.
First she did another Broadway show for Mr. Anthony - "Happily Never After." Then she arrived in Hollywood to live in a tiny bungalow on Hayworth Avenue with her five cats. Ironically, that bungalow was exactly the same kind as that in which lived Faye Greener, Karen's character in "Day of the Locust."
Now in L.A., and looking about fifteen years old, Karen was sent up for and got many TV guest shot appearances, mainly as virgins on wagon trains, or virgins victimized by a crime ring, or virgins from outer space.
One bright day, at the Old World Restaurant on the Sunset Strip, Henry Jaglom introduced her to JACK NICHOLSON. Soon after, she got a call saying that a friend of Jack's, Bert Schneider, would like Karen to meet someone named DENNIS HOPPER, for a film he was making, "Easy Rider." She thought Dennis was a fabulously spontaneous actor and couldn't wait to work with him. They guaranteed her $300 dollars, but her agent was out of town. So Karen went to Mr. Casselman's agency and typed up a contract for herself! She then went to New Orleans for one of the most tumultuous professional experiences of her life. Convinced that the shoot was too extraordinary to result in any movie she could be proud of, Karen kept it off her resume for the two years that it took "Easy Rider" to be released - to become the surprise blockbuster that it was! Soon after, BOB RAFELSON asked that Karen audition for the part of Rayette, in "Five Easy Pieces". She got the part which led to an ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONand her first GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD.
Karen's next few years were filled with fine roles in fine films: ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S last film "Family Plot", ROBERT ALTMAN'S "Nashville," and "Airport 75" for Universal Studios, "The Great Gatsby" (her second Golden Globe) by the legendary late JACK CLAYTON, "Day of the Locust"(nominated for a Golden Globe) for JOHN SCHLESSINGER, and so forth. Three films for the brilliant Czech director, IVAN PASSER, and two horror pics for DAN CURTIS, the extraordinary science fiction director: "Trilogy in Terror" and "Burnt Offerings". Jack Nicholson also took her to meet MIKE NICHOLS for a part that she simply wasn't buxom enough to get.
Even during the shooting of "Burnt Offerings", Karen was pregnant. When the baby came, she took off from show business, not putting any attention on her career, but instead, on family matters. She is from a Midwestern family, not one of whom have ever been in show business, and she had no sophistication in the workings of Hollywood. Taking what came, in order to support her family, she often took the wrong films in an almost unbelievable absence of common sense. In the early eighties, out of that marriage, and with her son Hunter- a well known child star of the eighties, (Paris Texas, Invaders from Mars) she entered another era of better work: Robert Altman's "Come back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean" and Henry Jaglom's "Can She Bake a Cherry Pie?" And MICHEAL RAEBURN'S critically acclaimed "The Grass is Singing" adapted from the African novel by Doris Lessing.
In the late eighties, Karen took off from the business again, and had her second family. This time the whole thing worked. She's been with STEPHEN ECKLEBERRY for many years, and their beautiful daughter, Celine has just started art college.
When Celine became old enough not to need so much attention, Karen went back to her work, now including writing in her goals. She starred in "Crime Time" for George Sluizer with Steve Baldwin, wrote the film, "Movies, Money, Murder" starring Martin Mull and Lainie Kazan, played two parts in the Sundance film, "Conceiving Ada", did her first one-woman show "A View from the Heart", and continued her work ceaselessly, sometimes doing as many as ten independent features a year. Noteworthy amongst them have been:
-George Hickenlooper's "Dogtown", for which she won Best Actress at Hermosa Beach film Festival, l998.
-Ron Cosentino's "Fallen Arches" for which she won best actress at Chicago Alt Film Festival, l998.
-"Karen Black, Actress at Work", (2000) a documentary by director Kerry Feltham, winner Special Jury Prize Cannes and Berlin.
-"Charades", which she co-wrote and produced, Official Selection for the Austin Film Festival, Santa Monica Film Festival, and the upcoming Nashville Film Festival.
-Karen wrote the short ,"Going Home" winner of the Golden Plaque, Chicago International Film Festival, 1997.
-Co-starred in "Mascara" for Linda Kandel, new superstar Indie director "Men" for which Karen received great reviews as did the film which she co-wrote, starring Sean Young and John Herd. "Sugar" a comedy by James Frey, with Danny Nucci.
-April 15, 2000, "Red Dirt" the story of coming to peace with oneself, a gay coming of age film was an Official Selection of the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival. The film has also been selected for the Seattle Film Festival. Miss Black has said that this part now, a lyrical beautifully written part of a Southern woman too afraid of life to leave her room, is the best part she may ever have had.
ROB ZOMBIE'S horror film for Universal, "House of a Thousand Corpses."
-Karen continues to write, and is very proud of her new show MY LIFE FOR A SONG. She has several movies coming out, including the wonderful "Bluetooth Virgin," Directed by Russell Brown, which one a top award at the Seattle Film Festival and due out this fall.
She is working on getting "Deep Purple," her screenplay which was accepted at Robert Redford's Sundance Screenwriter's Lab in Utah, into production next year.
FILMS IN THE LAST TWO YEARS:
Henry Jaglom's "Hollywood Dreams" starring stunning newcomer Tanna Frederick, Justin Kirk of "Angels Over America" fame and David Proval.
"Suffering Man's Charity" a film by one of the brightest stars on the world horizon, ALAN CUMMING , which stars Karen along with Anne Heche, Carrie Fisher and David Boreanaz in what Karen describes as "a part you would give your eye teeth for, if you haven't already lost them."
"Watercolors" a coming of age gay film by David Oliveras, with Greg Louganis, four time gold medalist, and David Siqueiros' film ,"One Long NIght" with Alison Eastwood ( Clint's daughter), Jon Seda and Ed Begley, Jr.
"Read You Like a Book", with Danny Glover and Lorenzo Pisoni will open the prestigious Mill Valley Film Festival this September and -completed only a few weeks ago- Mr. Jaglom's next enterprise, "Irene In Time" coming out next year.
Karen says she is very proud of her work in these six films - a fascinating panorama of characters -from an overbearing acting teacher in Jaglom's "Hollywoood Dreams" to a drugged nymphomaniac in the Alan Cumming movie to the most endearing librarian you would ever want to meet in veteran director Robert Zagone's, "Read You like a Book"!
Next up?
Karen is starring in the critically aclaimed play "Missouri Waltz" which she wrote, in Macon Georgia with producer Tony Long - an endearing tragedy about the travails of two ghosts trying their damnedest to save the old home in which they have always "lived" from destruction. Harriet Schock has written the music!
Music
CHECK OUT MY BLOG AT: www.karenblackactress.blogspot.com
Contact:
My Agent's website:
http://www.atalentagency.com/brianmccabe.html
KAREN BLACK's Details
Status:
Married
Here for:
Networking, Friends
Orientation:
Straight
Body type:
Slim / Slender
Ethnicity:
White / Caucasian
Religion:
Other
Zodiac Sign:
Cancer
Smoke / Drink:
No / Yes
Children:
Proud parent
Occupation:
Actor, Writer, Singer, Songwriter
KAREN BLACK is in your extended network. Posted at 7:23 PM Jan 22, 2008 view more
About me: WATCH THE TRAILER FROM THE BLUE TOOTH VIRGIN
http://www.thebluetoothvirg...
Two writers must face a dilemma that is common to anyone who has ever had an artistic friend: What happens when you have to give feedback, and the news isnt good?
http://www.thebluetoothvirg... Two writers must face a dilemma that is common to anyone who has ever had an artistic friend: What happens when you have to give feedback, and the news isnt good?
PREMIERE OF MY NEW ONE-WOMAN SHOW
IN TORONTO!
My new one-woman show is about lives; the lives of the characters I have found inside of songs, the characters I have found I've admired in American literature, and some of the life that I have lived as well. Accompanying me for songs and the musical director of the show is the one and only Tracy Stark. For those of you who have seen my award-winning one-woman show before, this is something new.
Who I'd like to meet: WATCH A VIDEO I DID WITH CASS MCCOMBS!