This former beauty pageant contestant and
Ford model made her film debut with a non-speaking part as a beautiful
woman fleetingly glimpsed from a moving train in Woody Allen's Stardust
Memories (1980), and thereafter clawed her way to a stardom that has brought
back an old-fashioned, high-octane glamour to the role of "movie star."
Stone, who grew up a bookworm in a large family in Northwest Pennsylvania,
worked her way up from McDonald's counter-girl to successful Ford model
(both in print ads and TV commercials) by the late 1970s.
Through the 1980s, Stone appeared as a stereotypical
blonde in mostly forgettable roles: in Wes Craven's Deadly Blessing (1981);
as a down-and-out waitress turned petulant movie star in Irreconcilable
Differences (1984); an archaeologist's daughter in King Solomon's Mines
(1985) and its sequel, Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold (1987).
Other unmemorable early credits include Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol
(1987), Action Jackson (1988) and the umpteenth remake of Blood and Sand
(1989).
Stone also struggled in TV, beginning with
a tiny part in "Not Just Another Affair" (CBS, 1982), the short-lived series
Bay City Blues (NBC, 1983) and gradually bigger (though not better) roles
in the TV movies "Calendar Girl Murders" (ABC, 1984), "The Vegas Strip
War" (NBC, 1984), the failed cop-show pilot "Hollywood Starr" (ABC, 1985),
"Mr. and Mrs. Ryan" (ABC, 1986), "Badlands 2005" (ABC, 1988) and "Tears
in the Rain" (Showtime, 1988). Probably her only TV success was a supporting
role as Robert Mitchum's daughter-in-law in the epic miniseries War and
Remembrance (ABC, 1988-89).
Stone's first real break was playing Arnold
Schwarzenegger's kick-boxing, secret agent "wife" in Paul Verhoeven's sci-fi
actioner Total Recall (1990). After five more forgettable thrillers and
comedies, she finally achieved the proverbial "overnight" stardom as a
sexually voracious crime writer opposite Michael Douglas in Verhoeven's
controversial and popular erotic thriller, Basic Instinct (1992). Her pantie-less
leg-crossing scene brought Stone much-needed notoriety, but has haunted
her ever since.
In a more conventionally sympathetic role,
Stone followed up with another sizzling sex melodrama, Sliver (1993), which
did middling business stateside but proved a solid success overseas. Trying
to escape the sex-bomb trap, she begged for the frigid wife role in Intersection
(1994), which met with limited success. She again flexed her international
box-office clout paired with Sylvester Stallone in the explosive actioner
The Specialist (1994) but fared much less well commercially with her next
project, The Quick and the Dead (1995), which marked her producing debut.
Stone looked terrific in Western duds playing something of a distaff version
of a Clint Eastwood-like gunfighter. Her directorial choice, Sam Raimi,
helmed the smartly derivative tale with style to spare but the critical
reception was uneven and the public stayed away. She rebounded with her
widely acclaimed performance as Ginger, the Vegas hustler who wins the
heart of Robert De Niro, in Casino (also 1995).
The highly-paid, much-in-demand star (she has
her own production company, Chaos, and has signed a first-look deal with
Miramax) next filmed a remake of the noir classic Diabolique with Isabelle
Adjani and Chazz Palmentieri and played a death-row inmate whose lawyer
(Rob Morrow) works to save her from execution in Last Dance (both 1996).
Stone, a diva who thoroughly enjoys her hard-won stardom, is a clever manipulator
of her public image—on heavy press days, she reportedly changes outfits
between each interview and photo session, a practice unheard of since the
days of Joan Crawford and Norma Shearer. She lives, fittingly enough, in
a gated French chateau in Beverly Hills. |