Ally Sheedy
About Ally Sheedy
An engaging, attractive, auburn-haired player who rose to prominence in the 1980s, Sheedy was lumped in with fellow actors (and co-stars) Rob Lowe, Emilio Estevez and Molly Ringwald in what was dubbed by critics and journalists as 'the Brat Pack'.
The native New Yorker had already made her mark as a child performer, dancing for eight years (1968-76) with the American Ballet Theatre, and author with the children's book "She Was Nice to Mice" (McGraw-Hill, 1975). The success of the book brought requests from various publications (The New York Times, Village Voice) and while on a promotional tour, Sheedy was approached about acting. At age 15, she made her debut in TV commercials with a spot for Burger King and for the next three years, she alternated between commercials and Off-Off-Broadway productions.
Moving to L.A. to attend USC, Sheedy began to land roles in TV-movies and specials ("The Best Little Girl in the World" ABC, 1981; "I Think I'm Having a Baby" CBS, 1981). She first gained attention as a teasing Catholic schoolgirl who catches the attention of one of the cops on the NBC series "Hill Street Blues" (1983). That same year she made her film debut as Sean Penn's loyal girlfriend in the delinquent youth drama, "Bad Boys", and co-starred as Matthew Broderick's friend who becomes entangled in "WarGames". Sheedy went on to play one of the detentioners in "The Breakfast Club" and Gene Hackman's daughter in "Twice in a Lifetime" (both 1985). She displayed her comic abilities as a Cinderella-inspired character in the little-seen "Maid to Order" (1987) and as Molly Ringwald's cop sister in Alan Alda's "Betsey's Wedding" (1990).
Sheedy's feature output slowed somewhat in the 90s as the quality of her vehicles declined. But she rebounded with a strong turn as a fortyish photographer coping with addictions who falls in love with a young magazine staffer in the acclaimed indie "High Art" (1998). Building on her renewed credibility in the indie world, the actress offered terrific turns as lovelorn women in "Sugar Town" and "I'll Take You There" (both 1999), displaying a sexy charisma and off-kilter comic presence. Her much-touted return to the stage, however, as the first female to undertake the lead role of the German-born transsexual rock singer in "Hedwig and the Angry Inch" in late 1999 proved ill-fated. Still, her career resurgence continued into the new millennium with the lead in the Americanized "The Governor" (TNT, 2000), Lynda LaPlante's reworking of the British series about a female prison warden.
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| David Lansbury | husband | born on February 25, 1961; son of producer Edgar Lansbury and nephew of actress Angela Lansbury; married on October 10, 1992 |
| Rebecca Lansbury | daughter | born in 1994 |
| John Sheedy | father | divorced from Sheedy's mother c. 1971 |
| Charlotte Sheedy | mother | divorced from Sheedy's father c. 1971; came out as a lesbian to Sheedy c. 1980 |
| Meghan Sheedy | sister | |
| Patrick Sheedy | brother |
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Eric Stoltz | companion | lived together in the early 1980s |
| Richie Sambora | companion | dated briefly in the late 1980s |
| Contributed to The New York Times, Village Voice, Ms. magazine | |
| Danced with American Ballet Theatre (ABT) from ages six to 14 | |
| 1973 | Made professional debut with ABT |
| 1974 | Wrote best-selling children's book, "She Was Nice to Mice," at age 12 |
| 1977 | Began appearing in TV commercials at age 15; first one was for "Burger King" |
| 1981 | First TV appearances, "The Best Little Girl in the World", "The Day the Loving Stopped" and "I Want to Have My Baby" |
| 1983 | Film acting debut, "Bad Boys" |
| 1983 | Played recurring role of Catholic high school girl on "Hill Street Blues" |
| 1984 | First film with Rob Lowe "Oxford Blues" |
| 1991 | Made Off-Broadway acting debut in "Advice From a Caterpillar" |
| 1998 | Had best screen role in years as a drug-addicted photography in "High Art" |
| 1999 | Cast as a repressed Hollywood production designer in "Sugar Town" |
| 1999 | Returned to the Off-Broadway stage in the title role of a transsexual rock singer in "Hedwig and the Angry Inch" |
| 1999 | Turned in a delightful comic turn as a distressed woman in the romantic comedy "I'll Take You There"; screened at Telluride |
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Quick Facts
Also known as
Birth Name : Alexandra Sheedy
Born
1962-06-13 00:00:00.0 in New York, New York
Education
- Bank Street School, New York, New York
- Ecole Francaise, New York, New York
- University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California
- Columbia Grammar and Prepatory School, New York, New York
Professions
actor, writer