.Information - Biography.
Rene was born on
February 17, 1954 in a low-income neighborhood in Burbank, California
and she was raised by her single mother.With sparkling blue eyes,
exquisite cheekbones and a sassy, down-to-earth attitude, Rene Russo has
parlayed a successful modeling career into an equally prosperous acting
one. While still a high school student, she caught the attention of
agent John Crosby who arranged a contract with modeling diva Nina
Blanchard. Russo was an immediate success and became one of the top
models of the 1970s and early 80s, appearing on the covers of many
fashion magazines including Vogue and Harper's Bazaar. Russo moved to
the Eileen Ford Agency where she worked with top photographers like
Richard Avedon and Francesco Scavullo and went on to be featured
prominently in a series of print ads and commercials for Revlon.
Segueing to acting in the mid-80s, Russo landed the role of Eden,
literary agent and romantic interest of the title character, on the
short-lived adventure series "Sable" (ABC, 1987-88). It marked the first
of many seemingly thankless wife of "girlfriend" roles that she went on
to play, like her feature debut in David S Ward's baseball comedy "Major
League" (1989) as a librarian reluctant to rekindle a romance with Tom
Berenger. She played spouse to James Belushi in "Mr. Destiny" (1990) and
Michael Keaton in "One Good Cop" (1991) before landing the career-making
role of Detective Lorna Cole in Richard Donner's "Lethal Weapon 3"
(1992). As the no-nonsense Internal Affairs officer who blossoms when
she interacts with Riggs (Mel Gibson) and Murtaugh (Danny Glover), Russo
displayed not only her acting ability but her facility as an action
heroine. Her romantic scenes with Gibson were both humorous (they
compare battle scars) and sensual. Their onscreen chemistry led to a
reunion as the concerned parents of a kidnapped child in "Ransom" (1996)
and the unnecessary but inevitable "Lethal Weapon 4" (1998).
While she was clearly capable of more, Russo seemed content to rest in
the niche of playing strong women who took a back seat to men like her
competent Secret Service agent (and romantic interest for Clint
Eastwood) in Wolfgang Petersen's "In the Line of Fire" (1993) and her
ex-wife and fellow scientist opposite Dustin Hoffman in the thriller
"Outbreak" (1995). Barry Sonnenfeld gave her a slight change-of-pace,
casting her as a B-movie actress with a penchant for blonde wigs and
tight skirts in "Get Shorty" (also 1995). That Russo managed to hold her
own against such powerful screen presences as John Travolta, Danny
DeVito and Gene Hackman, as well as displayed impeccable comic timing
brought her critical praise. Continuing on a similar theme, she lent her
sexy presence to the role of a small-town shrink caught between a golf
pro (Don Johnson) and his buddy (Kevin Costner) in Ron Shelton's breezy
but lightweight "Tin Cup" (1996).
Russo finally headlined a film, the biopic "Buddy" (1997), in which she
essayed the real-life eccentric millionaire Gertrude Lintz who raised a
menagerie on her estate. While she delivered a fine performance, the old
adage about working with children and animals proved truthful: most of
the actors were upstaged by the chimpanzees dressed like humans and the
titular gorilla, Gertrude's favorite of her "collection.” Critics panned
the film and audiences stayed away—her attempt to carry a film and prove
her bankability failed.
Still sexy and vital in her mid-40s, Russo confounded Hollywood
stereotypes by delivering her most accomplished performance as an
insurance investigator who romances the prime suspect in an art theft in
the remake of "The Thomas Crown Affair" (1999). At first concerned over
the required nudity and the frank sexuality of the character, the
devoutly Christian actress reportedly prayed before accepting the role
("I don't know where in the Bible it says 'Don't be nude in motion
pictures.'"). At the director's insistence, Russo also adopted a more
sophisticated look, cropping her hair and dyeing it red as well as
wearing a sleek wardrobe. Her onscreen chemistry with co-star Pierce
Brosnan (abetted by several steamy love scenes) helped to impress
reviewers and audiences, winning her new fans. Russo followed with
another sultry female, Natasha Fatale, in the mixed live action-animated
feature "The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle" (2000).
After the embarrassment of “Rocky and Bullwinkle,” Russo took another
misstep with the limp action comedy “Showtime” (2002), playing the
producer of a reality show that pairs a showboating actor (Eddie Murphy)
and an old-school cop (Robert De Niro). She then played an unhappy
housewife with an unhappy daughter (Zooey Deschanel) in “Big Trouble”
(2002), a ensemble comedy about a group of people brought together by a
suitcase nuke at a Miami airport. The feature languished for six months
because of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 and was finally
released with little fanfare or audience attendance—something about
bombs and hijacked airplanes kept people away. Russo spent a few years
away from film, but returned in 2005 to star alongside Al Pacino and
Matthew McConaughey in “Two For the Money,” a gambling drama about a
college basketball player (McConaughey) turned to sports wagering after
being groomed by a consultant (Pacino) who notices his knack for
predicting the right outcome for games.
She then starred opposite Dennis Quaid in the romantic comedy, “Yours,
Mine and Ours” (2005), a remake of the 1968 Lucille Ball-Henry Fonda
comedy about two high school sweethearts who reunite after the deaths of
their spouses and rush to get married only to discover their children
hate the new arrangement.