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The granddaughter of John Barrymore and
grandniece of Ethel Barrymore and Lionel Barrymore, Barrymore was
born in Culver City, California on February 22, 1975. From there,
she didn't waste much time getting in front of the cameras,
making her first commercial at nine months and her first
television movie, Suddenly Love, at the age of two. Two years
later, she made her film
debut, appearing as William Hurt's daughter in Altered
States (1980). At the advanced age of seven, Barrymore became a
true celebrity, thanks to her role as the cherubic Gertie in
Steven Spielberg's E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial. The huge success
of that 1982 film endeared Barrymore to millions of audience
members, but following leads in two more films, Irreconcilable
Differences and Firestarter (both 1984), the young actress began
to succumb to a destructive lifestyle defined by drugs, alcohol,
and too much partying. A child expected to behave like an adult,
Barrymore began drinking at the age of nine and started taking
drugs a short while later.
Unsurprisingly, observers began writing Barrymore off as just
another failed child star when she was barely into her teens. She
made a string of (largely forgettable) movies, many of which only
reinforced her image as a has-been. However, in the middle of her
teen years, Barrymore entered rehab, cleaned herself up, and
wrote an autobiography, Little Girl Lost, which detailed her
travails with drugs and alcohol. In the early 1990s, she entered
another phase in her career, gaining notoriety for playing a
series of vampy, trampy trailer-park Lolitas. In this capacity,
she turned in memorable performances in Poison Ivy (1992), the
1993 made-for-TV The Amy Fisher Story, and Batman Forever (1995),
all of which featured her pouting seductively and showing more
thigh than all the Rockettes combined. Barrymore's on-screen
antics were ably complemented by the off-screen reputation she
was forming at the time: first she could be seen posing nude with
then-boyfriend Jamie Walters on the cover of Interview magazine,
then modeling for a series of racy Guess ads, flashing David
Letterman during an appearance on The Late Show as a "birthday
present" to the host, and finally posing nude for Playboy in
1995.
In 1996, Barrymore's image underwent an abrupt and effective
transformation from slut to sweetheart. With a brief but
memorable role in Wes Craven's Scream and a lead in Woody Allen's
Everyone Says I Love You that featured her as a Kelly Girl for
the '90s, Barrymore's career received an adrenaline shot to the
heart. She began working steadily again, and she reshaped her
offscreen persona into that of a delightful and sweet-natured
girl trying to mend her ways. This new image was supported by her
screen work, much of which featured her as a chaste heroine. Her
starring role as the "real" Cinderella in Ever After (1998)
was a good example, and it had the added advantage of turning out
to be a fairly solid hit. Barrymore's other major 1998 film, The
Wedding Singer, was another hit, further enhancing her reputation
as America's new sweetheart. The following year, the actress all
but put the final nail in the coffin of her wild-child reputation
of years past, starring as the nerdy, lovelorn twenty-something
reporter who bears the titular condition of Never Been Kissed.
That movie not only marked a notable transition in Barrymore's
reputation, but an advancement in her cinematic career as well.
Expanding her
role
from actress to producer, Barrymore would continue starring in
and producing such efforts as Charlie's Angels (2000), Donnie
Darko (2001).
Though some may have suspected that her millenial transition from
sweetheart to skull-cracker in Charlie's Angels may have
signalled a shift towards more action oriented roles, Barrymore
once again charmed audiences with another emotional comedy,
Riding in Cars With Boys in 2001.
Though some may have suspected that her millennial transition
from sweetheart to skull-cracker in Charlie's Angels may have
signaled a shift towards more action oriented roles -- and
despite her return to the role in Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle
(2003) -- Barrymore once again charmed audiences with another
emotional comedy, Riding in Cars With Boys in 2001, while
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2002) found Drew in the role of
long-suffering girlfriend alongside Sam Rockwell's unlikely CIA
operative. Though the film did not fare particularly well
critically or otherwise, Barrymore took a nonetheless interesting
turn as an apple-pie wife turned sinister in 2003's Duplex, and
held her own against scene-chomper Ben Stiller. Barrymore teamed
up with fellow Stiller-flick alumni Owen Wilson for 2004's Date
School, and once again plays Adam Sandler's sugar sweet
girlfriend in director Peter Segal's romantic comedy Fifty-First
Dates. Rebecca Flint, All Movie Guide