Laura Linney

American actress
Also known as: Laura Leggett Linney
Quick Facts
In full:
Laura Leggett Linney
Born:
February 5, 1964, New York, New York, U.S. (age 61)
Awards And Honors:
Emmy Award (2013)
Emmy Award (2008)
Emmy Award (2004)
Emmy Award (2002)
Emmy Award (2013): Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie
Emmy Award (2008): Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie
Emmy Award (2004): Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series
Emmy Award (2002): Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie
Golden Globe Award (2011): Best Actress in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy
Golden Globe Award (2009): Best Actress in a Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television
Married To:
David Adkins (1995–2000)
Marc Schauer (2009–present)
Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
"King of the Hill" (2002)
"BoJack Horseman" (2018)
"Lush" (1999)
"Inside Amy Schumer" (2016)
"The City of Your Final Destination" (2009)
"Arthur Christmas" (2011)
"The Other Man" (2008)
"Man of the Year" (2006)
"Nocturnal Animals" (2016)
"The Exorcism of Emily Rose" (2005)
"Sympathy for Delicious" (2010)
"John Adams" (2008)
"P.S." (2004)
"Morning" (2010)
"Tales of the City" (1993)
"Driving Lessons" (2006)
"The Savages" (2007)
"Genius" (2016)
"Kinsey" (2004)
"Primal Fear" (1996)
"The Dinner" (2017)
"Breach" (2007)
"The Squid and the Whale" (2005)
"Sully" (2016)
"The Life of David Gale" (2003)
"More Tales of the City" (1998)
"Sink Sank Sunk" (2018)
"Jindabyne" (2006)
"The Hottest State" (2006)
"Hyde Park on Hudson" (2012)
"A Simple Twist of Fate" (1994)
"The Fifth Estate" (2013)
"Mr. Holmes" (2015)
"The Big C" (2010–2013)
"The Nanny Diaries" (2007)
"Further Tales of the City" (2001)
"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows" (2016)
"The Mothman Prophecies" (2002)
"Ozark" (2017–2020)
"Dave" (1993)
"Searching for Bobby Fischer" (1993)
"Falling" (2020)
"Law & Order" (1994)
"Last Week Tonight with John Oliver" (2017)
"Frasier" (2003–2004)
"The House of Mirth" (2000)
"American Experience" (2006)
"Congo" (1995)
"Maze" (2000)
"Mystic River" (2003)
"The Truman Show" (1998)
"You Can Count on Me" (2000)
"Lorenzo's Oil" (1992)
"Tales of the City" (2019)
"The Roads Not Taken" (2020)
"Love Actually" (2003)
"American Masters" (2001)
"American Dad!" (2006)
"The Details" (2011)
"Absolute Power" (1997)

Laura Linney (born February 5, 1964, New York, New York, U.S.) is an American actress best known for playing strong yet vulnerable characters.

Linney was born into a theatrical family; her father was the playwright Romulus Linney. She graduated from Brown University in 1986 and later studied at the Arts Theatre School in Moscow and graduated from the Juilliard School (M.F.A.) in New York City in 1990. She immediately began performing on Broadway, eventually earning praise for her roles in Six Degrees of Separation and Hedda Gabler.

Linney began her film career with a small part in Lorenzo’s Oil (1992), followed by a role in the comedy Dave (1993). In 1993 she also appeared as Mary Ann Singleton in Tales of the City, the television miniseries based on Armistead Maupin’s book. Her breakthrough came in 1996 when she starred opposite Richard Gere in the film Primal Fear, a thriller that revolves around the murder of an archbishop. This led to starring roles in other movies, including Absolute Power (1997)—in which she portrayed the daughter of a man (played by Clint Eastwood) who is framed for a murder involving the president—and the comedy-drama The Truman Show (1998).

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At the beginning of the 21st century, Linney’s acting began to receive widespread praise. For her portrayal of a single mom in You Can Count on Me (2000), she was nominated for an Academy Award for best actress. She won Emmy Awards for roles in the sitcom Frasier (2002), the television movie Wild Iris (2004), and the HBO miniseries John Adams (2008). In 2005 Linney earned a second Academy Award nomination, for best supporting actress, for her performance as the freethinking wife of the sex researcher Alfred Kinsey in Kinsey (2004). In the quirky drama The Squid and the Whale (2005), she starred as a promising writer dealing with a messy divorce in 1980s Brooklyn.

Linney subsequently appeared in the comedy Man of the Year (2006) and the FBI thriller Breach (2007). In 2007 she also portrayed a playwright still reeling from her dysfunctional childhood in The Savages, for which she was nominated for a third Academy Award. Her later roles included a confidante of Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt (Bill Murray) in Hyde Park on Hudson (2012) and the housekeeper of an aged Sherlock Holmes (Ian McKellen) in Mr. Holmes (2015). Her credits from 2016 included the action spectacle Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows; Sully, about US Airways flight 1549, which crash-landed in the Hudson River; and Tom Ford’s thriller Nocturnal Animals. Linney then was cast in The Dinner (2017), an adaptation of Herman Koch’s novel about two couples’ response to their children’s involvement in a horrific crime. In 2020 she appeared in the dramatic films Falling, which centres on the relationship between a conservative farmer with dementia and his gay son, and The Roads Not Taken, about a man contemplating alternate lives.

During this time, Linney also appeared on television. In 2010–13 she starred as a high-school teacher stricken by cancer in the dramedy series The Big C on the cable channel Showtime. She won a Golden Globe Award for the role in 2011 and an Emmy Award in 2013. Linney’s later TV work included the Netflix series Ozark (2017–22), in which she portrayed the wife of a money launderer working for a drug cartel. She later reprised her role as Mary Ann in the Netflix series Tales of the City, which premiered in 2019 and was set some 20 years after the original series.

In addition, Linney remained active in the theatre, and she garnered Tony Award nominations for her roles in The Crucible (2002), Sight Unseen (2004), Time Stands Still (2010), and The Little Foxes (2017). In 2018 she made her debut on the London stage, appearing in the title role of My Name Is Lucy Barton, an adaptation of Elizabeth Strout’s novel about a writer examining her life. Linney continued in the role when the production transferred to Broadway in 2020; for her performance, she received another Tony nomination.

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acting, the performing art in which movement, gesture, and intonation are used to realize a fictional character for the stage, for motion pictures, or for television.

(Read Lee Strasberg’s 1959 Britannica essay on acting.)

Acting is generally agreed to be a matter less of mimicry, exhibitionism, or imitation than of the ability to react to imaginary stimuli. Its essential elements remain the twin requisites enunciated by the French actor François-Joseph Talma in his tribute to the actor Lekain (1825): “an extreme sensibility and a profound intelligence.” For Talma it is sensibility that allows an actor to mark his face with the emotions of the character he is playing and to convey the intentions of the playwright, the implications of the text, and the movements of the “soul” of the character. Intelligence—the understanding of the workings of the human personality—is the faculty that orders these impressions for an audience.

(Read Cecil B. DeMille’s 1929 Britannica essay on acting.)

The essential problems in acting—those of whether the actor actually “feels” or merely imitates, of whether he should speak naturally or rhetorically, and of what actually constitutes being natural—are as old as theatre itself. They are concerned not merely with “realistic” acting, which arose in the theatre of the 19th century, but with the nature of the acting process itself.

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The ephemeral nature of acting has left it without many practical foundations and only a few theoretical traditions. In the middle of the 18th century the German critic and dramatist Gotthold Ephraim Lessing drew attention to this difficulty: “We have actors but no art of acting.” In an artistic field where the measures of greatness are traditionally the subjective reports of witnesses or critics, the understanding of the art has naturally remained in dispute. It remains as true today as when stated by George Henry Lewes in his On Actors and the Art of Acting (1875):

I have heard those for whose opinions in other directions my respect is great, utter judgments on this subject which proved that they had not even a suspicion of what the art of acting really is.

Efforts to define the nature of an art or craft usually are based upon the masterpieces of that field. Without that necessary reference point, vague speculations and generalizations—without proof of validity—are likely. In the visual, musical, and literary arts, this foundation exists; the work of the great masters of the past and the present serves not only to elucidate the art but also to create standards to emulate. It is difficult to imagine what the present state of comprehension of music would be if only the music of today were available, and the achievements of Monteverdi, Bach, Beethoven, and Mozart had to be known only by hearsay. Yet, this is precisely the situation that exists in acting. The actor, in the words of the 19th-century American actor Lawrence Barrett, “is forever carving a statue of snow.” That is why the understanding of acting has not equaled the appreciation of it and why the actor’s creative process has defied comprehension.

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Theories of traditions

Throughout the history of theatre, debate has continued over the question of whether the actor is a creative artist or simply an interpreter. Since the actor’s performance is usually based on the play, and the dramatist is conceded to be a creative artist, it is sometimes concluded that the actor must be only an interpretive artist. Some modern exponents of the actor’s creativity have indirectly accepted this view and have turned, therefore, to nonverbal theatre. But others deny that this recourse to primitivism is necessary in order to make acting a creative art. When composers like Schubert or Schumann created musical settings for the poems of Heine or Goethe, their music did not lose its essentially creative nature. Verdi used Shakespeare’s Othello and Falstaff for his great operas, but his music is no less creative for that. When an artist merely imitates the work of another artist in the same medium, that may properly be called noncreative; the original artist has already solved the basic problems of execution, and his pattern is simply followed by the imitator. Such a work can be considered merely an exercise in skill (or in execution). An artist in one medium who uses an art work of another medium as subject matter, however, must solve the problems posed by his own medium—a creative achievement. It is therefore quite proper to speak of a character as if he were the actor’s creation—of John Gielgud’s “Hamlet,” for example, or John Barrymore’s or Jonathan Pryce’s. Because a medium offers the potential for creativity, of course, it does not follow that all its practitioners are necessarily creative: there are imitative artists in every medium. But acting can only be understood after it is first recognized as a creative medium demanding a creative act. In “The Art of Acting” the American drama teacher Brander Matthews remarked,

The actor needs to have under control not only his gestures and his tones, but all other means of stimulating sensibility and these should be ready for use at all times, wholly independent of the words of the text.

In the same work he quoted with approval the words of the great 19th-century Italian tragedian Ernesto Rossi that a “great actor is independent of the poet, because the supreme essence of feeling does not reside in prose or in verse, but in the accent with which it is delivered.” And even Denis Diderot, the French philosopher of the 18th century whose famous Paradox of Acting (written 1773–78; published 1830) is dealt with below and who was himself a dramatist, stated:

even with the clearest, the most precise, the most forceful of writers, words are no more, and never can be more, than symbols, indicating a thought, a feeling or an idea; symbols which need action, gesture, intonation, and a whole context of circumstances, to give them full significance.

If the art of acting is regarded as merely interpretive, the external elements of the actor’s skill tend to be emphasized, but, when acting is recognized as a creative art, it leads inevitably to a search for the deeper resources that stimulate the actor’s imagination and sensitivity. This search presents difficult problems. The actor must learn to train and to control the most sensitive material available to any craftsman: the living organism of a human being in all of its manifestations—mental, physical, and emotional. The actor is at once the piano and the pianist.

Acting should not be confused with pantomime, which is a form of external movements and gestures that describes an object or an event but not its symbolic significance. Similarly, the actor is not to be mistaken for an imitator. Many of the best imitators are unable to act in their own person or to create a character that is an extension of themselves rather than an imitation of someone else. Neither is acting mere exhibitionism; the capacity for “showing off” or entertaining at parties is quite different from the talent demanded of the actor—the ability to put oneself into another character, to create through performance a nonexistent event and bring it to its logical fulfillment, and to repeat this performance not only when one is in a favourable mood but also at specified times and places, regardless of one’s own feelings on each occasion.