Helen Hunt Movies
A precociously talented youngster,
Helen Hunt was drawing paychecks as a television actress from the age of ten. Before she was 17, she had appeared as a regular on two series,
Swiss Family Robinson (1975) and The Fitzpatricks (1977).
Hunt proved she was more than just a workaday child actor with her starring performance in the fact-based 1981 TV movie
The Miracle of Kathy Miller, in which she played a high school athlete who overcame severe mental and physical damage brought on by a highway accident.
While she had been appearing in films as early as
Rollercoaster in 1977,
Hunt was never groomed as a star player, and it is possible that her resemblance to another child actress,
Jodie Foster, held her back from more important roles.
After taking on her first adult role in the 1982 sitcom It Takes Two,
Hunt's film assignments improved, with sizable roles in
Girls Just Want to Have Fun (1985),
Peggy Sue Got Married (1986),
Project X (1987),
Next of Kin (1989), and
The Waterdance (1991). She also gained a small measure of cult status by appearing in a brace of science fiction films, including
Trancers II (1991) and
Trancers III (1992). That same year,
Hunt landed her longest-lasting acting assignment to date, as the co-star of the
Paul Reiser-created comedy series
Mad About You. During the show's seven-year run, she won both Emmy and Golden Globe awards for her portrayal of Jamie Buchman. In 1996,
Hunt had her most successful film role to date in the blockbuster
Twister. The following year, she topped that when she received a Best Actress Oscar for playing a caring waitress and single mother who befriends acerbic, obsessive-compulsive author Melvin Udall (
Jack Nicholson, who also won an Oscar for his performance) in
As Good As It Gets. After
Mad About You ended in 1999, Hunt appeared in films by several veteran directors, including
Robert Zemeckis (
Cast Away [2000]),
Robert Altman (
Dr. T and The Women [2000]), and
Woody Allen (
The Curse of the Jade Scorpion [2001]). She starred in Life x 3 on Broadway in 2003.
In 2005, Hunt joined the star-studded cast of HBO's two-part miniseries Empire Falls in the role of Janine, ex-wife of Miles (Ed Harris), the story's central character. The actress made her feature directorial debut in Then She Found Me (for which Hunt also starred, produced, and wrote the screenplay), an adaptation of Elinore Lipman's best-selling novel of the same name. The story follows a Philadelphia schoolteacher (Hunt) whose long-lost birth mother (Bette Miller) reappears at just as her daughter is careening into a midlife crisis. Hunt played a supportive mother in Soul Surfer (2011), an inspirational drama based on the true tale of a surfer who returned to the sport after tragically losing an arm. In 2012 she played a sex surrogate helping a man in an iron lung lose his virginity for director Ben Lewin in The Sessions, a part that earned her rave reviews and an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi