Ali MacGraw Movies
The daughter of artists, actress
Ali MacGraw prepared for an art career of her own at Wellesley College. At 22,
MacGraw entered the world of high fashion as assistant editor at Harper's Bazaar and went on to work as a photographer's assistant, at least until someone decided that her looks were far too dazzling to be kept behind the camera. Before long, she was adorning magazine covers worldwide and appearing in TV commercials (she's the beach girl in the "Polaroid Swinger" camera ads of the mid-'60s). After an unremarkable movie debut in 1968, she became a full-fledged star in 1969's
Goodbye Columbus. Perhaps no one was more impressed by
MacGraw's charms than Paramount executive
Robert Evans, who fell in love with her and began guiding the destinies of her career (
Evans became
MacGraw's second husband in 1971). Her next film role was unquestionably the best: Jenny Cavilleri, the charmingly foul-mouthed, slowly dying heroine of the 1970 smash hit
Love Story, which earned her an Oscar nomination.
Evans continued promoting
MacGraw's career even after she'd left him in favor of actor
Steve McQueen, whom she'd met while filming
Sam Peckinpah's
The Getaway (1973), and to whom she was married from 1973 to 1978. After losing the role of Daisy Buchanan in
The Great Gatsby (1974) to
Mia Farrow,
MacGraw took a four-year sabbatical from films. Her 1978 comeback picture was
Convoy, which reunited her with
Sam Peckinpah; inspired by a CB radio craze, the film was regarded as a great step backward for all concerned. After playing
Alan King's long-suffering lady friend in
Just Tell Me What You Want,
MacGraw confined her infrequent acting appearances to the small screen. She was briefly a regular as Lady Ashley Mitchell on the weekly
Dynasty, and starred in the miniseries
The Winds of War (1983) and
China Rose (1985).
MacGraw also appeared in the TV movies
Gunsmoke: The Long Ride (1992), playing a character named Uncle Jane, and
Natural Causes (1994). In 1991,
Ali MacGraw published Moving Pictures, her autobiography. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide