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S.M. Gellar

Sarah Michelle Gellar (born April 14, 1977) is a Golden Globe-nominated, Emmy Award-winning American actress. She is probably best known as Buffy Summers in the acclaimed television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

She has since become known as a film actress, having starred in the family film Scooby-Doo (2002), the independent film Harvard Man (2001), the teen drama Cruel Intentions (1999) and the horror films The Return (2006), The Grudge 2 (2006), The Grudge (2004), I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997) and Scream 2 (1997).

She also provided the voice of April O'Neil in the film TMNT.

 

Sarah Michelle Gellar

Biography

Early life

Gellar was born in New York City, the only child of Rosellen Greenfield, a nursery school teacher, and Arthur Gellar. Both of her parents were Jewish, though Gellar's family had a Christmas tree during the holidays while she was growing up.[1][2] In 1984, her parents divorced and she was brought up by her mother on the Upper East Side.

Gellar was estranged from her father from this time until his death from liver cancer on October 9, 2001. She attended New York's Columbia Grammar & Preparatory School and the Professional Children's School. Gellar held a straight-A average and became a competent figure skater. Her best friend was Melissa Joan Hart, who later was the star of the series Sabrina, the Teenage Witch.
 

At the age of four, Gellar was spotted by an agent in a restaurant in Uptown Manhattan. Two weeks later, she auditioned for a part in An Invasion Of Privacy, a made-for-television film starring Valerie Harper, Carol Kane and Jeff Daniels. At the audition, Gellar read both her own lines and those of Harper's, impressing the directors enough to cast her in the role. A short while later, she got a part in a controversial television commercial for Burger King, in which she criticized McDonald's and claimed to eat only at Burger King.

This led to a lawsuit against Burger King, ad agency J. Walter Thompson, and Gellar herself, who appeared in court as a witness for the defense. The dispute was eventually settled out of court.[3][4] Gellar continued to make commercials while appearing in acting roles, including playing Emily in an episode of the TV series Spenser: For Hire, appearing in a minor role in the Chevy Chase starring comedy Funny Farm and in the movie High Stakes, and filming in Europe for the TV series Crossbow. In 1991, she played a young Jacqueline Bouvier in A Woman Named Jackie.

Gellar got her first major break in 1992, when she starred in the serial Swan's Crossing and was subsequently cast in the soap opera All My Children, playing Kendall Hart, the long-lost daughter of character Erica Kane (Susan Lucci). In 1995, at the age of eighteen, she won a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Leading Actress in a Drama Series for the role. It is on the set of this Soap opera that she met Michelle Trachtenberg who would later join the Buffy the Vampire Slayer cast.

Gellar left All My Children in 1995 amid rumors of a strained working relationship with Lucci, and landed the lead in the 1997 TV series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, playing a teenager burdened with the responsibility of fighting a number of mystical foes. The show was well received by critics and audiences alike, spawning a spinoff series (Angel). Throughout its seven seasons and a total of 144 episodes, Buffy, and Gellar along with her, became cult icons in the United States, the UK and Australia , particularly as archetypes of "empowered" women.[5] Gellar also sang several of the songs during the Buffy the Vampire Slayer musical episode "Once More, with Feeling", which spawned an original cast album.


During the show's later years, Gellar expressed dissatisfaction about certain aspects of the show.[6][7] Shortly after the show's end, Gellar stated that she had no interest in appearing in a Buffy feature film, although since then she has said she will consider it if the script is good enough.[8] She did not appear in the final season of Angel, causing the intended episode ("You're Welcome") to be rewritten for the character of Cordelia Chase[9]. Gellar has said that she was willing to appear in the episode, but scheduling conflicts and family problems prevented it.[10] Gellar has declined to lend her voice to the various Buffy video games, and another actress voiced Buffy for an animated series based on the show, which never aired.

Gellar has appeared on the covers of Cosmopolitan, Glamour, FHM, Rolling Stone, and other magazines. She was featured in Maxim magazine's "Hot 100" list in 2002, 2003, and 2005, and in FHM 's "100 Sexiest Women" of 2005. She was voted number 1 in the magazine's 1999 edition. In 1998, she was named one of People's "50 Most Beautiful People (in the World)". Gellar has also appeared in "Got Milk?" ads as well as in the Stone Temple Pilots music video "Sour Girl", and is a celebrity spokesperson for Maybelline.


 

 Film career

Gellar attempted to capitalize on her television fame for a motion pictures career, with intermittent commercial success. After roles in the popular thrillers I Know What You Did Last Summer and Scream 2 (both 1997), she starred in the 1999 films Simply Irresistible, a romantic comedy, and Cruel Intentions, a modern-day retelling of Les Liaisons Dangereuses. Cruel Intentions, with a kiss between Gellar and co-star Selma Blair that won the two the "Best Kiss" award at the 2000 MTV Movie Awards, was a modest hit at the box office, grossing over $38 million in the U.S. Critic Roger Ebert stated that Gellar and co-star Ryan Phillippe "develop a convincing emotional charge" and that Gellar is "effective as a bright girl who knows exactly how to use her act as a tramp".

Gellar next played a lead role in James Toback's critically unsuccessful Harvard Man (2001) and starred as Daphne Blake in Scooby-Doo (2002), a live-action adaptation of the cartoon series. Gellar also appeared in the sequel, Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed (2004), which grossed less than the first film. Gellar's next film was the 2004 horror film The Grudge, which was a success at the box office. David Wirtschafter, the president of the William Morris Agency (which represented Gellar), subsequently told The New Yorker that the success of The Grudge "takes our client Sarah Michelle Gellar, who now is nothing at all, and...makes her a star, potentially. Suddenly, the Sarah Michelle Gellar space is meaningful". The remark led Gellar to terminate her association with the agency.
 

Gellar appeared in the sequel The Grudge 2, which opened on October 13, 2006; in the film, she has a minor role reprising her character from the first film. Gellar next appeared in the thriller The Return, which was released on November 10, 2006. She then lent her voice to two animated films: the animated fairy tale Happily N'Ever After, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. The latter film was released by Warner Bros. and The Weinstein Company, and made over $25 million on its opening weekend. She has also starred in several films that have yet to be released, including Southland Tales, The Air I Breathe, Suburban Girl, and Addicted (a supernatural thriller based on the South Korean film Jungdok.[12]) . So far Addicted is the only movie with a known release date ,October 12th though The Air I Breathe and Suburban Girl have been seen by members of the public at the 2007 Tribeca Film Festival .

Her next film, Alice, is in the pre-production stage.
 

 

Personal life

Gellar met future husband Freddie Prinze Jr. during filming of the 1997 teen horror film I Know What You Did Last Summer[13] but the two did not begin dating until 2000. They were engaged in April 2001 and married in Mexico on September 1, 2002 in a ceremony officiated by Adam Shankman, a film director and choreographer with whom Gellar had worked on Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

In 2004, while filming The Grudge in Japan, Gellar visited the famous Japanese swordsmith Shoji Yoshihara (Kuniie III) and bought a Katana from him as a birthday present for her husband.[14] Gellar realized that she needed clearance from the government to remove the sword from the country, and after eventually succeeding, stated that it was "incredibly difficult" to do.[15]

Gellar has said in interviews that she believes in God but does not belong to an organized religion.[1]

Gellar has said in interviews that she collects rare editions of classic children's literature.

 

Films

Film

Year

Role

Notes

Over the Brooklyn Bridge

1984

Phil's daughter

Bit part; uncredited

Funny Farm

1988

Elizabeth's student

Bit part; uncredited

High Stakes

1989

Karen Rose

Credited as "Sarah Gellar"

I Know What You Did Last Summer

1997

Helen Shivers

Scream 2

1997

Casey "Cici" Cooper

Small Soldiers

1998

Gwendy Doll

Voice

She's All That

1999

Girl in Cafeteria

Bit part; uncredited

Simply Irresistible

1999

Amanda Shelton

Cruel Intentions

1999

Kathryn Merteuil

Harvard Man

2001

Cindy Bandolini

Scooby-Doo

2002

Daphne Blake

Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed

2004

Daphne Blake

The Grudge

2004

Karen Davis

The Grudge 2

2006

Karen Davis

The Return

2006

Joanna Mills

Happily N'Ever After

2007

Ella

Voice

TMNT

2007

April O'Neil

Voice

Southland Tales

2007

Krysta Now

Complete

The Air I Breathe

2007

Sorrow

Complete

Suburban Girl

2007

Brett Eisenberg

Complete

Addicted

2007

Unknown

Post-Production

Alice

2008

Alice

In-development (see also American McGee's Alice)

 

TV movies

Film

Year

Role

Notes

An Invasion Of Privacy

1983

Jennifer Bianchi

A Woman Named Jackie

1991

Teenage Jacqueline Bouvier

Beverly Hills Family Robinson

1998

Jane Robinson

Filmed In 1996

 

TV series

Show

Year

Role

Notes

Swan's Crossing

1992

Sidney Orion Rutledge

All My Children

1993-199 5

Kendall Hart

Buffy The Vampire Slayer

1997-200 3

Buffy Summers, Buffybot, Faith (in episodes "This Year's Girl" and "Who Are You"), and The First Evil (in Season 7)

 

External links

Sarah Michelle Gellar at the Internet Movie Database

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