Jennifer Connelly (birthname:
Jennifer Lynn Connelly) made one of the most unusual debuts in screen history: An unknown 12-year-old actor, she appeared for a few minutes in Sergio Leone’s masterpiece, Once Upon a Time in America (1984), but enough to launch a career that quickly led to roles in Connelly’s teens with such legends as director Dario Argento (Phenomena in 1985, in which she had the lead) and Muppets creator and director Jim Henson (Labyrinth in 1986 with David Bowie).
After studying English at Yale and graduating from Stanford with a degree in drama (not to mention a successful run as a model, landing on multiple magazine covers), Jennifer Connelly returned full-time under the direction of yet another legend—Dennis Hopper—in his often overlooked Texas noir, The Hot Spot (1990) with Don Johnson and Virginia Madsen.
Connelly confirmed her star status with such projects as John Hughes’ Career Opportunities (1991) with Frank Whaley; Joe Johnston’s superhero adventure, The Rocketeer (1991) with Billy Campbell, Alan Arkin, and Timothy Dalton; Betty Kaplan’s steamy version of Isabel Allende’s book, Of Love and Shadows (1994) with
Antonio Banderas; Lee Tamahori’s LAPD noir, Mulholland Falls, with Nick Nolte, Melanie Griffith, Chazz Palminteri, and Michael Madsen; and Alex Proyas’ noir sci-fi Dark City (1998), with Rufus Sewell, Kiefer Sutherland, and William Hurt.
Jennifer Connelly then experienced a major career blastoff in the early 2000s, with a remarkable eight-year string of notable films. Her physically and emotionally astonishing performance in
Darren Aronofsky’s adaptation of Hubert Selby Jr.’s Requiem for a Dream (2000) with Ellen Burstyn and
Jared Leto is certainly a career highlight, followed by
Ed Harris’ fine biopic Pollock (2000), capped by Connelly’s Oscar-winning performance (for Best Supporting Actress) in Ron Howard’s A Beautiful Mind (2001) with
Russell Crowe, Ed Harris, Paul Bettany, and Christopher Plummer.
Jennifer Connelly jumped into the early phase of MCU in Ang Lee’s Ambitious Hulk with Mark Ruffalo (2003), but switched back to a more familiar dramatic registry with superb work with Ben Kingsley in The House of Sand and Fog (2003); with Kate Winslet in Todd Field’s brilliant Little Children (2006); and again with Ruffalo and Joaquin Phoenix in Terry George’s tragic drama, Reservation Road (2007).
Jennifer Connelly slowed her busy pace after this, but picked her spots for prestige projects such as Jon Amiel’s Charles Darwin biopic, Creation (2009), with Paul Bettany; reteaming with Aronofsky and Crowe for the Biblical epic,
Noah (2014), which grossed nearly $360 million worldwide; and with actor-director Ewan McGregor for Philip Roth’s New York epic, American Pastoral (2016) with Dakota Fanning.
Like many movie stars in recent years, when the superhero genre has inundated the market, Connelly dove in with 2017’s
Spider-Man: Homecoming (in a rare vocal performance) and
Alita: Battle Angel (2019), with
Mahershala Ali and Christoph Waltz. Since shooting her role (replacing Kelly McGillis) with
Tom Cruise in 2018 in
Top Gun: Maverick (finally released in 2022), Connelly has devoted her energies for only the second time in her career to TV, with the TNT series version of Bong Joon-ho’s Snowpiercer (2020-2022) with Daveed Diggs and Sean Bean.