Gretchen Mol (born November 8, 1972) is an American actress and former model. She is known for her roles in films like Rounders, Celebrity, 3:10 to Yuma, The Thirteenth Floor, and The Notorious Bettie Page, where she played the title character. She currently appears as Gillian Darmody in HBO's Boardwalk Empire.
Early life
Mol was born in Deep River, Connecticut, where her mother, Janet (née Morgan), is an artist and teacher and her father is a school teacher at RHAM.[1][2] She went to high school with Broadway actor Peter Lockyer,
with whom she performed in school musicals and plays. Her brother, Jim
Mol, is a director and editor in the film industry. Mol attended The American Musical and Dramatic Academy and graduated from the William Esper Studio. After summer stock in Vermont, she took a job for a while as an usher at Angelika Film Center. She was living in a Hell's Kitchen walk-up when she was noticed by a talent agent who spotted her working as a hat check girl at Michael's restaurant in New York.[3]
Stage
Mol's acting career began in summer stock theatre in Vermont where she played a variety of roles including Godspell and 110 In The Shade.[3] She played Jenny in Neil LaBute's The Shape of Things on stage in both London and New York in 2001,[4] in a role she reprised in the film version, released in 2003. The New York Times critic Ben Brantley, in his review of the play (which he disliked),[5]
wrote, "[Mol] gives by far the most persuasive performance as the
unworldly Jenny, and you wind up feeling for her disproportionately,
only because she seems to be entirely there, in the present tense". In
2004, Mol spent a year singing and dancing as Roxie in the Broadway
production of Chicago.
Film
In 1994, Mol was spotted by photographer Davis Powell.[6] He photographed her in New York's Central Park
and replaced her unrepresentative portfolio with professional-looking
black & white images which landed her on the cover of W magazine within weeks and foreshadowed her "It Girl" and "Bettie Page" looks. Shortly afterwards, she ended her brief modeling career and entered acting full-time.
While major roles have been sporadic, Mol has been in more than 30 feature films. She made her film debut in Spike Lee's 1996 film, Girl 6. She said "I was auditioning for Guiding Light
and I was happy I got a Spike Lee movie, which was a tiny part, but all
of a sudden I had Spike Lee on my resume. I didn't audition for day player anymore".[3]
After Girl 6, New York filmmaker Abel Ferrara took notice and cast her in two movies, The Funeral (1996) and New Rose Hotel (1998). She had a small role in Donnie Brasco (1998). But by now, she was being typecast as "the girlfriend," which she attempted to change by taking a role opposite Jude Law in Music from Another Room (1998), a romantic comedy. The film went virtually unnoticed by critics and audiences.[7]
In 1998, she appeared in several notable films including Rounders, starring Matt Damon and Woody Allen's Celebrity opposite Leonardo DiCaprio. In 1998 she also came to prominence when she was featured on the cover of Vanity Fair magazine, dubbed the "It Girl of the Nineties" by the magazine.
For her second film with Woody Allen, 1999's Sweet and Lowdown, she played a minor role which the Greenwich Village Gazette called "notable".[8] She played the female lead role in the 1999 film The Thirteenth Floor. She played the victim of a con artist in the 2003 film, Heavy Put-Away, based on the Terry Southern story. In 2006, she shared the lead in a romantic comedy, Puccini for Beginners, in which her character has a lesbian affair.
Mol worked with Mary Harron for two years as the director struggled to finance The Notorious Bettie Page:
"I kind of felt like I lived with it for a while; certainly not as long
as Mary Harron did but I got a good chance to really feel like I knew
something about Bettie so by the time the role was mine and I was on set
I was pretty confident. I felt like I really worked for it."[9]
The next year, 2007, was one of her busiest, with four films in production or in release, including a remake of 3:10 to Yuma starring Russell Crowe, and An American Affair, in which her character, Catherine Caswell, has an affair with John F. Kennedy. When released in February 2009, the film was harshly criticized by New York Times critic Stephen Holden, though he said that Mol's part was "quite well acted".[10]
In April 2008, she began filming Tenure in Philadelphia, working opposite Luke Wilson, and Andrew Daly.[11] Though it had received some good reviews after being screened at several film festivals, it was released direct-to-video in February 2010.[12]
Television
Mol's first television work was in a Coca-Cola commercial. Mol had a small role of Maggie Tilton in the 1996 miniseries Dead Man's Walk, based on the Larry McMurtry novel. She also was in a few episodes of Spin City.[7] She was the star of the short-lived David E. Kelley series Girls Club (2002), a drama about three women lawyers. The series was not well received and it was cancelled after two episodes.
She appeared in two TV remakes of classic films: Picnic (2000), in the role of Madge Owens, and The Magnificent Ambersons as Lucy Morgan (2002). She made a Hallmark Hall of Fame television movie in January 2007, starring in The Valley of Light, a story set in post-World War II based on a novel by Terry Kay.[13] It was her second Hallmark production. She had a minor role in Calm at Sunset in 1996.[14]
She played Norah in The Memory Keeper's Daughter which aired in the U.S. on The Lifetime Channel in the U.S. in April 2008.[15]
She played Annie in the ABC series Life on Mars, the U.S. remake of the British show of the same name. It started airing in the U.S. on October 9, 2008 and ran 17 episodes, concluding on April 1, 2009.
She has a recurring role on HBO's Boardwalk Empire as Gillian Darmody, a showgirl at the Beaux Arts and mother to gangster Jimmy Darmody (played by Michael Pitt)[16]
Personal life
Interviewed by the Associated Press
in Baltimore in December 2006, Mol commented about how she maintained
her confidence as an actress: "It is an ongoing struggle. Confidence is
something that sometimes you have and sometimes you don't. And the older
you get, hopefully, the more you have some tools to at least fake it".[17]
She married film director Kip Williams
on June 1, 2004. Their first child, Ptolemy John Williams, was born
September 10, 2007. On February 17, 2011, Mol gave birth to their second
child, daughter Winter Morgan Williams.[18]
While raising Ptolemy, Mol has only taken jobs close to her home in New
York City. "I told my agent I didn't want to work in L.A., even if it
was the greatest job in the world. I didn't want to compromise."[19] She is also the national spokesperson in the United States for the PMD Foundation, which funds research and awareness of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease, a neurological disorder afflicting children worldwide.
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1996 | Girl 6 | Girl #12 | |
Dead Man's Walk | Maggie | TV Mini-Series | |
The Funeral | Helen | ||
Calm at Sunset | Emily | TV | |
Spin City | Gwen | TV Series | |
1997 | Donnie Brasco | Sonny's girlfriend | |
The Last Time I Committed Suicide | Mary Greenway | ||
Subway Stories: Tales from the Underground | The Wife | TV Segment "Love on the A Train" |
|
The Deli | Mary | ||
1998 | Too Tired to Die | Capri | Uncredited |
Celebrity | Vicky | ||
Rounders | Jo | ||
Finding Graceland | Beatrice Gruman | ||
New Rose Hotel | Hiroshi's Wife | ||
Music from Another Room | Anna Swan | ||
Bleach | Gwen | ||
1999 | The Thirteenth Floor | Jane Fuller / Natasha Molinaro | |
Cradle Will Rock | Marion Davies | ||
Sweet and Lowdown | Ellie | ||
Forever Mine | Ella Bryce | ||
Just Looking | Hedy | ||
2000 | Picnic | Madge Owens | TV |
Attraction | Liz | ||
Get Carter | Audrey | Uncredited | |
2002 | The Magnificent Ambersons | Lucy Morgan | TV |
Girls Club | Lynn Camden | TV Series: 9 Episodes | |
Freshening Up | Jannelle | TV Short | |
2003 | Heavy Put-Away | Mary | Short Film |
The Shape of Things | Jenny | ||
2006 | The Notorious Bettie Page | Bettie Page | Nominated—Satellite Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama |
Puccini for Beginners | Grace | ||
2007 | The Ten | Gloria | |
The Valley of Light | Eleanor | TV | |
Trainwreck: My Life as an Idiot | Lynn | ||
3:10 to Yuma | Alice Evans | Nominated—Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture | |
2008 | The Memory Keeper's Daughter | Nora Henry | TV |
2008–2009 | Life on Mars | Annie Norris | TV Series: 17 Episodes |
2009 | An American Affair | Catherine Caswell | |
Tenure | Elaine Grasso | ||
2010-2012 | Boardwalk Empire | Gillian | TV Series: 21 Episodes |
2014 | True Story | Karen | Filming |
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