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(January 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) | (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Lisa Eichhorn Lisa Eichhorn in 2010 Born| (1952-02-04) February 4, 1952 (age 70) Glens Falls, New York, U.S. Occupation| Actress, writer, producer Years active| 1977-present Spouse(s)| John Curless (m. 1976; div. 1979)​ Ben Nye Jr. (m. 1981; div. 1986)​ Richard Moxon (m. 2006; div. 2012)​ Children| 1 Lisa Eichhorn (born February 4, 1952) is an American actress, writer and producer. She made her film debut in 1979 in the John Schlesinger film Yanks, for which she received two Golden Globe nominations. Her international career has included film, theatre and television. ## Contents * 1 Early life * 2 Career * 2.1 Early career * 2.2 1990s * 2.3 2000s * 2.4 Teaching * 3 Personal life * 4 Filmography * 4.1 Production credits * 5 Awards and nominations * 6 References * 7 External links ## Early life[edit] Lisa Warren Eichhorn was born in Glens Falls, New York, on February 4, 1952, to Dorothy Elizabeth Golly and Frank Warren Eichhorn, and shortly thereafter moved to Westbury, Long Island, with her older brother and two half-sisters. In 1958, the family moved to Reading, Pennsylvania, where Eichhorn later attended Mt. Penn High School.[1] At the end of her junior year, she left to study in Svolvær, Norway, as a Rotary International Exchange student, and graduated from Mt. Penn in absentia in 1970. Eichhorn began college at Queen's University at Kingston, Ontario, taking a wide range of subjects. She quickly realized that her passion was drama and English, and these subjects became her focus. She left Ontario after two years to study at St. Peter's College, Oxford, on a year-long Rotary International Ambassadorial Scholarship,[2] though this was not as an admitted member of the University[3] in Statu Pupillari.[4] While at Oxford, Eichhorn met Alan Rickman at a cocktail party. Rickman encouraged her to audition for London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), where she was accepted in 1975. ## Career[edit] ### Early career[edit] Upon graduating from RADA in 1977, Eichhorn immediately began rehearsals for the Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch, playing Ophelia in Hamlet. This was followed by a wide range of regional work, including Stop the World - I Want to Get Off for the Queen's Theatre, Rosalind in As You Like It at the Bolton Octagon, The Wings of the Dove for the BBC, and The Fatal Weakness opposite Elaine Stritch at the Theatre Royal, Windsor. In December 1977, Eichhorn met with John Schlesinger for the role of Lancashire shop-girl Jean Moreton in his wartime romance, Yanks. She convinced him she was British and he gave her a screen test and, subsequently, the part.[5] Although Eichhorn then felt duty-bound to tell Schlesinger she was actually American, he insisted that she was his choice regardless of her nationality. Eichhorn won two Golden Globe nominations for her performance in Yanks: Best Actress and Best New Star. The day after filming wrapped on Yanks, Eichhorn flew to Boston to play Gertrude Wentworth in Merchant-Ivory's The Europeans, for which she won a BAFTA nomination for Best Supporting Actress. Eichhorn made a handful of London television appearances, then moved to Hollywood where she collaborated with actor Treat Williams on her first American film, Why Would I Lie? (originally titled The Fabricator). Around this time, Ivan Passer and Paul Gurian enlisted Eichhorn to play Maureen (Mo) Cutter in Cutter's Way (previously Cutter and Bone) with Jeff Bridges and John Heard. Eichhorn's performance as Alex Cutter's wistful, alcoholic wife was deemed "the most underrated performance of the decade" by the American Film Institute and earned her the Best Actress Award (American division) at the Deauville Film Festival. In 1980, Eichhorn was cast opposite Gene Hackman in the low-budget Universal feature, All Night Long. Barbra Streisand's then-agent, Sue Mengers, wanted a bigger outing for her husband, director Jean-Claude Tramont, and persuaded him to replace Eichhorn with Streisand on the film: three weeks into principal photography Eichhorn was fired from the project. In the summer, Eichhorn travelled to Poland to shoot the CBS/TimeLife venture The Wall for Harry Sherman. She moved to Connecticut for the birth of her daughter in 1981, then returned to L.A. to play Margaret in The Hasty Heart opposite Kurt Russell. George Cukor came backstage after one performance and told her she was like Greta Garbo. Eichhorn's film work at this time included Wildrose and Opposing Force in L.A. and East Lynne, with Martin Shaw, and The Weather in the Streets, with Michael York and Joanna Lumley, for the BBC in London. In 1984, Eichhorn starred in Golden Boy at the Royal National Theatre, London. She made her New York theatre debut opposite Nathan Lane in The Common Pursuit in 1986, while playing Elizabeth Carlyle on All My Children for a year. Eichhorn was invited to be a Life Member of the Actors Studio in 1988. She shot the film Moon 44 for Roland Emmerich in Germany, then began a fruitful association with the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester, England, in Alex Finlayson's award-winning Winding the Ball, under the direction of Greg Hersov. ### 1990s[edit] In 1990, Eichhorn made her Broadway debut at the Belasco Theatre in The Speed of Darkness, with Len Cariou, Stephen Lang and Robert Sean Leonard. She went on to star opposite Sada Thompson and Justin Kirk in Any Given Day at the Longacre Theatre, and in the film A Modern Affair opposite Stanley Tucci. In 1996, Eichhorn returned to Los Angeles for her daughter's high school career. She starred in two more Hersov-Finlayson collaborations at the Royal Exchange Manchester: Tobaccoland and Misfits, in which she played Marilyn Monroe. She returned to New York in 2000 to do a variety of theatre, television and teaching. ### 2000s[edit] In 2003, Eichhorn moved back to London to pursue writing and producing. She returned to the Royal Exchange Manchester in 2004 to play Ouisa in Six Degrees of Separation, and played Joy Gresham opposite Julian Glover's C.S. Lewis in Shadowlands at Salisbury Playhouse. Eichhorn continues to live in London where she works in theatre (Women of Lockerbie, Enduring Freedom) and television (Spooks, Midsomer Murders, Inspector Morse, Cracker), while developing several projects for film. In 2007, Eichhorn produced and co-wrote Defenders of Riga, which was the official Latvian film entry to the 2009 Academy Awards. ### Teaching[edit] Eichhorn began teaching Acting and Directing in 1992 at the School of Visual Arts in New York. She has taught at the University of Southern California, Disney, DreamWorks, and London's National Film and Television School and Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. She has also been a guest speaker at the Tel Aviv International Student Film Festival, and has taught in Milan, Kosovo and Latvia under the auspices of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Visiting Artists Program. ## Personal life[edit] Eichhorn met actor John Curless in 1976 when he substituted for her stage fighting instructor at RADA. They were married for a year and a half. While filming Cutter's Way in 1979, Eichhorn met makeup artist Ben Nye, Jr. They married in 1981, and had a daughter Emily Eichhorn-Nye (born 1981). They divorced in 1986. In 1990, Eichhorn met Edward M. Ferguson III, with whom she lived in New York and Los Angeles until 2000. Eichhorn met solicitor Richard Moxon when setting up her company, GiftHorse Productions, in 2003. They married in August 2006 but were divorced in 2012. ## Filmography[edit] Year | Film or TV Series | Role | Notes | | | 1978 | The Wings of the Dove | Milly Theale | 1979 | Yanks | Jean Moreton | Golden Globe Nomination for Best Actress Golden Globe Nomination for Best New Star The Europeans | Gertrude Wentworth | BAFTA Nomination for Best Supporting Actress 1980 | Roald Dahl's Tales of the Unexpected | Sally | TV – 1 episode, "My Lady Love, My Dove" Why Would I Lie? | Kay | 1981 | Cutter's Way | Maureen 'Mo' Cutter | Best Actress Award (American Division), Deauville Film Festival 1982 | The Wall | Rachel Apt | East Lynne | Lady Isabel Vane | 1983 | Feel the Heat | Honor Campbell | TV 1984 | The Weather in the Streets | Olivia Curtis | Wildrose | June Lorich | 1986 | Miami Vice | Danielle Hier | TV – 1 episode, "French Twist" Blind Justice | Carolyn Shetland | Opposing Force | Lieutenant Catherine Casey | Murder in Three Acts | Cynthia Dayton | 1986 | All My Children | Elizabeth Carlyle | TV – 1 season 1988 | The Equalizer | | TV – 1 episode, "Something Green" 1989 | Saracen | Delphine Grant | TV – 1 episode, "Into Africa" 1990 | Frederick Forsyth Presents: Pride and Extreme Prejudice | Claudia | Moon 44 | Terry Morgan | Grim Prairie Tales | Maureen | Nocturne | The Woman | 1991 | A Woman Named Jackie | Dr. Jordan | TV miniseries 1992 | Swamp Thing | Victoria | TV – 1 episode, Love Lost Devlin | Anita Brennan | Law & Order | Mary Kostrinski | TV – 1 episode, Point of View 1993 | The Vanishing | Helene Cousins | Tribeca | Janie | TV – 1 episode, The Rainmaker King of the Hill | Mrs. Kurlander | 1994 | Law & Order | Arnette Fenady | TV – 1 episode, Nurture 1995 | Lulu Askew | Lulu | A Modern Affair | Grace Rhodes | Murder, She Wrote | Annette Rayburn | TV – 1 episode, Unwilling Witness 1996 | First Kid | Linda Davenport | Sticks and Stones | Book's Mom | 1997 | C-16: FBI | Catherine Hampton | TV pilot – 2 episodes The Practice | Mary Jane Wiggins | TV – 2 episodes, First Degree Sex, Lies and Monkeys Touched by an Angel | Beth | TV – 1 episode, My Dinner with Andrew 1998 | Law & Order | Arlene Galvin | TV – 1 episode, Scrambled Diana: The People's Princess | Rachel | Goodbye Lover | Mrs. Brodsky | Judas Kiss | Mary-Ellen Floyd | Chicago Hope | Helen Galloway | TV – 1 episode, The Breast and the Brightest Inspector Morse | Dr. Millicent 'Millie' Van Buren | TV – 1 episode, The Wench is Dead Angel Blue | Jill Cromwell | 1999 | L.A. Doctors | Judith Atcheson | TV – 1 episode, Been There, Done That Judging Amy | Mrs. Snowden | TV – 1 episode, The Persistence of Techtonics The Talented Mr. Ripley | Emily Greenleaf | 2000 | Boys and Girls | Shuttle Passenger | Things Left Unsaid | | 2001 | Law & Order: Special Victims Unit | Peyton Kleberg | TV – 1 episode, Tangled 2002 | Strong Medicine | | TV – 1 episode, Trauma Spooks | Mary Kane | TV – 1 episode, Thou Shalt Not Kill Law & Order: Criminal Intent | Dr. Leonard | TV – 1 episode, Bright Boy 2003 | Law & Order | Retired M.E. Gail Berardi | TV – 1 episode, Suicide Box 2005 | Kenneth Tynan: In Praise of Hardcore | Mary McCarthy | Jericho | Mrs. Redford | TV – 1 episode, The Killing of Johnny Swan 2006 | Cracker | Jean Molloy | TV – 1 episode, A New Terror 2007 | Midsomer Murders | Faith Alexander | TV – 1 episode, The Animal Within 2009 | Stolen | Maggie | 2013 | About Time | Mary's Mother, Jean | 2016 | The Confessions | Mysterious woman | 2016 | Offensive | Helen Martin | ### Production credits[edit] Film | Year | Role | Notes | | | Defenders of Riga | 2008 | Producer and co-writer | Latvia's official entry to the 2009 Academy Awards ## Awards and nominations[edit] Year | Award | Category | Title of work | Result | | | | 1979 | Golden Globe | Best Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama | Yanks | Nominated 1979 | Golden Globe | New Star of the Year in a Motion Picture - Female | Yanks | Nominated 1980 | BAFTA Film Award | Best Supporting Actress | The Europeans | Nominated 1982 | National Society of Film Critics Award | Best Supporting Actress | Cutter's Way | Nominated ## References[edit] 1. ^ Romanski, Matt (July 29, 1979). "Magazine reviewer hails Berks woman's film debut". Reading Eagle. p. 66. 2. ^ "Rotary.org: Ambassadorial Scholarships". Archived from the original on 2011-02-10. Retrieved 2011-02-08. 3. ^ "Lisa Eichhorn". IMDb. Retrieved 22 May 2017. 4. ^ "Statutes and Regulations: Statute II". www.admin.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 22 May 2017. 5. ^ Klemesrud, Judy (November 30, 1979). "Lisa Eichhorn: she tricked director". Windsor Star. (from The New York Times). p. 23. ## External links[edit] * Lisa Eichhorn at IMDb * Lisa Eichhorn at the Internet Broadway Database Authority control General| * ISNI * 1 * VIAF * 1 * WorldCat National libraries| * France (data) * Germany * Israel * United States Biographical dictionaries| * Germany Other| * SUDOC (France) * 1 *[m.]: married *[div.]: divorced