From Birth To Stardom
When Jennifer Aniston — one of several stars
on the hit television show Friends — appeared butt-naked on
the cover of Rolling Stone, she reached a level of sitcom stardom
that few of her contemporaries could match. In the revealing article,
Aniston not only showed off that famous coiffure, but uncovered
a tan line that spoke to her love of uncomfortable swimwear. But,
at the time, one couldn't help but wonder if there was any substance
behind the big hair and the pleasing posterior.
Aniston grew up around show business. Her father John was a regular
on Days of Our Lives for years; her mother Nancy was an actress
and sometime model; and her godfather was none other than Kojak
himself, Telly Savalas. Aniston had the good fortune to attend a
free-spirited school that encouraged her love of the arts. She joined
the school's drama club, and though she had always been interested
in acting, she soon started to think of it as a career choice. She
also became an dedicated artist, and one of her paintings was displayed
in New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. She attended New York's
High School of Performing Arts (better known as the Fame school),
and after graduation, she worked off-Broadway and appeared in productions
of For Dear Life and Dancing on Checker's Grave. After two years
of occasional theatre and waitressing, Aniston decided to head for
Hollywood, where she had little luck on auditions until her agent
advised her to shed thirty pounds. (Aniston went through Nutri/System
and gave a testimonial about the program on The Howard Stern Show)
Soon she found work on several failed television shows, including
Ferris Bueller, Molloy, The Edge, and Muddling Through.
It wasn't until she landed the role of Rachel Green in Friends
that Aniston became a household mane — scores of women flocked
to their hairdressers to demand the Rachel 'do. She emerged as "the
sexy Friend," although co-stars and Lisa Kudrow could hardly
be considered short on looks. Aniston tributes and temples erupted
in megabytes of fan pages all over the Internet, and her followers
didn't just watch the show with the sound turned down (fans Beavis
and Butt-Head suggested this for optimal viewing pleasure), but
compiled episode lists and spent hours discussing whether Rachel
and Ross (David Schwimmer) would finally break the sexual tension
and just do it. The fact that Aniston has managed to gain such a
following for playing a ditsy, spoiled waitress who's a little on
the bitchy side is a tribute to her appeal.
Aniston and her castmates have parlayed their fame into quite a
cash cow. (Did someone say cow? We'd be remiss if we didn't mention
that white mustache Aniston donned when she appeared with Kudrow
in print ads for milk.) She has also plugged a video tutorial for
Windows '95 with Matthew Perry, and has mugged with all her Friends
for Diet Coke. She even appeared in an esoteric NBC public service
announcement, where she declared with a soulful gaze: "Smart
is sexier than stupid any day." Every Friend has a movie deal,
and Aniston is leading the pack as far as film roles go. She made
She's the One for director Edward (The Brothers McMullen) Burns
on her weekends off from Friends, which raised the ire of Schwimmer,
who said, "No one can convince me that it doesn't harm the
quality of the show that people have to fly on Friday to New York
to shoot for two days and come back late Sunday night to be back
at work Monday." Aniston shrugged off the criticism, and has
gone on to complete 'Til There Was You, Dreams for an Insomniac,
and Picture Perfect. Better received than all her initial movie
roles was her wistful, charming lead performance in Nicholas Hytner's
witty adaptation of the Stephen McCauley novel The Object of My
Affection, in which Aniston played a social worker who falls in
love with her gay roommate.
Away from the small and big screens, Aniston has garnered overweening
attention for her romantic relationship with heartthrob actor Brad
Pitt. After months of rumors, the couple finally tied the knot on
July 29, 2000.
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