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Keri was born in Fountain Valley, California to David
Russell, a Nissan Motors executive, and Stephanie Stephens; she
has an older brother, Todd, and a younger sister, Julie. Keri
grew up in Dallas, Texas, Mesa, Arizona and Denver, Colorado.
Keri first found her way onto television as a cast member of the
New Mickey Mouse Club variety show on the Disney Channel. Keri
Russell was on the show from 1991 to 1993, and in the last
year starred with future pop-stars Christina Aguilera, Britney
Spears, and Justin Timberlake.
Several appearances on film and TV followed, with one of her
most significant pre-Felicity roles coming in the 1996's The
Babysitter's Seduction. However, it was a fairly stereotypical
TV movie, with melodramatic overtones. Keri Russell had a role
in the short-lived soap opera series Malibu Shores the same
year. Keri also appeared in Bon Jovi's music video "Always" with
Jack Noseworthy.
From 1998 to 2002, Keri starred as the title character in
Felicity. Russell's long and curly hair was one of her
character's defining characteristics, and a drastic hairstyle
change at the beginning of the show's second season was
considered to be the cause of a significant drop in the show's
ratings. This reportedly led to a new policy at The WB where
major changes in appearance by on-screen talent must be approved
by the network: WB network executive Susanne Daniels said in
early 2000, " Nobody is cutting their hair again on this
network. " In reality, the network didn't become that strict,
but new policies were enacted requiring hairstyle changes to be
approved by management. Keri Russell won a Golden Globe for her
performance in 1999.
Keri herself was surprised at the reaction, later stating:"
People still take it really personally. They come up to me at
breakfast places like, 'When are you growing your hair back?' ".
The ratings drop also coincided with the show's move to Sunday
night, so it is unclear exactly how much effect the hairstyle
change actually had.
When Felicity ended, Keri took a break from acting and even
considered quitting the profession. Keri Russell's next role was
as part of the Mel Gibson-led
bio-pic We Were Soldiers in 2002, where she played the wife of
an American serviceman. Keri Russell moved to New York City and
took about two years to avoid the business of Hollywood,
spending time with friends.
The actress made her Off-Broadway stage debut in 2004, appearing
with Jeremy Piven,
Andrew McCarthy, and Ashlie Atkinson in Neil LaBute's Fat Pig.
In 2005 she returned to television and film, first with an
appearance in the Hallmark Hall of Fame TV movie Magic of
Ordinary Days. In theatrical release was The Upside of Anger,
where she appeared alongside Kevin Costner and Joan Allen. Keri
Russell will be in the mid-year miniseries Into the West.
Although a number of her Felicity co-stars went on to appear in
J.J. Abrams's TV series, Alias, Keri declined invitations to be
part of the show. In a seminar at the Museum of Television and
Radio, Abrams said, "I've asked Keri if she would ever do it,
and I usually get this, sort of like, giggle—and then she hangs
up." In 2005, he asked her to join the cast of Mission:
Impossible III, and she accepted. The film was released on May
5, 2006.
Keri's latest movie is Butterfly: A Grimm Love Story, titled
Rothenburg for its German release. Keri Russell plays Katie
Armstrong, a graduate student who writes a thesis paper on an
infamous cannibal murder case. In the process, Armstrong becomes
obsessed with the dark side and begins to lose herself. The film
was set to open in Germany on March 9, 2006, but Armin Meiwes
succeeded in getting a German court to issue an injunction
banning the film in that country. Meiwes, who killed and
partially ate a man in 2001, served as inspiration for the film.
In requesting the injunction, he complained that the film was a
sensationalized account of his crime.
Keri currently resides in Manhattan and is the newest celebrity
spokeswoman for CoverGirl_(brand) Cosmetics.
Film List
This Keri Russell Biography Page is Copyright The Planets © 2004 - 2006 Chuck Ayoub