Alexandra Wilson
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2023}}
{{short description|American actress}}
{{For|the American entrepreneur|Alexandra Wilkis Wilson}}
{{BLP sources|date=December 2014}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Alexandra Wilson
| image =
| birth_name = Alexandra Muriel Wilson
| occupation = Actress
| years_active = 1984–present
}}
Alexandra Muriel Wilson is an American actress. She is best known for playing the original Josie Watts on the soap opera Another World (1988–1991). She also starred in the television series Homefront (1991-1992) and the film Small Soldiers (1998).{{citation needed|date=November 2016}}
Biography
=Early life=
Alexandra Wilson attended Chantilly High School in Fairfax County, Virginia, and was involved in performing and cheerleading. Wilson then studied theater and history at Broward Community College in the Miami area, but left after a year to avoid the drug scene.{{cite web|url=http://naturesjoyny.com/wp-content/uploads/051211MSMO3.jpg|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141213023324/http://naturesjoyny.com/wp-content/uploads/051211MSMO3.jpg|url-status=usurped|archive-date=December 13, 2014|title=Alex in Wonderland |first=Stella|last=Bednarz|work=Soap Opera Digest}}
Wilson's grandmother was one of the first Rockettes.{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1901&dat=19881106&id=zBcqAAAAIBAJ&sjid=k9MEAAAAIBAJ&pg=4229,4227424|title=New York brings actress to another world|first=Nancy|last=Reichardt|work=The News-Journal|date=November 6, 1988}} Her mother (Elaine Wilson), an award-winning drama teacher at Chantilly High School, sparked her interest in acting, as early as age five. Wilson recounted her mother's influence: "She put me in some of her productions, and she taught me in high school. I was never sure I could do it, but I knew I had to be an actor."{{cite web|title=The View from Kirtland Hill |url=http://w3.one.net/~abacab/hf/text/bits.htm |website=Homefront fan page |publisher=Excerpt from Soap Opera Digest |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/19991011024047/http://w3.one.net/~abacab/hf/text/bits.htm |archivedate=October 11, 1999 }}{{cite web |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=946&dat=19920103&id=w0wOAAAAIBAJ&sjid=-H4DAAAAIBAJ&pg=5136,92886 |title=Alexandra Wilson finds her 'Homefront' |first=Lisa |last=Otoupal | date=January 3, 1992 |work=Palo Verde Valley Times}}
After graduating from high school, Wilson held drama seminars for her mother's students. Later, Elaine Wilson would co-found and serve as President of The Alliance Theatre in Centreville, Virginia.{{cite web|url=http://www.thealliancetheatre.org/board-of-directors.html|title=The Alliance Theatre Board of Directors}}
=Career=
In 1980, with her parents' encouragement, Wilson moved to New York City to fully pursue a performing career. She initially lived with her ex-Rockette grandmother and paid for acting, dancing, and singing classes by waitressing for customers like Paul Newman, Mick Jagger, and Matthew Broderick. While auditioning for musicals, Wilson discovered that she preferred television and films over theater, as she admittedly struggled with dancing, though she could sing and act.
Wilson's early television roles were minor parts in the primetime series The New Mike Hammer (1984) and Spenser: For Hire (1986). By 1988, her film credits included Diner, Silent Madness, The Secret of My Success, and The Distance Between.{{cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1298&dat=19880604&id=yvdNAAAAIBAJ&sjid=RosDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5615,794590|title='Another World' addition used to playing television|first=Nancy|last=Reichardt|work=The Free Lance-Star|date=June 4, 1988}} From the age of 19, she has supplemented her income by appearing in a number of commercials, most notably for Pizza Hut, Tide, Coke, and later, Claritin.
Wilson's breakthrough came when she was cast as a regular in television daytime dramas. She made her soap opera debut as Sage Holland, a recurring character in As the World Turns. Wilson then progressed to starring in Loving (1987) as the troubled teenager April Hathaway. Six months into her contract, however, she was written out of the show, which led her to audition for Another World. When Wilson won the part of city-turned-farm girl Josie Watts, she welcomed the change, stating, "There's more potential with Josie than there was with April. She has more 'life' to her." Starting June 1988, Wilson starred in Another World for three years.{{cite web|title=Josie Watts|url=http://www.anotherworldhomepage.com/josie.html|website=Another World Homepage}} In 1994, she would turn down an offer to portray Kelly Cramer on One Life to Live.{{cite web|title=Alexandra Wilson (I)|url=https://m.imdb.com/name/nm0932971/?ref_=m_ttfcd_cl18 |website=IMDb}}
In 1991, Wilson moved to Los Angeles and transitioned to primetime television as a principal cast member of the post-World War II drama Homefront. Her appearance as Sarah Brewer Metcalf in Season One, opposite Kyle Chandler, allowed her to play a grown-up character for the first time. It also showcased her longtime fascination with history, particularly the World War II dynamics of both the battlefront and civilian life, and the importance of women in factories.{{cite web|url=http://homefront.yuku.com/topic/998/1991-Interviews|title=Alexandra Wilson: On the Homefront|first=Lisa|last=Backus|date=Fall 1991}} Despite winning the 1992 People's Choice Award for Favorite New TV Dramatic Series, Homefront had an abbreviated run and was not renewed for a third season.{{cite web|title=Homefront (1991-1993)|url= https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0101121/|website=IMDb}} Subsequently, Wilson would receive main billing in other short-lived drama series: the Aaron Spelling-produced The Round Table (1992) and University Hospital (1995), and the medical science fiction program Mercy Point (1998-1999).{{citation needed|date=November 2016}}
After Homefront, in the early 1990s, Wilson briefly returned to high school roles as the love interest of Billy Cranston (David Yost) in Mighty Morphin Power Rangers and the girlfriend of Brandon Walsh (Jason Priestley) in Beverly Hills, 90210. The latter reunited her with former Loving/Another World co-star Luke Perry. Throughout the 1990s, Wilson had several episodic guest spots on television, including One West Waikiki, Mr. & Mrs. Smith, High Tide (starring Rick Springfield), The Tony Danza Show, and V.I.P. (with Pamela Anderson Lee and Jay Leno).{{citation needed|date=November 2016}}
In 1998, Wilson had a role in the movie Small Soldiers, directed by Joe Dante. From 1996 to 1999, Wilson was additionally involved in a string of made-for-television movies: If Looks Could Kill (alongside Antonio Sabato Jr.), The Second Civil War (with Beau Bridges and James Earl Jones, and also directed by Dante), The Christmas Wish (opposite Neil Patrick Harris and Debbie Reynolds), and In My Sister's Shadow (co-starring Janet Leigh).{{citation needed|date=November 2016}}
Wilson's performances in the early 2000s included guest appearances in the television shows Any Day Now, First Monday, and Larry David's Curb Your Enthusiasm. She has since starred in independent features, namely the 2002 neo-noir Ocean Park (in the dual role of twins Jo and Davia), Bradford Tatum's crime thriller Salt (2006), and the Kickstarter-funded Life Inside Out in 2013.
=Personal life=
A dog owner, she once adopted a Spuds MacKenzie look-alike from the ASPCA. She is a history buff, and World War II is her favorite subject.
Another World co-star Allison Hossack was Wilson's roommate in the early 1990s in New York City. She later shared a two-bedroom Hollywood Hills apartment with Sharon Lawrence.{{cite web|last1=Gliatto|first1=Tom|title=Once in Love with Andy|url=http://www.people.com/people/mobile/article/0,,20104148,00.html|website=People|date=October 17, 1994}} Wilson is also good friends with Homefront co-star Jessica Steen and has stayed in touch with Another World's Matt Crane after leaving the show.
Filmography
=Film=
class="wikitable sortable" |
Year
! Movie ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
---|
1998
|Ms. Kegel | |
2006
|Salt |Phoebe | |
2009
|Ocean Park |Jolette Delacroix / Davia Delacroix | |
2013
|Vicky | |
=Television=
class="wikitable sortable" |
Year
! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
---|
1984
|Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer |Sally |"Too Young to Die" |
1986
|Chrissy Pierce |"At the River's Edge" |
1987
|Sage Holland |Recurring role |
1987–1989
|April Hathaway |TV series |
1988–1991
|Josephine Anne 'Josie' Watts |Main role{{cite web|title=Alexandra Wilson|url=http://www.tv.com/m/people/alexandra-wilson/|website=TV.com}} |
1991–92
|Sarah Brewer |Main role (season 1) |
1992
|Brooke Alexander |"Sex, Lies and Volleyball/Photo Fini", "Shooting Star/American in Paris", "Castles in the Sand" |
1992
|{{sortname|The|Round Table|The Round Table (TV series)}} |Kaitlin Cavanaugh |6 episodes (2 unaired){{cite book|last1=Brooks|first1=Tim|last2=Marsh|first2=Earle F.|title=Round Table, The|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=w8KztFy6QYwC&dq=kaitlin+cavanaugh+round+table&pg=PA1176|website=The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present|date=June 24, 2009|publisher=Random House Publishing |isbn=9780307483201}}{{cite web|title=The Round Table |url=http://epguides.com/RoundTable/ |website=epguides |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150715114255/http://epguides.com/RoundTable/ |archivedate=July 15, 2015 }} |
1993
|Marge |"Peace, Love and Woe" |
1995
|Sam McCormick |Main role |
1995
| |"Unhappily Ever After" |
1996
|If Looks Could Kill | |TV film |
1996
|Elena Rossini |"The Grape Escape" |
1997
|Liddy Parker |"Two Barretts and a Baby" |
1997
|{{sortname|The|Second Civil War}} |Caroline Dawes |TV film |
1998
|{{sortname|The|Tony Danza Show|The Tony Danza Show (1997 TV series)}} |Allison Paxton |"Vision Quest" |
1998
|{{sortname|The|Christmas Wish}} |Julia |TV film |
1998–99
|Dr. Dru Breslauer |Main role |
1999
|Laurie Connor |TV film |
1999
|Sharon Carter |"Valma and Louise" |
2001
| |"It's Not Just a Word: Part 1" |
2002
|Mary Willis |"Strip Search" |
2002
|Mary |"Mary, Joseph and Larry" |
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb name|932971}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wilson, Alexandra}}
Category:Year of birth missing (living people)
Category:American soap opera actresses