Betsy Brantley
{{short description|American actress|bot=PearBOT 5}}
{{distinguish|Betsy Brandt}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Betsy Brantley
| image =
| caption =
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1955|9|20}}
| birth_place = New York City, New York, U.S.
| death_date =
| death_place =
| spouse = {{plainlist|
- {{marriage|Steven Soderbergh|1989|1994|end=divorced}}
}}
| years_active = 1981–present
| children = 1
| occupation = Actress
| alma_mater = University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Central School of Speech and Drama
}}
Betsy Brantley is an American actress. She has appeared in numerous films, plays, and television shows since the early 1980s. Her breakout role was in the 1982 film Five Days One Summer with Sean Connery.
Early life
Betsy Brantley was born in 1955 to Jack R. Brantley, a textile executive, and Dotty Brantley (née Rabey).{{cite web |title=Jack R. Brantley Obituary |url=https://greensboro.com/obituaries/brantley-jack-r/article_036351c7-1d3b-5280-bd22-624d57091376.html |publisher=Greensboro News and Record |date=November 30, 2017 |access-date=November 1, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220119162451/https://greensboro.com/obituaries/brantley-jack-r/article_036351c7-1d3b-5280-bd22-624d57091376.html |archive-date=January 19, 2022 }} In 1960, Jack moved the family to Greensboro, North Carolina, moving into the same house on Meadowbrook Terrace where he grew up. In 1962 Jack moved the family to Rutherfordton, North Carolina, to serve as division president at dress-manufacturer Tanner. Betsy has a fraternal twin Alison, an older brother Jack Jr., and a younger brother Duncan who is a producer and screenwriter.
Growing up Brantley spent a great deal of her time in the Blue Ridge Mountains near Rutherfordton, where she developed a love for mountains. Her affinity with mountains helped her land her first major role in the film Five Days One Summer.{{cite web |title=Scott's World: Incest, mountains, new star |url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1982/11/22/Scotts-World-Incest-mountains-new-star/3444406789200/ |first=Vernon |last=Scott |publisher=United Press International |date=November 22, 1982 |access-date=November 1, 2020}}
Brantley graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1977 and the Central School of Speech and Drama in the United Kingdom in 1980.{{cite news |last1=Salter |first1=Charles Jr. |title=Headed for parts unknown |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/62290903/betsy-brantley/ |accessdate=November 1, 2020 |work=The News and Observer |date=December 26, 1990 |location=North Carolina, Raleigh |page=D 1|via = Newspapers.com}}
Career
Brantley's first major role was Kate in the 1982 film Five Days One Summer with Sean Connery. The film's director, Fred Zinnemann, cast Brantley because he wanted a new, unfamiliar face. Zinnemann only auditioned young women with little or no acting experience because he didn't want audiences associating a known actress, who had been around the block a time or two on screen or in a publicized personal life, spoiling the illusion of virtue. Until her role in Five Days One Summer, her acting experience had been limited to a few roles in the English theater, a five-minute part in a British TV movie and a minor role in the film Shock Treatment.
Like Five Days One Summer, many of Brantley's films are based in Europe. Her most famous role, perhaps, is her portrayal of Neely Pritt in Shock Treatment (1981). She also played alongside Pierce Brosnan and Michael Caine in the film version of The Fourth Protocol (1987) and acted a cameo in the Ashley Judd movie Double Jeopardy (1999). Brantley was also the performance model for Jessica Rabbit in Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988).Listed in the end of movie credits
Along with roles in several other films, including Havana (1990) and Deep Impact (1998), Betsy has been a cast member in a number of television shows, including Tour of Duty and Second Noah. On Tour of Duty, she played the role of Dr. Jennifer Seymour (later Major Jennifer Seymour). On Second Noah, she played Jesse Beckett, a veterinarian and the mother of eight adopted children.
Brantley played Dolph Lundgren's girlfriend in Dark Angel (1990, retitled I Come in Peace in America).
She has also appeared as Elsie Cubitt in the Granada Television production of "The Dancing Men", from The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and also appeared in the 1987 BBC Horizon film, Life Story (the story of the discovery of the DNA double helix) as James Watson's sister, Elizabeth Watson.
Personal life
Brantley married filmmaker Steven Soderbergh.{{cite book|last1=Biskind|first1=Peter|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jo1HDZsI1-QC&q=%22Betsy+Brantley%22&pg=PT274|title=Down and Dirty Pictures: Miramax, Sundance, and the Rise of Independent Fil|date=8 January 2013|publisher=Simon and Schuster|isbn=978-1-4391-2710-0|language=en|accessdate=November 1, 2020}} She has one daughter, Sarah, with Soderbergh. Sarah lives in Seattle, Washington.{{cite web |title=Pets and Their People: Blueberry and Betsy Brantley |url=https://dailyprogress.com/community/orangenews/entertainment/pets-and-their-people-blueberry-and-betsy-brantley/article_da0ee18e-295b-11e9-8e90-1f0175a54e86.html |first=Hilary |last=Holladay |publisher=Orange County Review |date=February 5, 2019 | access-date=November 1, 2020}}
Brantley is a private person and somewhat uncomfortable with the stardom she achieved. After her critical success with Five Days One Summer, she said "I'd like to have had my career move a little slower, I find the attention just a bit daunting."
Brantley lives in a pre–Civil War era home in the Montford, Virginia area with her pet cat Blueberry.{{cite web |title="Creative to Creative" featuring Betsy Brantley postponed until June |url=https://dailyprogress.com/community/orangenews/creative-to-creative-featuring-betsy-brantley-postponed-until-june/article_f787b468-6314-11ea-bbae-1f6c5b2009f9.html |publisher=Orange County Review |date=March 10, 2020 | access-date=November 1, 2020}}
Filmography
=Film=
class="wikitable" |
Year
! Title ! Role ! Notes |
---|
1981
|Neely Pritt | |
1982
|Kate | |
1984
|Julie Schofield | |
1987
|{{sortname|The|Fourth Protocol|The Fourth Protocol (film)}} |Eileen McWhirter | |
1987
|{{sortname|The|Princess Bride|The Princess Bride (film)}} |The Mother | |
1988
|Jessica's Performance Model | |
1990
|Diane Pallone |AKA, Dark Angel |
1990
|Diane | |
1993
|Peg | |
1993
|Shepherd on the Rock |Jean | |
1996
|Mrs. Munson / Attractive Woman No. 2 | |
1997
|Mrs. Montgomery | |
1998
|Special Ed Teacher No. 2 | |
1998
|Ellen Biederman | |
1999
|{{sortname|The|Encounter|nolink=1}} |Waitress |Short |
1999
|Brenda Granger | |
1999
|Prosecutor | |
2002
|{{sortname|The|Angel Doll|nolink=1}} |Mary Barlow | |
2008
|This Man's Life |Mrs. Zimmerman |Short |
2022
|Kimi |Kimi |Voice |
=Television=
class="wikitable" |
Year
! Title ! Role ! Notes |
---|
1984
|Elsie Cubitt |Episode: "The Dancing Men" |
1985
|Romance on the Orient Express |Stacey |TV film |
1985
|American Beauty |Episode: "Gilded Youth" |
1987
|Elizabeth Watson |Episode: "The Race for the Double Helix" |
1987
|Dreams Lost, Dreams Found |Jane McAllister |TV film |
1987
|London Embassy |Flora Domingo-Duncan |Episodes: "The Winfield Wallpaper", "Tomb with a View" |
1988
|{{sortname|The|Comic Strip Presents...|The_Comic_Strip#The_Comic_Strip_Presents...}} |Vanessa |Episode: "The Yob" |
1988
|{{sortname|A|Year in the Life}} |Cynthia |Episode: "Glory Days" |
1988
|Dorothy |Episode: "Where's Solomon When You Need Him?" |
1988
|Nancy Tucker |Episodes: "Ozymandias", "A Happy Life" |
1988
|Marion Castle |Episode: "The Big Knife" |
1989
|Men |Claire |Episode: "Baltimore" |
1989
|Jennifer Seymour |Recurring role (seasons 2–3) |
1992
|Yesterday Today | |TV film |
1993
|{{sortname|The|Jackie Thomas Show}} |Gail Harper |Episode: "Stand Up for Bastards" |
1993
|Claudia |Episode: "True Love Ways" |
1993
|Final Appeal |Fran |TV film |
1995
|Little Lord Fauntleroy |Mrs. Errol |TV miniseries |
1995
| |Episode: "The Fugitive" |
1995
|Dad, the Angel & Me |Susan Lyons |TV film |
1996–97
|Jessie Beckett |Main role |
1997
|Joanne McNabb |Episode: "Great Expectations" |
1998
|Val Dixon |Episode: "Speak for Yourself, Bruce Clayton" |
1998
|Jan Armstrong |Episode: "Mare Tranquilitatis" |
1999
|Mrs. Dano |Episode: "The Heavens Can Wait" |
2002
|Impact |Diane Cousins |TV film |
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb name}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Brantley, Betsy}}
Category:People from Rutherfordton, North Carolina
Category:Alumni of the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama
Category:American film actresses
Category:American television actresses
Category:Actresses from North Carolina
Category:20th-century American actresses