Kristen's Bio
An exceptionally poised young actress with a knack for playing
sullen teens, Kristen Stewart earned her big break as Jodie Foster’s daughter in
David Fincher’s hot-wired thriller, “Panic Room” (2002). Though none of her
subsequent films scored as well at the box office as that picture, Stewart
consistently impressed audiences and critics alike, both with her performances
and with her choice of projects – which frequently strayed far from the
kid-oriented material offered to actors in her age group.
Born April 9, 1990 in Los Angeles, CA, Stewart’s family relocated briefly to
Colorado before returning to L.A., where her father worked as a stage manager,
producer, and director on numerous Fox television shows. Her performance in a
grade school Christmas play caught the eye of an agent in the audience, who
contacted her parents to gauge Stewart’s interest in becoming an actress. Both
were initially opposed to the idea, but Stewart’s curiosity won them over, and
at the age of eight, she began auditioning for film and television roles. Her
first screen appearance came a year later in the Disney Channel TV production,
“The Thirteenth Year” (1999), in which she played a bit role. A more substantial
part came two years later with Rose Troche’s challenging independent drama, “The
Safety of Objects” (2001), in which she played the boyish daughter of troubled
single mom Patricia Clarkson.
Stewart found herself at the center of a major Hollywood production in 2002 when
she replaced Hayden Panettiere as the juvenile lead in David Fincher’s “Panic
Room.” Despite the presence of such veteran actors as Foster (to whom Stewart
bore a remarkable physical resemblance), Forest Whitaker, and Patrick Bachau,
Stewart held her own and delivered an assured performance that led some critics
to compare her to the film’s lead during her child actor days. Following “Panic
Room,” Stewart signed on to play the daughter of Dennis Quaid and Sharon Stone
in another suspenseful project, Mike Figgis’ “Cold Creek Manor” (2003). However,
it fared poorly with
audiences. Her next role was her first as a leading actress – “Catch That Kid”
(2004) was a breezy, teen-friendly caper, with Stewart as a young
mountain-climbing aficionado who orchestrates a high-tech bank robbery to pay
for an operation for her gravely ill father. A minor hit with younger audiences,
it allowed Stewart a chance to show a lighter side of her acting talents than
her previous efforts. Stewart’s other film from 2004 was the psychological drama
“Undertow,” which despite an acclaimed director, David Gordon Green, Terrence
Malick as producer and a cast led by Jamie Bell, Josh Lucas, and Dermot
Mulroney, it received almost no theatrical screentime.
Stewart’s next film, “Speak” (2005), which was based on the best-selling novel
by Laurie Halse Anderson, gave her the opportunity to play both the dark and the
light in the same project. She
played Melinda, a high school freshman who stops almost all verbal communication
after being raped by an upperclassman, but retains a vivid and often sardonic
running commentary in her head. Stewart handled the complexities of the
character with her customary skill. Unfortunately, the film did not receive a
theatrical release and instead aired on Showtime and Lifetime, in an edited
form.
Stewart then segued into Jon Favreau’s underrated space fantasy “Zathura”
(2005), which, despite requiring her to remain in a state of suspended animation
for part of the film, gave her another showcase for her comic skills, as the
perpetually exasperated older sister of Josh Hutcherson and Jonah Bobo. Even
though critics found much to love about “Zathura,” it too was an underperformer
in terms of ticket sales.
In 2006, Stewart starred in the Canadian feature “Fierce People,” a drama by
actor-director Griffin Dunne, about a troubled masseuse (Diane Lane) who
arranges for a better life for her teenage son and herself, but with unfortunate
results. The picture received a limited release in the United States. She
followed this with nother starring role in “The Messengers” (2007), a
supernatural film from noted Thai genre filmmakers and brothers Danny and Oxide
Pang. Despite the directors’ reputation with horror audiences, it was critically
panned and largely ignored by moviegoers.
After “The Messengers,” Stewart worked on no less than six pictures including
“In the Land of Women” (2007), with Meg Ryan and Adam Brody, and “What Just
Happened?” (2008), a Hollywood drama based on the book by producer Art Linson,
starring Robert De Niro, Bruce Willis, and Sean Penn. Stewart also found time
for smaller projects like Mary Stuart Masterson’s directorial debut “The Cake
Eaters” (2007), in which she played a young woman with a debilitating disease.