Jenna Fischer
Jenna Fischer | |
---|---|
Born | Regina Marie Fischer March 7, 1974 |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1998-present |
Spouse(s) | James Gunn (2000–2008) Lee Kirk (2010–present) |
Regina Marie "Jenna" Fischer (born March 7, 1974)[1] is an American actress. She is most widely known for her Emmy-nominated[2] portrayal of Pam Halpert (née Beesly) on the NBC situation comedy and mockumentary The Office, and has also appeared in several films, including Blades of Glory, Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story and The Promotion.
Early life
Fischer was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, but raised in the St. Louis, Missouri suburb of Manchester, the daughter of Jim, a plastics engineer, and Anne, a history teacher.[3] Fischer has one younger sister, Emily, a third grade teacher.[4] She experienced her first taste of performing at age six, when she participated in an acting workshop taught by her mother at Henry School in St. Louis, a workshop also attended by actor Sean Gunn, with whom she grew up.[3][5]
Fischer attended Pierremont Elementary School in Manchester, Missouri, and Nerinx Hall High School, a private all-girls Catholic school, in Webster Groves, Missouri.[6] She originally enrolled as a pre-law history major at Truman State University, but instead graduated with a bachelor of arts in theatre, as well as a minor in journalism (she was an active participant on the college newspaper).[7][8]
Career
Career development
Fischer first began her career working in professional theatre. While attending college in Missouri, she performed with a touring Murder Mystery Dinner Theatre group[9] and, upon her move to Los Angeles, began performing Commedia dell'arte with the Zoo District Theatre. Her performance in the company's musical adaptation of the film Nosferatu led to her first agent.[10] However, she struggled to break into film and television, telling NPR that her first paying film job was a "sex education video for [psychiatric] patients upon their release from UCLA Medical Center".[11] In a Myspace blog written specifically to advise actors beginning their own career,[12] she explained that it took three years before landing her first televised speaking role, a part on Spin City.[12]
She continued to spend the next few years of her career appearing in bit parts in small indie films, such as Employee of the Month, Lucky 13, and The Specials, as well as guest spots on the television shows Six Feet Under, That '70s Show, Cold Case, Miss Match, Strong Medicine, Undeclared, What I Like About You, and Off Centre.
Fischer appeared in friend Peter Alton's 2002 short subject film Les Superficiales. Fischer met Alton at the Zoo District Theatre group, and he later co-wrote and narrated her self-produced film, Lollilove.[13] In 2003, she held a starring role in The Girl's Guide to Summer, a 2003 Instant Films short (a competition similar to the nationally held 48 Hour Film Project, only based in Los Angeles) directed by Instant Film's co-founder (and camera operator) Charles Papert.[14]
Lollilove
While her film career was slowly beginning, Fischer took matters into her own hands, writing, producing, directing and starring in her own mockumentary, LolliLove. The film co-starred her now ex-husband James Gunn, as well as friends Linda Cardellini, Judy Greer, Lloyd Kaufman and Jason Segel. "I wasn't working much, getting little guest-star roles months away from each other," Fischer explained in 2006. She began participating in The Artist's Way, a self-led creativity seminar in book form. "From doing that book I got this idea...When we started it, it wasn’t even supposed to be a real movie. It was just going to be an improv project for James and I to amuse ourselves with."[15] Utilizing a camera she gave Gunn as a wedding present, she filmed preliminary improvisational interviews with her friends in the faux documentary format that would later bring her fame on The Office. "I really feel it was divine intervention that I chose to work in this medium for a year," she said in an interview. "It was the best practice I could have ever gotten for the possibility of being on the show."[16]
Lollilove premiered at the St. Louis International Film Festival, the hometown of Fischer and Gunn, in November 2004, and was also shown at the TromaDance Film Festival. For her role in the film, Fischer was awarded a Screen Actors Guild Emerging Actor Award.[17] Despite the film's contribution to her career, she admitted to a St. Louis arts and entertainment magazine:[18] that the experience dissuaded her from any future directing:
The directing was exhausting and the writing was painful. It was very difficult to direct and star in a movie. We also had a very small crew so I did a lot of things a normal director doesn’t have to do, like make the props and serve lunch. I was simultaneously getting into character, going over my lines, set dressing the next shot, coaching an actor, and brainstorming with my DP [cinematographer]. I’m good at multitasking, but that was too much for me. I couldn’t enjoy any one part the way I would have liked. I think I’ll stick to acting.
The Office and feature films
In 2005, after a succession of mostly improvised auditions similar to her Lollilove experience, Fischer landed the role of Pam Beesly on what would become the NBC hit, The Office, based on the original BBC series. Before her initial audition, casting director Allison Jones advised Fischer, "Dare to bore me."[19] Fischer herself spent several years working as a receptionist and administrative assistant in Los Angeles offices, much like her television counterpart, while struggling to achieve success, and thus felt she was well-suited to the role.[20] "I'm so attached to Pam's journey," she told NPR in 2009. "I just love playing this character so, so much."[19] She received a Primetime Emmy Award nomination in 2007.
Soon after The Office premiered, Fischer was focused on the show's success; in an April 2005 interview with her alma mater's student newspaper, she said: "Honestly it would be great to get to play Pam for a long, long time .... I don't have real big aspirations to be a movie star. I would love to be on a long-running hit TV show. You end up playing a defining role."[7] As The Office grew into a success, Fischer's film acting career became more established. In 2006, she co-starred in her then-husband's film, Slither, and in 2007, she filmed supporting roles in The Brothers Solomon, with Will Arnett and Will Forte, Blades of Glory, with Will Ferrell, John Heder, and Amy Poehler, and Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, alongside John C. Reilly, with whom she co-starred again in 2008's The Promotion, also starring Seann William Scott.
In 2009, Fischer completed filming on the movies Solitary Man, and the indie A Little Help, which opened in the summer of 2010 at the Seattle International Film Festival. Also that summer, she completed filming on the Farrelly Brothers comedy Hall Pass, which was released in February 2011.
Other work
Fischer appeared on Bravo's Celebrity Poker Showdown in 2006, participating in the show's eighth tournament, shot in New Orleans, Louisiana, and playing for Catholic Charities' Tsunami Relief.
In 2007 Fischer starred in the music video for Willie Wisely's single "Through Any Window", directed by longtime friend John Cabrera; the opportunity arose because she knew Wisely from work he had done on soundtracks for LolliLove and Tromeo and Juliet, one of her husband's films.[21]
In December of the same year, during the Hollywood writer's strike, Fischer appeared at Sacred Fools Theatre in episode 25 of Darque Magick, a serialized play written and directed by Jenelle Riley.[22]
In July 2009, Fischer played left field for the National League team in the Taco Bell All-Star Legends and Celebrity Softball Game as part of the MLB All-Star Week festivities, held at Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri, where she grew up.[23] In March 2010, she returned to the area to co-chair an annual auction for Nerinx Hall High School, her alma mater. At the event, she auctioned off a set visit to The Office and multiple autographed props from the show.[24]
Fischer was named an official spokeswoman for Proactiv Skincare Solutions in 2009,[25][26] and was announced as the voice behind the Wisconsin Milk Marketing Board Grilled Cheese Academy website[27] in 2010.
Fischer was named as producer of the mid-August through October 2010 run of the critically acclaimed play Sad Happy Sucker, written by her husband Lee Kirk and directed by friend Sean Gunn. The play previously ran as a theatre workshop in February and March 2007.[28]
Personal life
Fischer met screenwriter James Gunn, her first husband, after she graduated from Truman State and moved to Los Angeles; her childhood friend Sean Gunn, James' brother, introduced them after he helped her get a part in a showcase.[7] That small part in a showcase also led to her getting her first manager.[7] On October 7, 2000, Fischer married James Gunn.[29] About seven years later, Fischer announced her separation from Gunn.[30] In a radio interview during the publicity tour of The Promotion, she confirmed that her divorce from Gunn was finalized.[31]
In the summer of 2009, People magazine reported her engagement to screenwriter Lee Kirk.[32] Fischer confirmed this publicly on her MySpace page.[33] The pair were married[34] on July 3, 2010.[35] On May 13, 2011, Fischer's publicist confirmed the couple is currently expecting their first child.[36]
In May 2007, while attending the NBC upfronts for her role in The Office, Fischer suffered a traumatic injury after falling down a flight of stairs in a Manhattan lounge, fracturing her back in four places. She was taken via ambulance to a Manhattan hospital and spent several weeks after in a New York City hotel before she was finally cleared by her doctor to fly to Los Angeles.[37] After a twelve-week recovery, she returned to the set in time for the fourth season's first episode.
Fischer is passionate about animal rescue, and she is involved with the Los Angeles organizations Kitten Rescue and Rescue Rover.[38] Before The Office, she worked for three years doing hands-on rescue work for the organizations.[39] She still regularly fosters cats and has hosted Kitten Rescue's annual silent auction three years in a row (in 2008, 2009, and 2010).[40]
Fischer maintains a MySpace blog, detailing her experiences on The Office,[41] and is the godmother of co-star Angela Kinsey's daughter, Isabel.[42]
Filmography
Films
Year | Film | Role | Other notes |
---|---|---|---|
1998 | Born Champion | Wendy Miller | |
1998 | Channel 493 | Rane | |
2000 | The Specials | College Girl | |
2001 | Picking Up Chicks With Hartland Williams | dog walker | |
2002 | Les Superficails | French Girl | |
2003 | Melvin Goes to Dinner | Hostess | |
2003 | Doggie Tails Vol.1: Lucky's First Sleepover | Kelsey | |
2003 | Rubbing Charlie | uncredited | |
2004 | Employee of the Month | Whisper | |
The Women (short) | Leslie | ||
LolliLove | Jenna | Co-writer and director | |
2005 | The 40-Year-Old Virgin | Woman #1 | Background in a bar scene |
2005 | Lucky 13 | Sorority Girl | |
2006 | Slither | Shelby | |
2007 | Blades of Glory | Katie Van Waldenberg | |
The Brothers Solomon | Michelle | ||
Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story | Darlene Madison | ||
2008 | The Promotion | Jen Stauber | |
2009 | Official Rejection (documentary) | herself | |
2009 | Solitary Man | Susan | |
2010 | A Little Help | Laura | post-production |
2011 | Hall Pass | Maggie | |
2012 | The Giant Mechanical Man | Janice |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2001 | Spin City | Waitress | Episode "A Shot in the Dark: Part 2" |
Undeclared | Betty | 2 episodes | |
2002 | Off Centre | Melanie | Episode "The Backup" |
What I Like About You | Kim | Episode "Copy That" | |
2003 | Strong Medicine | Camille Freemont | Episode "Maternal Mirrors" |
Miss Match | Connie | Episode "Kate in Ex-tasy" | |
2004 | Cold Case | Dottie 1943 | Episode "Factory Girls" |
2005 | That '70s Show | Stacy Wanamaker | Season 7, Episode 12 "Don't Lie to Me" |
Six Feet Under | Sharon Kinney | Season 5, Episodes 1 and 2: "A Coat of White Primer" and "Dancing for Me."[43] | |
2005–present | The Office | Pam (Beesly) Halpert | Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series (2006, 2007) Nominated: Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series (2007) Nominated: Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series (2008) |
Awards and nominations
Year | Group | Award | Result | Film/Television series |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | St. Louis International Film Festival | Screen Actors Guild Emerging Actor Award | Won | LolliLove |
TromaDance Film Festival | Independent Soul Award | Won | ||
2006 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series[44] | Won | The Office |
2007 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series[45] | Won | |
Emmy Award | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series[46] | Nominated | ||
2008 | Screen Actors Guild Awards | Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series | Nominated | |
2009 | Teen Choice Awards | Choice TV Actress: Comedy [47] | Nominated |
References
- ^ Brady, James (2007-11-21). "In Step With...Jenna Fischer". Parade Magazine. Retrieved 2009-06-10.
- ^ Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress – Comedy Series List of Primetime Emmy Award Nominees
- ^ a b Fischer's biography at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ Jenna Fischer - IMDb
- ^ St. Louisan Jenna Fischer is more than ready for "The Office", Post-Dispatch Television Critic, Thursday, Mar. 24 2005
- ^ The Office: Your Questions Answered!, an April 2006 entry by Fischer in the TV Guide Insider blog
- ^ a b c d "Alumna works in "The Office" on NBC". Truman State University Index. April 7, 2005. Retrieved 2011-03-05.
- ^ Jenna Fischer Interview[dead link] from findarticles.com
- ^ [1] Jenna Fischer on A Little Help, Dinner Theatre, and Breaking the Pam Mold, a 2010 interview.
- ^ [2] Jenna Fischer's Acting Advice Blog, a 2008 entry.
- ^ [3] 2009 Interview with NPR, "Jenna Fischer, Keeping it Real at The Office
- ^ a b [4] Myspace: The Acting Advice Blog by Jenna Fischer.
- ^ A March 15, 2006 article by Jenelle Riley in Entertainment News Wire
- ^ Quick shoot artists, an August 2003 article from the Los Angeles Times (includes a 3660053.realvideo?coll=cl-home-top-blurb-right link to the film itself)
- ^ [5] Interview with a Wisconsin online arts and entertainment magazine, Issue #7
- ^ [6] A March 2006 article by Jennelle Riley. Entertainment News Wire.
- ^ Jenna Fischer profile from Variety magazine
- ^ The LolliLove Interview: Jenna Fischer (December 2005), from an arts and entertainment magazine in St. Louis
- ^ a b [7] NPR Interview: Jenna Fischer, Keeping it Real at The Office
- ^ [8] Internet Movie Database Biography, Jenna Fischer
- ^ Willie Wisely & Jenna Fischer: Kodak Moment from Harp (magazine)
- ^ Darque Magick from the Sacred Fools Theatre website
- ^ Official List of St. Louis Game Participants[dead link]
- ^ AuctioNerinx from the Nerinx Hall High School website
- ^ More of your Questions Answered, a March 25, 2009 blog entry from her Myspace Blog
- ^ Katy Perry, Avril Lavigne, Jenna Fischer Get Proactiv a January 13, 2010 blog entry from AOL's Stylelist.com
- ^ "Jenna Fischer narrates Grilled Cheese Academy". OfficeTally. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
- ^ [9]'Sad Happy Sucker', play wesite. Retrieved 2010.
- ^ Jenna Fischer Biography at NBC's The Office website
- ^ Office actress Fischer, husband separate (September 2007), Reuters.
- ^ WMMR Interview (June 2008)
- ^ The Office Star Jenna Fischer Is Engaged, a July 6, 2009 article from People magazine
- ^ Jenna Fischer Engaged, a July 6, 2009 entry on the Officetally fansite
- ^ "Jenna Fischer Weds Lee Kirk". National Ledger. July 5, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010.
- ^ "Jenna Fischer marries; newlywed Megan Fox returns home". USA Today. July 5, 2010.
- ^ "Jenna Fischer is Pregnant". US Magazine. May 13, 2011.
- ^ "a 2007 Myspace entry by Fischer". Blogs.myspace.com. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
- ^ Harrington, Maureen. Jenna Fischer: 'A Little' Crazy About Cats, People, 12 September 2008.
- ^ "a 2008 Myspace blog entry by Fischer". Blogs.myspace.com. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
- ^ "Jenna Fischer Hosts Fur Ball". Looktothestars.org. 2008-09-16. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
- ^ Template:Myspace
- ^ IMDB: Jenna Fischer, IMDB
- ^ Jenna Fischer from IMDB
- ^ Screen Actors Guild Honors Outstanding Film and Television Performances..., a January 2007 press release from the SAG Awards website
- ^ 'Sopranos,' 'The Office' Win SAG Ensemble Awards, a January 2008 TVWeek article
- ^ Rizzo, Monica (2007-07-19). "2007 Emmy Award Reactions". People.com. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
- ^ "Teen Choice Awards 2009". Teenchoiceawards.com. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
External links
- American film actors
- American television actors
- Actors from Missouri
- People from Fort Wayne, Indiana
- People from St. Louis, Missouri
- Truman State University alumni
- The Office (U.S. TV series)
- Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series Screen Actors Guild Award winners
- 1974 births
- Living people
- Animal rights advocates