![]() |
Ellen Burstyn
Keynote Fee : $20,000 plus expenses Travels From: NY |
Topics
- Celebrities & Causes
- Substance Abuse
- Women's Health
Formats
- Keynote
Speaker Information
Ellen Burstyn's illustrious career has encompassed the stage, film and television. Born Edna Rae Gillooly in Detroit, Michigan, Burstyn spent her early years as a model and actress, appearing regularly on "The Jackie Gleason Show" and other television shows, including "The Doctors," "Ben Casey," and "Iron Horse." Debuting on Broadway in 1957 in "Fair Game," it was her starring role in "Same Time, Next Year" in 1975 that garnered Burstyn a Tony Award as "Best Actress," as well as The Drama Desk and Outer Circle Critics Award. In 1978, she created the role in the film version and received a Golden Globe Award and an Academy Award nomination.
A long-standing star of theater, Burstyn's stage credits include the Broadway production of "84 Charing Cross Road," "Park Your Car in Harvard Yard," "Driving Miss Daisy," the one-woman play "Shirley Valentine," "Shimada," and "Sacrilege." In the 1990's she starred in two plays by Horton Foote, "The Trip to Bountiful" and "Death of Papa." She has recently starred in Eugene O'Neill's "Long Day's Journey Into Night" at Houston's Alley Theatre and at Hartford Stage in Connecticut. In the fall of 2003, Burstyn returned to Broadway in "Oldest Confederate Widow Tells All" at the Longacre Theater, where she made her Broadway debut in 1957.
Burstyn's film career began with her portrait of an ex-housewife turned waitress/singer trying to support herself and her 12-year old son in "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore," for which she won the 1974 Oscar for "Best Actress," as well as a Golden Globe and the British Academy Award. She has been nominated for Oscars in four other film roles, including "The Last Picture Show," "The Exorcist," "Resurrection," and "Requiem for a Dream." Her other film credits include "Goodbye Charlie," "Tropic of Cancer," "The King of Marvin Gardens," "Providence," "Dying Young," "When A Man Loves A Woman," "Roommates," "How To Make An American Quilt," "Deceiver," "Playing By Heart," "Walking Across Egypt," and "The Spitfire Grill." Her latest starring role was in the film "Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood."
On television, Burstyn received an Emmy nomination for her title role in "The People vs. Jean Harris." She also starred in "Act of Vengeance," "When You Remember Me," "Getting Out," "My Brother's Keeper," "Follow the River," Disney's "Flash," Hallmark's "Night Ride Home," and Showtime's "Mermaid." She received a second Emmy nomination for her starring role in "Pack of Lies," a 1987 Hallmark Hall of Fame television production. In 1988, Burstyn narrated a segment of "Dear America: Letters Home from Vietnam" on HBO. She also starred in the television series "That's Life." Burstyn has recorded many books-on-tape, and in 1996, she was nominated for a Grammy in the "Best Spoken Word" category as the narrator of Grow Old Along With Me, The Best is Yet To Be. She is currently in the process of writing her autobiography.
The first woman to be elected President of Actors' Equity Association, Burstyn served as the Artistic Director of the Actors Studio for six years. She continues to be active as Co-President with Al Pacino and Harvey Keitel. Academically, Burstyn holds three doctorates: one in Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts, a Doctor of Humane Letters from Dowling College, as well as one from the New School for Social Research, where she teaches in the Actors Studio/New School M.F.A. program. She was the recipient of the Career Achievement Award from the 2000 Boston Film Festival and the Career Achievement Award from the prestigious National Board of Review in early 2001.
Burstyn also lectures throughout the country on a wide range of topics, including her personal story of overcoming substance abuse. In her early 20's, at the start of her career on Broadway, Burstyn found herself caught up in what was considered "normal" behavior at the time: late nights out drinking and partying, with mornings spent nursing hangovers. When she moved from New York to Hollywood to begin working in film, she continued to rely on alcohol and cigarettes to help her through stressful situations. Then, directed by her own intuition, Burstyn made a change in her career that changed her entire life. She returned to New York and began studying with the renowned acting coach, Lee Strasberg. Through her work with Strasberg, Burstyn learned "how to be present" in her work, and in her life. She overcame her impulses to drink and smoke, and as a result discovered her own commitment to a healthy balance of body, mind, and spirit. Burstyn now encourages others to listen to what is real inside of themselves, to separate from their fear, and to "make a friend of your own mind."

