Was originally supposed to play the role of Iris Hineman is the film Minority Report (2002), but had to back out. She was replaced by Lois Smith. (imdb.com)
Donated her wardrobe from The Devil Wears Prada to a charity auction. (imdb.com)
Sister of Harry Streep. (imdb.com)
Her father was a drug company exec; her mother, an artist-turned-housewife who kept an art studio behind the house. Her father loved to play the piano and her mother to sing. Meryl was given singing lessons at a young age. Her mother died in 2001 and her father in 2004. (imdb.com)
Occasionally mistaken for friend Glenn Close, Streep was pregnant with her fourth child while shopping in a Los Angeles baby store where the staff lavished her with huge amounts of baby paraphernalia. Just as she was about to leave they whispered, "We loved you in Fatal Attraction (1987)". (imdb.com)
She was voted the 37th Greatest Movie Star of all time by Entertainment Weekly. (imdb.com)
Was nominated for Best Actress in 1987 along with Cher. When Cher was announced, just before the cameras cut away from the other four actresses, Streep could be seen springing to her feet in delight and applauding for Cher. During her acceptance speech, Cher thanked Streep personally, as they had worked together on Cher's first film, "Silkwood". As the camera briefly cut away to Streep sitting in the audience, she blew Cher a kiss. (She's apparently a very good sport about losing.). (imdb.com)
Holds the record for most Golden Globe nominations for acting, actresses only (19 total). (imdb.com)
Nominated for a 2007 Drama Desk Award for her performance in "Mother Courage and Her Children" (Outstanding Actress in a Play). (imdb.com)
Measurements: 34B-26-36 (from film SFX torso mold done in 1982) (source: Celebrity Sleuth magazine). (imdb.com)
Ranked #24 in Empire (UK) magazine's "The Top 100 Movie Stars of All Time" list. [October 1997] (imdb.com)
2007 - Ranked #6 on EW's The 50 Smartest People in Hollywood. (imdb.com)
She was inducted in the 2007 New Jersey Hall of Fame for her services to arts and entertainment. (imdb.com)
Born at 8:05 a.m. EDT. (imdb.com)
Named an Officer of the French Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. [2000] (imdb.com)
Has named her favourite actresses working today as Cate Blanchett, Emily Blunt, Dame Helen Mirren and Nicole Kidman. (imdb.com)
Acting career began on the stage. (imdb.com)
Holds the record as the female actor with the most Golden Globe wins, with six wins. Jack Nicholson is the male actor with the most wins, also at six. (imdb.com)
Tony Nominee in 1976 as Best Actress (Featured Role - Play) for Tennessee Williams' "27 Wagons Full of Cotton.". (imdb.com)
Uses music, most often Classical, to get into character. (imdb.com)
May 27, 2004 was proclaimed "Meryl Streep Day" by Manhattan Borough President C. Virginia Fields. [May 2004] (imdb.com)
Received her own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. [16 September 1998] (imdb.com)
Premiere Magazine ranked her as #46 on a list of the Greatest Movie Stars of All Time in their Stars in Our Constellation feature (2005). (imdb.com)
Son Henry Gummer is an actor, filmmaker and co-founder of a rock band. Daughter Mary Willa, whose stage name is Mamie Gummer, is an off-Broadway actress. (imdb.com)
Christine Estabrook was a fellow classmate at Yale Drama School. (imdb.com)
Has a deviated septum, which she refuses to have fixed. Directors work around it by avoiding straight-on close-ups. (imdb.com)
Early in her career, Streep received a letter from Bette Davis, whom most critics and cinema historians ranks as the greatest American movie actress ever. Davis told Streep that she felt that she was her successor as the premier American actress. Ironically, Katharine Hepburn despised Streep as an actress. Davis, a double winner who was nominated 10 times for an Academy Award, all of them Best Actress nods, set the record for most acting nominations with her tenth in 1963 for What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), a record later surpassed by Hepburn with her 11th nomination (and 3rd win) for The Lion in Winter (1968). Hepburn extended her record with her 12th nomination (and fourth win) for On Golden Pond (1981), a record ironically eclipsed by by Streep--the actress anointed Davis' successor--with her own 13th nod for Adaptation. (2002). (imdb.com)
Was nominated 14 times for the Academy Award, eleven times as Best Actress and three times as Best Supporting Actress, winning twice (Best Supporting Actress for Kramer vs. Kramer (1979) and 'Best Actress' for Sophie's Choice (1982). Her 10 nominations in the top acting category is equaled by Bette Davis (ten Best Actress nominations) and surpassed by the legendary Katharine Hepburn with 12 Best Actress nods. (imdb.com)
Nominated for a 2008 Grammy Award for "The One and Only Shrek" (Best Spoken Word Album For Children). (imdb.com)
Considered for the role of Evita Peron in Evita (1996). (imdb.com)
Listed as one of twelve "Promising New Actors of 1977" in John Willis' Screen World, Vol. 29. (imdb.com)
Sister-in-law of Maeve Kinkead. (imdb.com)
Is the second of 4 consecutive winners of the Best Supporting Actress Oscar to have the initials "M.S.". The others are: Maggie Smith - California Suite (1978), Mary Steenburgen - Melvin and Howard (1980), and Maureen Stapleton - Reds (1981). (imdb.com)
The longest she has gone without an Oscar nomination is five years, between Postcards from the Edge (1990) and The Bridges of Madison County (1995). (imdb.com)
Her character Karen Silkwood from her 1983 film Silkwood (1983) was ranked #47 on the American Film Institute Heroes list of the 100 years of The Greatest Screen Heroes and Villians. (imdb.com)
Member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences. (imdb.com)
Mentioned by first name only (with two-time co-star Jack Nicholson) in Michael Crichton's 2004 novel "State of Fear.". (imdb.com)
Her performance as "Sophie Zawistowska" in Sophie's Choice (1982) is ranked #3 on Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Performances of All Time (2006). (imdb.com)
She often works with Academy award-winning director Mike Nichols. (imdb.com)
She and her daughter Mamie Gummer portrayed the same role at different ages in 'Evening' (2007). (imdb.com)
Her performance as "Karen Silkwood" in Silkwood (1983) is ranked #71 on Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Performances of All Time (2006). (imdb.com)
Has only been turned down for three roles: Patsy Cline in Sweet Dreams (1985), Miss Kenton in The Remains of the Day (1993), and Elizabeth I in Elizabeth (1998). (imdb.com)
Received an honorary Doctor of Arts degree from Middlebury College during her nephew's graduation in 2004. (imdb.com)
As a young actor, she performed at the Yale Repertory Theater with Christopher Lloyd. (imdb.com)
She is nominated for the inaugural 2007 New Jersey Hall of Fame for her services to drama, film, and television. (imdb.com)
Sigourney Weaver was a fellow classmate at Yale Drama School. (imdb.com)
The children's TV series "Sesame Street" (1969) has featured a character named "Meryl Sheep" in her honor. (imdb.com)
Has 4 children; Henry Gummer (aka Harry Gummer) (b. 1979), Mary Willa Gummer (aka Mamie Gummer) (b. 1983), Grace Jane Gummer (b. 1986), and Louisa Jacobson Gummer (b. 12 June, 1991). (imdb.com)
Tennessee Williams wanted her for a film version of "A Streetcar Named Desire" in the 1980s. When Streep proved unavailable, the project was refashioned for television and the role of Blanche given to Ann-Margret. (imdb.com)
She attended Harding Township Middle School, in Harding, New Jersey for 1 or 2 years (imdb.com)
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