Anne Heche

Anne Heche
Anne Heche at NBCUniversal's 2014 Summer TCA Tour
Born Anne Celeste Heche
(1969-05-25) May 25, 1969
Aurora, Ohio, U.S.
Occupation Actress, director, screenwriter
Years active 1985–present
Spouse(s)
Coley Laffoon
(m. 2001; div. 2009)
Partner(s) Ellen DeGeneres
(c. 1997; sep. 2000)
James Tupper
(c. 2007; sep. 2018)
Children 2
Parent(s) Donald Heche
Nancy Heche

Anne Celeste Heche (/hʃ/ HAYSH; born May 25, 1969) is an American actress, director, and screenwriter. Following a dual role in the daytime soap opera Another World (1987–91), she came to mainstream prominence in the late 1990s with the films Donnie Brasco (1997), Volcano (1997), Six Days, Seven Nights (1998), and Return to Paradise (1998). In 1998, Heche portrayed Marion Crane in Gus Van Sant's horror remake Psycho. She was the lead in the 2017 NBC military drama The Brave, with the show lasting one season.[1]

A highly publicized relationship with comedian Ellen DeGeneres was followed by a significant downturn in Heche's career, although she has continued to act in numerous independent films such as Birth (2004), Spread (2009), Cedar Rapids (2011), and Rampart (2011). In 2004, Heche received a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in the Lifetime movie Gracie's Choice, and a Tony Award nomination for Best Actress in a Play for her work in Broadway's Twentieth Century. She also starred in the television series Men in Trees (2006–08), Hung (2009–11), Save Me (2013), Dig (2016), and Aftermath (2016).

Early life

Heche was born on May 25, 1969, in Aurora, Ohio, the youngest of five children of Nancy Heche (née Prickett) and Donald Joseph Heche.[2][3] Heche's family moved a total of eleven times during her childhood; at one point, they lived in an Amish community.[4] When asked in a 2001 interview on Larry King Live what her father's source of income was, Heche replied, "Well, he was a choir director. But I don't think he made much on that a week. He said that he was involved in a business of gas and oil. And he said that until the day he died. But he never was involved in the business of gas and oil ever."[5] The family settled in Ocean City, New Jersey when Heche was twelve years old. Due to desperate finances, Anne went to work at a dinner theater in Swainton.[6][7] "At the time we’d been kicked out of our house and my family was holed up living in a bedroom in the home of a generous family from our church," she said.[8] "I got $100 a week, which was more than anyone else in my family. We all pooled our money in an envelope in a drawer and saved up enough to move out after a year."[8]

On March 3, 1983, when Heche was 13, her 45-year-old father died of AIDS. Although he never came out as homosexual, "He was in complete denial until the day he died. We know he got it from his gay relationships. Absolutely. I don't think it was just one. He was a very promiscuous man, and we knew his lifestyle then," Heche said on Larry King Live.[5] Despite her father being gay, Heche has claimed that he repeatedly raped her from the time she was an infant until she was 12, giving her genital herpes.[9] When asked "But why would a gay man rape a girl?", in a 2001 interview with The Advocate, Heche replied "I don't think he was just a gay man. I think he was sexually deviant. My belief was that my father was gay and he had to cover that up. I think he was sexually abusive. The more he couldn't be who he was, the more that came out of him in ways that it did."[9]

Three months after her father's death, Heche's 18-year-old brother Nathan was killed in a car crash.[8] The official determination was that he fell asleep at the wheel and struck a tree,[2] though Heche claims it was suicide.[10] The remainder of Heche's family subsequently moved to Chicago, where Heche attended the progressive Francis W. Parker School. In 1985, when Heche was 16, an agent spotted her in a school play and secured her an audition for the daytime soap opera As the World Turns. Heche flew to New York City, auditioned, and was offered a job, but her mother insisted she finish high school first.[7] Shortly before her high school graduation in 1987, Heche was offered a dual role on the daytime soap opera Another World. "Again I was told I couldn't go. My mother was very religious and maybe she thought it was a sinner’s world," Heche stated. "But I got on the phone and said, 'Send me the ticket. I’m getting on the plane.' I was like, 'Bye!' I did my time with my mom in a one-bedroom, skanky apartment and I was done."[8]

Career

1990s

For her work on Another World, Heche received a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series in 1991. In November 1991, Heche made her primetime television debut in an episode of Murphy Brown. She made her TV-movie debut the following year with a brief appearance in the Hallmark Hall of Fame presentation of O Pioneers! (1992). In 1993, Heche made her feature-film debut in Disney's The Adventures of Huck Finn with Elijah Wood. Over the next two years, she had small supporting roles in made-for-TV movies such as Girls in Prison (1994) and Kingfish: A Story of Huey P. Long (1995). She also appeared in the straight-to-video erotic thriller Wild Side (1995) as Joan Chen's lesbian lover.

In 1996, Heche landed her first substantial role as a college student contemplating an abortion in a segment of the made-for-HBO anthology film If These Walls Could Talk, co-starring Cher and Demi Moore. Also in the year, she appeared opposite Catherine Keener portraying childhood best friends in the independent film Walking and Talking. The limited-release film garnered favorable reviews from critics and is number 47 on Entertainment Weekly's "Top 50 Cult Films of All-Time" list.[11] Heche gained positive notice from film critic Alison Macor of Austin Chronicle, who wrote in her review that she "is destined for larger film roles".[12] She played the wife of Johnny Depp's titular FBI undercover agent character in the 1997 crime drama Donnie Brasco. The film made $124.9 million worldwide,[13] and critic Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote: "[Heche] does well with what could have been the thankless role."[14]

By the late 1990s, Heche continued to find recognition and commercial success as she took on supporting roles in three other 1997 high-profile film releasesVolcano, I Know What You Did Last Summer, and Wag the Dog. The disaster film Volcano, about the formation of a volcano in Los Angeles, had her star with Tommy Lee Jones and Gaby Hoffmann, playing a seismologist. While critical response towards the film was mixed, it grossed US$122 million at the international box office.[15] She portrayed the minor role of a backwoods loner in the slasher thriller sleeper hit I Know What You Did Last Summer, starring Jennifer Love Hewitt, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Ryan Phillippe, and Freddie Prinze, Jr.. Despite her limited screen time in the film, Heche was considered a "standout" by some critics,[16] such as Variety.[17] She obtained the part of a presidential advisor opposite Robert DeNiro and Dustin Hoffman in the political satire Wag the Dog, a role that was originally written for a man.[7] Budgeted at US$15 million, the film made US$64 million.[18]

Heche's first starring role came in the 1998 romantic adventure Six Days, Seven Nights, where she appeared opposite Harrison Ford, portraying a New York City journalist ending up with a pilot (Ford) in a deserted island following a crash landing. She had been cast in the film one day before her same-sex relationship with Ellen DeGeneres went public.[19] Although Heche was cast in a second starring role shortly thereafter as Vince Vaughn's love interest in the acclaimed drama Return to Paradise (1998), she felt that the romance with DeGeneres destroyed her prospects as a leading woman.[20] According to Heche, "People said, 'You're not getting a job because you're gay'".[21] She commented: "How could that destroy my career? I still can't wrap my head around it."[20] Six Days, Seven Nights received mixed reviews, but grossed US$74.3 million in North America and US$164.8 million worldwide.[22] On her appearance in the dramatic thriller Return to Paradise, a writer for The New York Times remarked, "[...] as Ms. Heche's formidable Beth Eastern does her best to manipulate the other characters on [co-star Joaquin Phoenix's character] behalf, Return to Paradise takes on the abstract weightiness of an ethical debate rather than the visceral urgency of a thriller".[23]

Heche starred in Gus Van Sant's Psycho (1998), a remake of the 1960 film directed by Alfred Hitchcock. In the updated version, she took on the role originally played by Janet Leigh, Marion Crane, an embezzler who arrives at an old motel run by an insane killer named Norman Bates (played by Vince Vaughn in their second collaboration). Psycho earned mediocre reviews, and despite a US$60 million budget, it made a lukewarm US$37.1 million worldwide.[24] In an otherwise positive review for the film, The New York Times felt that Heche was "refreshingly cast in Marion's role", while noting that her portrayal was "as almost as demure as Ms. Leigh's, yet she's also more headstrong and flirty".[25] Her 1998 films have remained the only theatrically released films in which she has had a leading role. She has continued to act in film and on television, but quickly fell under the Hollywood radar.[26]

2000s

Most of her roles in the early 2000s were in independent films and television; she played the role of Dr. Sterling in the film adaptation of Elizabeth Wurtzel's autobiography about depression, Prozac Nation, with Christina Ricci and Jessica Lange. Premiered at the 2001 Toronto International Film Festival, the film received a DVD release in 2005. She appeared as a hospital administrator in the thriller John Q, about a father and husband (Denzel Washington) whose son is diagnosed with an enlarged heart. The production made US$102.2 million at the worldwide box office,[27] despite negative reviews by critics.[28] In 2001, she also obtained a recurring role in the fourth season of the television series Ally McBeal.

In 2002, Heche made her Broadway debut in a production of the Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Proof, acting as a young woman who has inherited from her father mathematical genius and his madness. The New York Times found Heche to be "consequential" in her portrayal, and comparing her to Mary-Louise Parker and Jennifer Jason Leigh, who had previously played her character in other productions of the play, stated: "[...] Ms. Heche, whose stage experience is limited and who is making her New York stage debut at 33, plays the part with a more appeasing ear and more conventional timing, her take on the character is equally viable. Her Catherine is a case of arrested development, impatient, aggressively indignant, impulsive".[29] In 2004, Heche received a Primetime Emmy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in the Lifetime movie Gracie's Choice, as well as a Saturn Award nomination for Best Actress for her performance in the CBS television film The Dead Will Tell. In the same year, she acted opposite Alec Baldwin in Broadway's Twentieth Century, about a successful and egomaniacal Broadway director (Baldwin), who has transformed a chorus girl (Heche) into a leading lady. For her performance, she was nominated for the 2004 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play.

Heche in 2007

Also in 2004, appeared alongside Nicole Kidman and Cameron Bright in the well-received independent drama Birth. She took on the recurring role on the WB drama Everwood during its 2004–05 season, and then a recurring role on Nip/Tuck in 2005 as an ex-mob wife and Witness Protection Program subject who requires plastic surgery. Heche continued her television work with her portrayal of a widow who does not celebrate Christmas in made-for-CBS Silver Bells (2005), and a con woman who schemes a man she meets on a dating website in the made-for-Lifetime Fatal Desire (2006).

Heche appeared in the small-scale dramedy Sexual Life (2005), chronicling the modern romantic life and co-starring Azura Skye and Elizabeth Banks. The film was screened in the film festival circuit and received a television premiere.[30] In 2006, Heche began work on her own series, Men in Trees. In the show, she starred as a New York author, who after finding out her fiancé is cheating on her, moves to a small town in Alaska, which happens to be abundant with single men and few women. Men in Trees was cancelled in May 2008, after a season shortened by the writer’s strike. During the airing of the show, Heche starred in the horror-comedy Suffering Man's Charity (2007), the romantic comedy What Love Is (2007), and the science-fiction thriller Toxic Skies (2008), all of which went little-seen by audiences.[31]

Heche appeared as the girlfriend of a narcissistic gigolo in the sex comedy Spread (2009), co-starring Ashton Kutcher. The film received a limited release in North American theatersl while it made US$12 million at the worldwide box office.[32] Matthew Turney of View London felt that "[t]here's also terrific support" from Heche in what he described as an "enjoyable, sharply written and beautifully shot LA drama".[33] Also in 2009, she was cast in the HBO dramedy series Hung, as the ex-wife of a financially struggling high school basketball/baseball coach (portrayed by Thomas Jane). The series received favorable reviews and aired until 2011.[34]

2010s

A cameo appearance as the CEO of an important company in the well-received comedy The Other Guys (2010), starring Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg, was followed by a much larger role in the independent comedy Cedar Rapids (2011), where she portrayed a seductive insurance agent with whom a naive and idealistic man (played by Ed Helms) becomes smitten. The Sundance-premiered production garnered critical praise and was an arthouse success.[35][36] David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter remarked in its review for the film, "while Heche shines brightest in more brittle mode, as in HBO's Hung, she strikes a sweet balance between Joan's mischievous and maternal sides".[37]

In the drama Rampart (2011), she starred with Woody Harrelson and Cynthia Nixon, as one of the two former wives of a corrupt police officer (Harrelson), who also happen to be sisters. The film had a selected theatrical run following its premiere at the 36th Toronto International Film Festival, and garnered an overall positive response;[38][39] The San Francisco Chronicle, pointing out Heche and her other female co-stars, remarked that they "allow Harrelson to shine —he has always had a way of preening for women— and he brings out the best in them".[40] Heche had the leading role in the small-scale comedy That's What She Said (2012), which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, and next obtained the part of the girlfriend of a former pro golfer (Colin Firth) in the critically acclaimed dramedy Arthur Newman (also 2012).

Heche starred with James Tupper, Jennifer Stone, and Rebekah Brandes in the supernatural horror film Nothing Left to Fear (2013), about a family's life in a new town being interrupted by an unstable man of the cloth. The film received a release for VOD and selected theaters,[41] and it currently holds a rating of only 12 on review-aggregator website Metacritic, indicating it was "overwhelming dislike" by critics.[42] Los Angeles Times remarked that both Heche and Tupper "should write apology notes to their fans".[41] Also in 2013, Heche headlined the short-lived NBC sitcom Save Me, in which she starred as a Midwestern housewife who believes that she is channelling God.[43] She played the waitress friend of a recovering gambling addict (Jason Statham) in the action thriller Wild Card (2014).[44] Distributed for a VOD and limited release in certain parts of North America only, the film only US$6.7 million internationally on a $30 million budget.[45] She had a recurring guest-role on The Michael J. Fox Show before its cancellation.

USA Network's action adventure drama series, Dig, had Heche portray the head of the FBI office in Jerusalem whose agents uncover a 2,000-year-old conspiracy while investigating an archaeologist's murder. The six-episode series premiered late 2014.[46] In 2015, Heche guest-starred in the ABC thriller series Quantico playing the role of criminal profiler, Dr. Susan Langdon.[47] On September 27, 2016, the post-apocalyptic action drama Aftermath –starring Heche– debuted on Canada's Space Network and on United States' Syfy. Heche played Karen Copeland, an Air Force pilot from Washington, who must navigate Armageddon, along with her university-professor husband Josh (played by James Tupper, also a co-producer on the series) and their three nearly adult children. Neither Dig nor Aftermath was renewed for a second season.

Heche filmed the supporting part of the lead singer for a Broadway musical in Opening Night (2016), with Topher Grace. The musical comedy was screened at the Los Angeles Film Festival.[48][49] In another independent film, the comedy Catfight (2016), Heche starred opposite Sandra Oh, portraying two bitter rivals who pursue a grudge match that spans a lifetime. Like Heche's previous film projects, the film premiered in the film-festival circuit and received a VOD and limited release,[50] to largely favorable reviews from critics.[51] Los Angeles Times wrote: "Oh and Heche are great here, giving performances entirely lacking in vanity and self-consciousness. They aren’t afraid to get ugly, both in their treatment of everyone around them as well as in their post-brawl bruises, which makes them that much funnier".[52]

On September 25, 2017, Heche debuted as (fictional) Deputy Director Patricia Campbell of the (real-life) Defense Intelligence Agency, or the "DIA," in the new military/espionage thriller The Brave. Heche is the series lead for this 2017-18 season NBC series. Campbell oversees an elite team of cross-military-service specialists who must undertake especially dangerous missions, led by male lead Mike Vogel.

In 2018, she joined the TV show Chicago P.D. in a supporting role.[53]

Media

Throughout her career, she has appeared in several magazine covers, including Entertainment Weekly, Mirabella, and Observer Magazine. Heche was chosen by People as one of the 50 Most Beautiful People in the World in 1998. She became a significant subject of widespread media interest while dating comedian Ellen DeGeneres.[54] In 2017, Heche hosted a weekly radio show on SiriusXM with Jason Ellis entitled Love and Hache.[55]

Personal life

Heche with James Tupper in November 2014

Heche's relationship with Ellen DeGeneres and the events following their breakup became subjects of widespread media interest.[56][57] The couple started dating in 1997, and at one point, said they would get a civil union if such became legal in Vermont.[58] They broke up in August 2000.[59] Heche has stated that all of her other romantic relationships have been with men.[8][60]

On September 1, 2001, Heche married Coleman "Coley" Laffoon, a cameraman whom she met the previous year on DeGeneres' stand-up comedy tour.[7] They have a son, Homer, born on March 2002.[7] Laffoon filed for divorce on February 2, 2007, after five and a half years of marriage.[61] The divorce was finalized on March 4, 2009.[62][63][64]

Heche reportedly left her husband for Men in Trees co-star James Tupper.[65] On December 5, 2008, Heche's representative confirmed that the actress was pregnant with their first child.[66] Their son, Atlas Heche Tupper, was born in March 2009. This is the second child for Heche and the first for Tupper.[67] Tupper and Heche separated in 2018.[68]

Family

Siblings

Heche has four siblings, three of whom are deceased.

  • Susan (May 5, 1957 – January 1, 2006) died of brain cancer.[69] Heche was estranged from her.[7]
  • Cynthia (August 26, 1961 – October 26, 1961) died in infancy of a heart defect.[8]
  • Nathan (April 21, 1965 – June 4, 1983) died in a car crash shortly before his high-school graduation. Heche has claimed his death was a suicide (see below;[2][10][70]).
  • Abigail (surviving; see below)

Nancy Heche

Heche and her mother, Nancy, have been estranged since Heche confronted her about sexual abuse she claims to have suffered at the hands of her father.[71] In her 2001 memoir, Call Me Crazy, Heche wrote that when she contracted genital herpes as an infant, her mother insisted that it was a diaper rash and refused to take her to the doctor.[72] Nancy was outraged by her daughter's allegations, responding, "I am trying to find a place for myself in this writing, a place where I as Anne's mother do not feel violated or scandalized." She added, "I find no place among the lies and blasphemies in the pages of this book."[73]

Heche's sister, Abigail,[74] added, "It is my opinion that my sister Anne truly believes, at this moment, what she has asserted about our father's past behavior; however, at the same time, I would like to point out that Anne, in the past, has expressed doubts herself about the accuracy of such memories." She said, "Based on my experience and her own expressed doubts, I believe that her memories regarding our father are untrue. And I can state emphatically, regardless of Anne's beliefs, that the assertion that our mother knew about such behavior is absolutely false."[73]

Nancy has denied Heche's allegation that her brother Nathan committed suicide: "I have talked to his youth pastor, and he said that Nathan was committed to the Lord, he loved Jesus, and I do not believe that that was suicide, but the death of his father from homosexuality three months earlier could certainly have stirred up a lot of confusion for him."[70]

Since her husband's death from AIDS, Nancy has been a Christian therapist and motivational speaker, who lectures on behalf of James Dobson's Focus on the Family about overcoming homosexuality.[20] In 2009, Anne Heche told The New York Times:

My mother's had a very tragic life. Three of her five children are dead, and her husband is dead. That she is attempting to change gay people into straight people is, in my opinion, a way to keep the pain of the truth out. People wonder why I am so forthcoming with the truths that have happened in my life, and it's because the lies that I have been surrounded with and the denial that I was raised in, for better or worse, bore a child of truth and love. My mother preaches to this day the opposite of that core of my life. It is no mistake that she still stands up against love. And one wonders why I'm not rushing to have her meet my children.[20]

In 2011, Heche told The Daily Telegraph that she doubts she will be able to ever repair relations with her mother.[8]

Mental illness

On August 19, 2000, Heche drove from Los Angeles to Cantua Creek outside Fresno, California, and parked her Toyota SUV along a dusty roadside.[75] Wearing only a bra and shorts, Heche walked 1 12 miles (2.4 km) through the desert and knocked on the door of a stranger's ranch house.[75] When the home's occupant, Araceli Campiz, opened the door, she immediately recognized Heche from the film Six Days, Seven Nights. Campiz recalled: "I was thinking, 'Oh my God, we're in the middle of nowhere', and she walks in."[75] Campiz said that Heche gulped down glass upon glass of water, and then "took off her Nikes and said she needed to take a shower", at which point Campiz obliged, offering Heche a towel.[75] As far as Campiz could tell, Heche was not drunk, drugged, or ill; however, Heche later admitted that she had taken ecstasy.[5] After Heche had a shower, she got settled in the living room, requested a pair of slippers, and suggested that Campiz do the same.[75] "She wanted to watch a movie, but the VCR was broken," according to Campiz.[75] Bemused at first, Campiz grew uneasy when Heche showed no sign of leaving—calling neither friends nor a garage—after half an hour had passed. Campiz has stated: "I didn't know what to do. So I called the sheriff's department."[75] According to a police report that was aired on KSEE-TV, when deputies arrived, Heche told them that she was "God, and was going to take everyone back to heaven in a spaceship". The deputies summoned an ambulance, which ferried Heche the 50 miles (80 km) to Fresno's University Medical Center, where she was admitted to the psychiatric unit, from which she was released after a few hours.[75]

Heche stated she was "insane" for the first 31 years of her life, and that this was triggered by being sexually abused by her father during her infancy and childhood.[76][77] In a series of interviews with Barbara Walters, Matt Lauer, and Larry King to promote Call Me Crazy in 2001, Heche stated on national television that she created a fantasy world called the "Fourth Dimension" to make herself feel safe, and had an alter ego who was the daughter of God and half-sister of Jesus Christ named "Celestia", who had contacts with extraterrestrial life forms.[73][78] Heche said she recovered from her mental health concerns following the incident in Cantua Creek and has put her alter ego behind her.[5]

Filmography

Heche at the 49th Primetime Emmy Awards (September 1997)

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1993 An Ambush of Ghosts Denise
1993 The Adventures of Huck Finn Mary Jane Wilks
1994 I'll Do Anything Claire
1994 Simple Twist of Fate Tanny’s Playmate
1994 Milk Money Betty
1995 Wild Side Alex Lee
1996 The Juror Juliet
1996 Pie in the Sky Amy
1996 Walking and Talking Laura
1997 Donnie Brasco Maggie Pistone
1997 Volcano Dr. Amy Barnes
1997 I Know What You Did Last Summer Melissa "Missy" Egan
1997 Wag the Dog Winifred Ames
1998 Six Days, Seven Nights Robin Monroe
1998 Return to Paradise Beth McBride
1998 Psycho Marion Crane
1999 The Third Miracle Roxane
2000 Auggie Rose Lucy Brown Also known as Beyond Suspicion
2001 Prozac Nation Dr. Sterling
2002 John Q. Rebecca Payne
2004 Birth Clara
2005 Sexual Life Gwen
2007 Suffering Man's Charity Helen Jacobsen
2007 What Love Is Laura
2007 Superman: Doomsday Lois Lane Voice
2008 Toxic Skies Dr. Tess Martin
2009 Spread Samantha
2010 The Other Guys Pamela Boardman Uncredited[79]
2011 Cedar Rapids Joan Ostrowski-Fox
2011 Rampart Catherine
2012 That's What She Said Dee Dee
2012 Black November Barbra
2012 Arthur Newman Mina Crawley
2013 Nothing Left to Fear Wendy
2013 Life at These Speeds Coach Rowan
2014 Wild Card Roxy
2016 Opening Night Brooke
2016 Catfight Ashley
2017 My Friend Dahmer Joyce Dahmer
2017 Armed Response Riley
2019 The Best of Enemies Post-production

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1987–91 Another World Vicky Hudson/ Marley Love Cast member
1991 Murphy Brown Nica 1 episode
1992 O Pioneers! Marie TV film
1993 The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles Kate 1 episode
1994 Against the Wall Sharon TV film
1994 Girls in Prison Jennifer TV film
1994 The Investigator Lucinda Short
1995 Kingfish: A Story of Huey P. Long Aileen Dumont TV film
1996 If These Walls Could Talk Christine Cullen TV film; Segment: "1996"
1997 Subway Stories Pregnant Girl TV film; Segment: "Manhattan Miracle"
1998 Ellen Karen 1 episode
2000 One Kill Capt. Mary Jane O'Malley TV film
2001 Ally McBeal Melanie West 7 episodes
2004 Gracie's Choice Rowena Lawson TV film
2004 The Dead Will Tell Emily Parker TV film
2004–05 Everwood Amanda Hayes 10 episodes
2005 True Rosie True Unaired pilot
2005 Nip/Tuck Nicole Morretti 3 episodes
2005 Silver Bells Catherine O'Mara Hallmark Movie
2005–06 Higglytown Heroes Gloria the Waitress (voice) 3 episodes
2006 Fatal Desire Tanya Sullivan TV film
2007 Masters of Science Fiction Martha Van Vogel 1 episode
2006–08 Men in Trees Marin Frist Series lead; 36 eps.
2008 Toxic Skies Lead role
2009–11 Hung Jessica Haxon Lead role; 30 episodes
2011 Girl Fight Melissa TV film
2011 Silent Witness Kate Robb TV film
2012 Blackout Dr. Debra Westen Miniseries
2013 Save Me Beth Harper Lead role, 7 episodes
2013–14 The Michael J. Fox Show Susan Rodriguez-Jones 4 episodes
2013–15 Adventure Time Cherry Cream Soda (voice) 2 episodes
2014 One Christmas Eve Nell Blackemore Hallmark Movie
2014 The Legend of Korra Suyin Beifong (voice) Recurring role, seasons 3 and 4
2015 Dig Lynn Monahan Miniseries
2015 Quantico Dr. Susan Langdon 1 episode
2016 Aftermath Karen Copeland Series lead; 10 eps.
2016 Looks Like Christmas Carol Hallmark Movie
2017–18 The Brave DIA Dep. Director Patricia Campbell Series lead
Video games
Year Title Role Notes
1996 9: The Last Resort Miss G-String Voice

Direction

Year Title Notes
2000 If These Walls Could Talk 2 Segment: "2000"
2001 Ellen DeGeneres: American Summer Documentary
2001 On the Edge Segment: Reaching Normal

Awards and nominations

YearTitleStatusAward
2004Gracie's ChoiceNominatedPrimetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie
2004The Dead Will TellNominatedSaturn Award for Best Actress on Television
1997Wag the DogNominatedSatellite Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
1992Another WorldWonSoap Opera Digest Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Daytime Drama
1991WonDaytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series
1989NominatedDaytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actress in a Drama Series
WonSoap Opera Digest Award for Outstanding Female Newcomer – Daytime

Books

  • Heche, Anne (2001). Call Me Crazy: A Memoir. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9780743216890. OCLC 47243952.

References

  1. Andreeva, Nellie (2018-05-11). "'The Brave' Canceled By NBC After One Season". Deadline. Retrieved 2018-09-17.
  2. 1 2 3 "Noble County Indiana Library – Whan Collection". Noble County Public Library. Retrieved September 14, 2010.
  3. "Anne Heche profile at". Filmreference.com. Retrieved November 1, 2008.
  4. Nancy Heche: When the Truth Comes Out CBN.com
  5. 1 2 3 4 "Anne Heche Discusses Her New Book, 'Call Me Crazy'". CNN.com. September 6, 2001.
  6. Amy Longsdorf (June 7, 1998). ""Six Days, Seven Nights" Actress Anne Heche As Much A Survivor In Life As In Film". Times Leader. Archived from the original on March 6, 2014.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Anne Heche biography at". Yahoo! Movies. Retrieved November 1, 2008.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Gill Pringle (May 1, 2011). "Anne Heche: 'There was no joy in my family'". The Daily Telegraph.
  9. 1 2 Anne Stockwell (November 6, 2001). The Agony and the Ecstasy of Anne Heche. The Advocate.
  10. 1 2 A conversation with Anne Heche Archived May 25, 2013, at the Wayback Machine.. Charlie Rose. June 11, 1998
  11. "The Top 50 Cult Movies". Filmsite.org. Retrieved 2012-11-13.
  12. Macor, Alison (August 6, 1996). "Walking and Talking". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
  13. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=donniebrasco.htm
  14. Maslin, Janet (February 28, 1997). "Al Pacino as Gangster, A Guy Who's Not Wise". The New York Times. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
  15. o.htm
  16. http://www.thefilmfile.com/reviews/i/97_iknowwhat.htm
  17. https://variety.com/1997/film/reviews/i-know-what-you-did-last-summer-111731125/
  18. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=wagthedog.htm
  19. Weisel, Al (February 1998). "Anne Heche". Us Weekly. Archived from the original on January 7, 2005.
  20. 1 2 3 4 Alex Witchel (July 31, 2009). "Anne Heche Is Playing It Normal Now". The New York Times.
  21. "Ellen DeGeneres and Anne Heche speak at March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, Bi and Equal Rights for Liberation (video)". March 23, 2000.
  22. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=sixdayssevennights.htm
  23. https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9905E1DF133AF937A2575BC0A96E958260&partner=Rotten%2520Tomatoes
  24. Morris, Clint. "Gus Van Sant: Exclusive Interview". Web Wombat. Retrieved 2009-03-30.
  25. https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9D0DE7DD1E3BF936A35751C1A96E958260
  26. Fernandez, Maria Elena (October 17, 2004). "There is life after Fresno". Los Angeles Times.
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