Everything about Allison Janney totally explained
Allison Brooks Janney (born
November 19,
1959) is an
Emmy Award-winning
American actress, best known for playing
C. J. Cregg on
The West Wing.
Biography
Personal life
Janney was born in
Dayton, Ohio, the daughter of Macy (
née Putnam), a former actress and homemaker, and Jervis Spencer Janney, Jr., a
real estate developer and jazz musician. She has two older brothers, Jay and Hal. She attended
The Miami Valley School in Dayton, where she was named a distinguished alumna in 2004, and the
Hotchkiss School in
Connecticut. She then attended
Kenyon College. At Kenyon, Janney studied under another Kenyon alum,
Paul Newman. She went on to study drama at the
Neighborhood Playhouse in
New York and the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in
London. She attended The Neighborhood Playhouse the same years as actor
Dylan McDermott.
Career
Janney's first roles on television were as comedic foils on
soap operas: she first played Vi Kaminski for a short time on
As the World Turns, following up with a two-year stint as one of the Spaulding maids, Ginger on
Guiding Light. In the spring of 1994, she appeared in the season finale of
Law & Order, as a reluctant witness against a member of the Russian mob. This episode was also notable as
Michael Moriarty's final episode in the series.
Janney has appeared in a number of films with roles of various sizes, including the 1990s films
American Beauty,
The Object of My Affection,
Big Night,
The Impostors,
Drop Dead Gorgeous,
The Ice Storm,
Primary Colors,
10 Things I Hate about You, and
Private Parts, and the 2000s films
Nurse Betty,
The Hours,
The Chumscrubber,
How to Deal,
Winter Solstice and a considerable role in the animated movie,
Finding Nemo, voicing Peach, the starfish. In 2006, Janney had carried notable roles in the movies,
Margaret and
Over the Hedge, an animated comedy.
In 1999, she was cast in the role of presidential press secretary C.J. Cregg on the television drama
The West Wing, for which she eventually won four
Emmy Awards. Two of the Emmys were for
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress - Drama Series in 2000 and 2001, and two were for
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress - Drama Series in the years 2002 and 2004. She was also nominated for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series in the 2003 and 2006 Primetime Emmys. She is one of six cast members from
The West Wing to have won an Emmy for their work - however, Janney is the only one who has won more than once. Janney was nominated in 2002 for
American Film Institute's Actor of the Year.
Several weekend trips to
Washington, D.C. were frequent to Janney's schedule, and for the rest of the cast as well as many outdoor scenes on
The West Wing were actually filmed in the nation's capital. Janney also met several times with former
White House Press Secretary,
Dee Dee Myers, who served in the
Clinton Administration from 1993–1994. Janney met with Myers in
New York City to help portray her character more authentically.
Janney's starting salary, according to the
Internet Movie Database (IMDb), was $70,000/episode in 1999. Since that date, negotiations were made for increased salaries for all the critically acclaimed actors on
The West Wing. It is suggested that Janney's salary per episode for the later years of the show increased significantly.
Alison played on ER as head of surgery from 2002-2004 as Dr. Carolyn Margoret Sanserds along side Noah Wile.
The West Wing was cancelled in January 2006, and the last episode aired in May of that year. Even though the latter seasons were plagued by declining ratings, the overall rating of Janney remained a relatively positive one, touted by Entertainment Weekly as "one to watch", "uncommonly beautiful and infinitely expressive". In January 2006, West Wing's cast was also nominated by the
Screen Actors Guild for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble Cast. Janney,
Martin Sheen,
Bradley Whitford,
Janel Moloney, and other members of the cast appeared at the SAG Awards to honor their late castmate and friend, John Spencer.
In 2006, she was nominated for an
Independent Spirit Award for her performance in the film
Our Very Own. Many of Janney's long time friends were involved with
Our Very Own including its producer
Shannon McMahon Lichte and cast member
Allison Mackie. All three were in the same class at the Neighborhood Playhouse. The writer/director Cameron Watson, also a longtime friend, wrote the role of Joan for her.
In 2007, Janney appeared in the
Academy-Award-nominated film,
Juno playing the part of Bren MacGuff, the title character's stepmother, for which she won Best Supporting Actress in the
Austin Film Critics Association Awards 2007. In the same year, Janney appeared in the
Golden-Globe-nominated film,
Hairspray, as Prudy Pingleton, Penny's strict and religious mom.
Janney has also appeared in another show created by Aaron Sorkin,
Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, which also starred Bradley Whitford, a former castmate of Janney's from
The West Wing. Janney made a guest appearance as herself in
The Disaster Show, as the guest host of the week's episode of Studio 60, though ironically she guest-starred in the only episode of the show not to include Whitford. However, many of the cast made references to her part in
The West Wing, showing that the show did exist even in the fictional world of Studio 60.
Janney has remained active in theater; in 1998, she was nominated for a
Tony Award for her role in
Arthur Miller's
A View from the Bridge. Her first Broadway role was in
Present Laughter opposite Frank Langella. In 2007, she participated in a workshop for a
new musical of the film
9 to 5. In late 2008, Janney will join Broadway stars
Stephanie J. Block,
Megan Hilty and
Marc Kudisch in the new musical,
9 to 5. Based on the film of the same name, Janney will star as
Violet Newstead, the super efficient office manager played by
Lily Tomlin (a former castmate from
The West Wing) in the original film.
In 2004, Janney began lending her voice to television and radio spots created by
Kaiser Permanente in the
health maintenance organization's broad "Thrive" media campaign, and in a radio campaign for the
American Institute of Architects.
Further Information
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