Born on April 25, 1946
in New York, Talia Shire was raised at her parents’ Long Island
home and "on the road". Her father, Carmine
Coppola, was a distinguished musician, conductor and
composer who was first flutist in Toscanini’s NBC
orchestra when Talia was just a little girl. His work
caused the family to travel around the country year-round.
Talia attended catholic schools and
exhibited typical Adrian Balboa tendencies even then. "In high school," Talia
says, "I was so shy that if somebody looked at me I
could feel it. I definitely was not the cheerleader
type!" To help conquer her shyness, she persuaded her
family to send her to Yale Drama School in 1966. She then
moved to Hollywood.
Her big break came with the role of
Connie Corleone in The Godfather (1971). Few moviegoers realized that they
were watching director Francis Ford Coppola’s little sister
"Tally" when she came to national prominence in
his blockbuster hit, but Talia Shire, like many
another show business relative before her, is right when she
explains that "a famous name or a connection may open
doors initially, but no one hires an actor or an actress
unless they’re right for the role."
Tally reprised her role as Connie in
The Godfather: Part II. For the sequel, she won a 1974
Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress.
That same year, her brother Francis Coppola took home an
Oscar for his direction in the second Godfather
installment, and their father Carmine Coppola won a much
deserved statuette for Original Dramatic Score for the same
film.
Shire first heard of the Rocky project through her then-husband,
film music composer David Shire. Then, she went to audition
for producers Winkler and Chartoff, and director John
Avildsen. Sylvester Stallone was jogging about the room,
preparing himself for the role.
Stallone remembers the scene . . .
"We were having difficulty casting the role of Adrian .
. . I had remembered Talia Shire from The Godfather
and asked that she come in. She came in. She wore glasses,
her hair was short and dark; she was almost the opposite of
the way I had pictured Adrian. She came in with enthusiasm
and gave one of the finer improvisational readings I had
seen since working on the film. And at the very end of the
improvisation, she reeled back and gave me a couple shots in
the jaw playfully, as though she were a fighter. I felt that
she had achieved near total control over the character even
in this sort span of time and I wanted her badly and
screamed and yelled and made everyone around me
uncomfortable until finally they said, 'Okay, you've got
her!' which was an incredibly great coup for us all."
It seems difficult to picture anyone
other than Tally shouting Rocky’s name at ringside during
the final confrontation which highlights each film. She
recalls being totally overwhelmed by the script. "When
I read the script, I went crazy for it, I loved it. I
connected easily with Sly. He created a sense of enjoyment
right away, a sense of fun. I have never had a better time
in a reading. The next day, I heard from them that I got the
role."
"I liked making Rocky
more than anything I’ve done. It’s a positive film, and
there aren’t many of those around anymore."
Talia was nominated at the 1977
Academy Awards ceremony for her portrayal of Adrian, but
unfortunately lost to actress Faye Dunaway for Network
(1976). She is the only performer ever to
twice appear in original films and their sequels and be
honored in each case with Oscar nominations.
Tally has only kind words for
Sylvester Stallone, both in and out of the ring. "During the
shooting, we all got along and loved each other and were
willing to work hard. Sly is a giant in all ways, bigger
than life, very sensitive. It must have been the same
working with Marlon Brando when he first started."
What's it like to play the same
character five times over? "It seems strange playing
Adrian again and again. One of the things I most enjoy about
it is that both she and I have gone through such major
changes in time. I feel that audiences identify with that,
too, in relation to all the characters. What’s really
unusual, perhaps even a once-in-a-lifetime experience, is
that all of us in the cast have been growing and maturing
and changing in our characters, just as people really do –
both the people playing the parts, and the people in the
audience watching these films."
Shire reflects on Rocky’s
enduring popularity: "Everything about the Rocky
movies has been one series of pleasant surprises followed by
another. None of us involved in the first Rocky
suspected just how big a hit it would prove to be. It was a
thrill to be at the beginning of something special. However,
for me as a performer, there’s another, even more
rewarding side to these films that has made them all
especially memorable and meaningful. What I’m talking
about is versatility, that rare opportunity to play many
facets of the same person.
"It’s hard to believe that
the Rocky movies have ‘gone the distance’
themselves. I think that all of us involved have been so
fortunate to do what movies rarely do, to tell the whole
story of Rocky."
Shire separated from her husband in
1980 and as a single mother went back to work in films such
as Old Boyfriends, Prophecy, Windows
and Rad. Peppered amongst these pictures were Rocky
reprisals II-IV. With Rocky V and The
Godfather: Part III, 1990 marked Tally's return to her
two most celebrated roles.
Five years later, Shire made her
feature directorial debut with One Night Stand
(1995). Happily married to producer Jack Schwartzman
for some years, the two formed a production company and
started work in earnest on her latest project. Sadly,
Tally's venture into directing was overshadowed by the
tragic events still to come. Her husband was diagnosed
with pancreatic cancer and shockingly died only months later
while One Night Stand was in post-production.
Since his death, she has immersed
herself in her work in films: Bed & Breakfast
(1992), Chantilly Lace (1993), The Landlady
(1998) and in 2002 she re-teamed with old pal Burt Young in Kiss
the Bride.
Talia's family tree is one of the
most famous in Hollywood history. In addition to
her celebrated father and brother Francis, her extended
family includes Academy Award winners Sofia Coppola (her
niece) and Nicolas Cage (her nephew). She has three
sons - Matthew, Jason and Robert. Jason Schwartzman,
star of the critically acclaimed Rushmore (1998) is a
star in his own right - as is her youngest, Robert
Schwartzman, who is an accomplished musician and has also
appeared in films, most notably The Princess Diaries (2001).