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Selma Blair (born June 23, 1972) is an American actress. After numerous supporting roles in the 1990s, she starred in the film Cruel Intentions and the short-lived TV series Zoe, Duncan, Jack and Jane in 1999.
She has since had notable roles in Hollywood feature films such as Legally Blonde (2001), The Sweetest Thing (2002), Hellboy (2004), and Hellboy 2 (2008).
After training at The Stella Adler Conservatory, pretty dark-haired actress Selma Blair began her career with a series of small roles on film and television. In 1997 she appeared in small roles in the features “In & Out” and “Arresting Gena”, and had a larger part in the independent “Strong Island Boys”.
The following year, Blair acted in the series premiere of the Fox comedy “Getting Personal” and had a featured guest role in the CBS drama “Promised Land” as a troubled teenager with a drinking problem. She appeared in the 1998 USA Network TV-movie “No Laughing Matter” before landing a role in the ensemble of the teen comedy feature “Can’t Hardly Wait” (1998).
Blair had her first starring film role in the thriller “Brown’s Requiem” (1998), the little seen adaptation of crime writer James Ellroy’s first novel, and was chosen to head
the cast of the coming-of-age midseason replacement series “Zoe, Duncan, Jack & Jane” (The WB, 1999-2000), playing Zoe Bean, a witty and blunt Manhattan teenager. She was also tapped for the role of shy Cecile in “Cruel Intentions” (1999), a contemporary reworking of “Les Liaisons Dangereuses” set in New York starring Sarah Michelle Gellar and Ryan Phillippe.
Later, she was featured as Darcy in the music-themed straight-to-video release, “Girl” (also 1999). In 2001, she gave a memorable performance as an uptight Harvard Law student in the hit comedy “Legally Blonde”. Then Blair created a stir as a college student who writes about a degrading sexual encounter with her Pulitzer Prize-winning professor in Todd Solondz’s dark comedy, “Storytelling” (2002).
In 2003, she joined Jason Lee and Julia Stiles for the inept romantic comedy “A Guy Thing”, in which she was a bride-to-be whose wild child cousin (Stiles) gives her fiancé (Lee) second thoughts. Typically cast as the girl who loses the boy in a romantic triangle, Blair changed course and became a leading lady in the comic book adaptation “Hellboy” (2004), playing Liz Sheridan, a paranormal investigator with formidable pyrotechnic power and the potential paramour for the film’s demonic leading man (Ron Perlman).
Less successful was her turn in John Waters’ misfire “A Dirty Shame” (2004), for which she donned enormous fake prosthetic breasts to play an exotic dancer named Ursula Udders. In the critically-lauded corporate comedy-drama from Paul Weitz, “In Good Company” (2004), Blair played the wife of a young corporate hotshot (Topher Grace) who walks out on him and leaves him with nothing.
She next had a turn in the briefly released corporate thriller, “The Deal” (2005), playing a tree-hugging graduate student from Harvard asked by a an associate on a Wall Street (Christian Slater) to join his firm amidst an oil crisis with the Middle East. Then in the teen dark comedy “Pretty Persuasion”
(2005), she was the wife of a high school drama school teacher (Ron Livingston) accused of sexual assault by three students with personal axes to grind. She also made a foray into horror with a leading role in the murky 2005 remake of the John Carpenter classic “The Fog.”
Blair was married to musician Ahmet Zappa on January 24, 2004, in Los Angeles. She filed for divorce at the Los Angeles Superior Court on June 21, 2006, citing irreconcilable differences. In a statement to People, a spokesperson for the couple said, “Selma and Ahmet have decided to divorce, but love each other very much and will continue to be close friends”. She had a long term relationship with actor Jason Schwartzman before her marriage to Zappa. In February 2007, Selma told People magazine of her relationship with actor and writer Matthew Felker.
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Selma Blair Website: http://www.westlord.com/selma-blair/