
Personal details
All About this Star
Biography:
Some very bad screen careers have been launched from a springboard of musical success. David Bowie leaps to mind - remember Labyrinth or, worse, The Linguini Incident? What about Mick Jagger in Ned Kelly or - horror of horrors - Freejack? Think Madonna in Body Of Evidence or Who's That Girl. Alanis Morissette wasn't up to much as God either. No, cinematically speaking, it's better for one's sanity to consider those musicians who FAILED at music, to whom acting was more than simply another massive ego-massage. For they were the ones who really practised, who really got good at it. Like, for instance, Sissy Spacek - now back at the very top of the acting tree after her critically-worshipped role as a bereaved mother in In The Bedroom.
Sissy's a nickname given to her by her elder brothers. Her official title is Mary Elizabeth Spacek, and she was born on Christmas Day, 1949, in Quitman, a ways to the east of Dallas up in north-east Texas. Spacek's an unusual moniker, too. This is due to the family's origins in Moravia, an old province of the Czech Republic. Sissy's great-grandfather came over to the US when he was just 13, working hard to pay for the rest of the family's passage across. They finally settled in Granger, down near Austin. On Sissy's mother's side, grandma was from Mississippi, grandad from Iowa - the couple settling in the Rio Grande valley. So, an unusual bunch. Down-home folks with a wider-than-average view of the world.
Sissy's dad, Edwin, had served in the US Army Air Corps during WW2, returning to serve as the Wood County Agricultural Extension Agent with Texas A&M University from 1946 to his retirement in '75. His wife, Virginia, looked after the kids. Life was easy and countrified. Sissy would go bareback riding whenever possible and was envious and belittled when dad took the boys hunting. One day she took a .410 shotgun and went on her own. Seeing a dove in a tree, she blasted it. "I never recovered," she later said "I've never been hunting since".
At Quitman High School, Sissy studied hard. In particular, in 6th Grade, she recalls one teacher introducing her to biographies. She began to devour the stories of all the strong women she could - Clara Barton, Helen Keller, Florence Nightingale, women who fought against the odds on the side of righteousness, women who used their position to change society for the better. She recognised that Texas was FULL of strong women, women battling poverty and male-formed conventions to maintain dignity and a decent standard of life for themselves and their family. Young Sissy took these lessons to heart.























