Aidan Quinn and Didi Conn at Sunday Symposium
From Desperately Seeking Susan to Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee Actor Aidan Quinn, in conversation with Didi Conn, travels over 20 years with as many characters.
The event will take place on Sunday afternoon, January 20, from three-thirty to five, at the Esplanade on Oak Tree Road. A reception will follow.
Reservations are required. Please stop by the Library or call 845/359-0136. Suggested donation: $10 to benefit The Palisades Free Library.
AIDAN QUINN
Born in Chicago on 8 March 1959, Aidan Quinn spent most of the first two decades of his life living on both sides of the Atlantic; his parents - his dad a literature professor, his mum a housewife - had emigrated from Ireland to the States in the 1950s, where Aidan, as well as his sister and three brothers were born. Artistic blood obviously runs in the family, with his older brother Declan having made a name for himself as cinematographer in films such as Leaving Las Vegas and Vanya On 42nd Street, younger sister Marian working as an actress, and younger brother Paul having recently ventured into the world of writing/directing for their joint family effort This Is My Father in addition to working as an actor. Only one of the five siblings, another younger brother, James, has stayed away from the limelight and is making a living as a landscaper in LA.
Aidan was barely a toddler when the family went back to his parents' hometown of Birr, Co. Offaly in Ireland where he started pre-school, only to return to Illinois about a year and a half later. At the age of 13, Aidan and his family returned to Birr yet again, but Aidan soon left to go to school in Dublin, where he stayed for a year before returning to Rockford, Illinois, Chicago and then back to Dublin. "We got used to living in two different cultures and being able to go back and forth", he once said in an interview. "With Declan, Marian and myself it's always back and forth, Irish-American, American-Irish…". This being caught between two cultures has contributed a fair deal to the feeling of closeness in the Quinn family.
Although a roofer by trade, Aidan discovered his love for acting around 1978 when he was about 19 and living in Dublin. Once the decision was made and it became obvious that work wasn't so easy to come by in Ireland, he returned to Chicago, where he made his stage debut in The Man in 605. Some of his early stage experience includes plays such as Scheherazade and The Irish Hebrew Lesson. Moving on to New York, he made his stage debut there in a production of Fool for Love, followed by roles in A Lie of the Mind as well as the title role in a modern-day Hamlet directed by Robert Falls.
In 1984 he made his cinema debut starring opposite Daryl Hannah in Reckless. His breakthrough however came a year later in the role of Dez alongside Rosanna Arquette and Madonna in Desperately Seeking Susan. He also starred in several television productions, including The Lies of The Twins opposite Isabella Rossellini (a double dose of Aidan - excellent!) and the NBC drama An Early Frost, the latter being the first film addressing the issue of AIDS & HIV. His portrayal of a gay man in this film earned him an Emmy nomination. Aidan has shown his versatility and talent as an actor by playing a wide range of roles, from heart throb/good guy in films such as Avalon, Desperately Seeking Susan and Benny & Joon, through to gay man in An Early Frost, missionary in At Play In The Fields Of The Lord and one of the world's most wanted terrorists in The Assignment.
Although having starred alongside "big" names such as Anthony Hopkins, Ben Kingsley, Liam Neeson, Donald Sutherland, Johnny Depp, Madeleine Stowe, Sandra Bullock, Brad Pitt, and Robert DeNiro, and in some "big" films such as Legends of The Fall and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, The Mission and Michael Collins he has managed to keep a fairly low profile. This is not something he's unhappy about, since he likes to keep his private life private, and, after all, he can't exactly complain about lack of work, having worked on 5 films released in 1998 alone, including Practical Magic, and Music of The Heart (which also stars Meryl Streep and Gloria Estefan), as well as his latest project alongside Pierce Brosnan, Evelyn.
Aidan has been married to actress Elizabeth Bracco (whom he met in a New York restaurant in around 1984 and who was with him in Stakeout in 1987, and who also starred in Trees Lounge and Mystery Train as well as being costume designer on In The Soup; she also starred in The Impostors, a film Aidan dropped out of in favour of Music of The Heart) since September 1987 and they have two daughters: Ava Eileen, born around 1989 (who had her acting debut at the tender age of 3 months: she was the baby in the film Avalon!) and Mia, born around 1998. Although their main home is in New Jersey (he purposely keeps well away from Hollywood), they like to retreat to their second home, a 18th century cottage in upstate New York whenever they can.
DIDI CONN
Actress and comedienne Didi Conn is best known for her starring role as Frenchy, the beauty school drop-out in the films Grease and Grease II. She recently commemorated the twenty fifth anniversary of Grease by writing Frenchy’s Grease Scrapbook: We’ll always be together which was published by Hyperion. She also starred in the films You Light up My Life, The Magic Show, Almost Summer, and was the voice of Raggedy Ann in the animated musical The Adventures of Raggedy Ann and Andy. She played the title role in the Academy Award-winning short film Violet. On television, Ms. Conn was a regular on The Practice with Danny Thomas and played for three seasons on the hit series Benson. She is loved by children of all ages for her 10 year run as Station Mistress Stacy Jones on the award-winning PBS series Shining Time Station. Ms Conn can be seen in the feature film Thomas and the Magic Railroad, starring Alec Baldwin and in Frida, Shooting Vegetarians, Helen at Risk, Oh Baby? and the upcoming Julie Taymor film, Over the Universe.
Ms. Conn made her Broadway debut starring as Bella in Neil Simon’s Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winning play Lost in Yonkers. Ms. Conn can be heard as the voice of Gracie Allen in the national tour of Say Goodnight, Gracie! She played Smeraldina in Julie Taylor’s production of The Green Bird at the Cort Theater and appeared as The Ghost of Christmas Past in A Christmas Carol staring Tony Roberts. Ms Conn most recently performed off-Broadway with John Turturro in Souls of Naples at the Duke Theatre and in January 2006 at the Mercandante Theatre in Naples, Italy. Didi Conn Starred off-Broadway in Israel Horovitz’s comedy The Primary English Class at the Minetta Lane Theater. She appeared with Polly Bergen and Michele Shay at the Westside Theater in Eve Ensler’s, The Vagina Monologues. Ms. Conn starred in Tina Howe’s new play Disorderly Conduct at Town Hall. Other New York credits include: The Lesson, Hello, I Love You and Consequence. She also toured for two years with the National Theatre Company’s Mimika Pantomime Troupe.
Regional credits include: the west coast premier of John Patrick Shanley’s Danny and the Deep Blue Sea, Birdbath, Room Service, It had to be You, Anything Goes and Enter Laughing. She was a guest actress at Robert Redford’s Sundance Institute Playwright’s Lab for six years and co-founded First Stage, a Los Angeles playwrights’ organization. Didi Conn is the national celebrity spokesperson for the National Alliance for Autism Research (NAAR).
Ms. Conn has recorded hundreds of commercial s for radio and television. She and her husband, composer David Shire, and their son Daniel divide their time between homes in New York and Los Angeles.