Born on Mar. 19, 1947 in tony Greenwich, CT, Close was raised one of four children in an upper-middle class family headed by William Close, a surgeon whose affiliation with the conservative salvation group Moral Re-Armament led him to relocate the family to the Belgian Congo where he ran several medical clinics. At the time, Close was 13 years old and subsequently received her education at boarding schools in Switzerland, followed by Choate Rosemary Hall back in Greenwich. During high school, she took an interest in theater, joining a repertory group called The Fingernails. After she graduated, Close spent several years touring with the folk-singing group Up With People, before leaving to attend the drama school at William and Mary in Virginia. Close graduated late from William and Mary - she was 27 years-old - but immediately found work in New York City with the Ph nix Theatre Company, appearing in "Love for Love" and "The Member of the Wedding." Close was cast as Mary Tudor in the Richard Rodgers' musical "Rex" (1976), then jumped to television, making her small screen debut as a homewrecker in the made for television movie, "Too Far to Go" (NBC, 1979).
Close made her breakthrough on Broadway with a supporting role in the musical "Barnum" (1980), playing the patient wife of the famed 19th century showman. Thanks to her performance, acclaimed director George Roy Hill became aware of Close - he was attracted to her sense of composure, the exact quality he was looking for in an actress to play Jenny Fields in "The World According to Garp" (1982). Though nervous about starring in her first feature after years on stage, Close nonetheless was spot-on in her performance as the prim, hard-nosed mother of an aspiring novelist (Robin Williams), whose own novel about her life raising a son as a single mother becomes a feminist rallying cry. Due to her impressive work, Close earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress in a Supporting Role, triggering a run for several Oscar nods in the 1980s - including three consecutive - that ultimately netted zero wins. Glenn Close next co-starred in the Baby Boomer ensemble comedy-drama "The Big Chill" (1983), earning her second Oscar nod for Best Supporting Actress for her performance as one of seven college friends gathered together to reminisce after the suicide of one of their own.
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