| Biography |
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Jennifer was born in the city of Waco, Texas. Is the daughter of Patricia Mae Shipp, a speech-language pathologist, and Herbert Daniel Hewitt, a medical technician. She has an older brother, Todd Hewitt, who is eight years older than her. Hewitt’s mother had a best friend in college who’s name was Love and who she thought was the perfect woman she had ever meet, and so she told her friend that when she’ll had a baby girl her name was going to be Love. The family structure of the four members was soon destroyed; only six months after Love was born, her parents got divorced and Jennifer and her brother moved with their mother to Nolanville in Killeen, Texas, where they were brought up by her and lived for nine years. She made her first appearance on television in 1984 in the show Kids Incorporated (which, coincidentally, once guest-starred Scott Wolf, her Party of Five co-star). She also did a multitude of commercials, even doing a stint as an L.A. Gear spokesgirl at the age of ten. After spending the majority of the ’80s working in television, Hewitt got her first film role in the 1993 film Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit, but it wasn’t until she got her big break as Sarah Reeves on Party of Five (1994) that she began to gain recognition. More recognition came first in the form of Trojan War (1997) and then I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997). The film, which capitalized on the growing trend in teen horror flicks catalyzed by Wes Craven’s Scream (1996), proved to be immensely popular among audiences, if not critics; it was predictably followed by a sequel, the aptly titled I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (1998). In addition to her film work, which also included 1998′s Can’t Hardly Wait, Hewitt maintained her role in Party of Five and continued to star in commercials, most notably as the Neutrogena spokesgirl, as well as headlining her own Fox series, Time of Your Life, in which her Party of Five character, Sarah Reeves, moves to New York to look for her father. Affectionately known as Love by family and friends, Hewitt has had moderate success as a pop singer, as well as on the big screen. She made her American musical debut in 1995 with the release of Lets Go Bang, and could also be heard singing two tracks for the House Arrest (1996) soundtrack in addition to playing a lead role in the film itself. Can’t Hardly Wait, a 1998 teen movie which featured Hewitt as the girl du jour, made enough of a splash in the genre to be parodied in 2002′s Not Another Teen Movie. In 2000, Hewitt received some critical acclaim for her portrayal of Audrey Hepburn in The Audrey Hepburn Story, a made-for-television dramatization of Hepburn’s life. The next year, Hewitt starred opposite Alien queen Sigourney Weaver in Heartbreakers, which featured the two actresses as mother-and-daughter con artists. The year 2002 brought Hewitt the opportunity to star opposite martial-arts favorite Jackie Chan in The Tuxedo, though the movie would tank among critics and audiences alike. After lending her vocal chords to a series of animated roles (The Adventures of Tom Thumb and Thumbelina [2002 [2001]), Hewitt wouldn’t return to a major theatrical role until 2004. She is scheduled to work with Val Kilmer in Marc F. Adler’s Delgo, as well as play lead roles in Gil Junger’s If Only and in the much anticipated 2004 adaptation of Garfield starring Bill Murray. A return to the small screen as a newlywed medium with the supernatural ability to communicate with the recently departed in Ghost Whisperer earned Hewitt a Saturn nomination for best actress in 2006, and later that same year it was once again time for a battle of wills with everyone’s favorite lasagne-loving cat in the family fun sequel Garfiend: A Tale of Two Kitties. |















Ghost Whisperer
Love Bites
Cafe
Delgo