Born
at 4:00am-EST
Mother of
actress Melissa Newman, whose namesake was the character portrayed by Woodward in Count Three
and Pray (1955).
When she was
9 years old, Joanne traveled with her mother to Atlanta for the premiere of Gone with the
Wind (1939). During the parade, she leapt into a limousine carrying Laurence Olivier and sat in his lap as she had a crush on him after seeing Wuthering Heights (1939). Years later when the two were working on Come Back, Little
Sheba (1977) (TV), Olivier claimed to remember the incident vividly.
Attended
LSU and then headed to New York. She did not attend Sarah
Lawrence until much later. She graduated in 1990 alongside her youngest daughter Claire "Clea" Newman.
Wore
a hand-made dress that cost about $100 dollars to the 1957 Oscar ceremony (the year she won Best Actress for Three Faces of
Eve.)
Serves
as artistic director, Westport Country Playhouse, near her home in Connecticut,
where husband Paul stars in "Our Town" June 2002.
Loves
ballet and horse-back riding
Joanne has
three children with Paul Newman: Elinor (Nell), Melissa (Lissy) and Claire (Clea)
In 1960
she became the first actress to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Lived next
door to her idol, Bette Davis, for awhile.
Her favorite
movies are Gone with the
Wind (1939), Wuthering Heights (1939), The Philadelphia
Story (1940) and Jezebel (1938).
Her all-time
favorite actress is Bette Davis and her all-time favorite actor is Laurence Olivier. Other major favorites of hers include John Garfield, Vivien Leigh, Katharine Hepburn and Clark Gable.
Had to have
her strip/dance scenes in The Stripper (1963) censored and approved by her husband, Paul Newman.
Was
a graduate from the class of 1947 at Greenville Senior High
School in Greenville, South Carolina.
Her likeness
was used for the paintings of Marguerite Wyke in the Laurence Olivier/Michael Caine thriller Sleuth (1972).
Was
briefly engaged to novelist, essayist and screenwriter Gore Vidal before breaking the engagement to pledge herself to eventual
husband Paul Newman. The new couple, who remained friends with Vidal, briefly lived with him in a house in Los Angeles.
In the July
21, 1975 issue of People magazine, in which she shared the cover with her husband Paul Newman, Woodward claimed that her older relatives back in a small town in rural Georgia would be upset if they knew that Newman was half-Jewish.
Played mother
to real-life daughter Nell Potts in The Effect of
Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds (1972)
Mother of
Nell Potts and Claire Newman.
Joanne told
a seventeen-year-old Melanie Griffith on the set of The Drowning
Pool (1975) that her goals were to marry a movie star (Paul Newman); have beautiful babies (she had 3); and win an Oscar (which she did in 1958). Melanie
said that she adopted the goals for herself by marrying a movie star (Antonio Banderas); have beautiful babies (she also had 3); but has expressed frustration that she
hasn't won an Oscar even though she was nominated in 1989.
As of 2007,
she is one of six women, who have received Best Actress nominations for performances directed by their spouses. The other
five are Frances McDormand for Fargo (1996), Gena Rowlands for A Woman Under
the Influence (1974), Julie Andrews for Victor/Victoria (1982), Elisabeth Bergner for Escape Me Never (1935) and Jean Simmons for The Happy Ending (1969). Jules Dassin also directed his future wife Melina Mercouri in an Oscar-nominated performance (Pote tin Kyriaki (1960)), but they weren't married yet at the time of the nomination.