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FELBERG REAL LIFE STORIES
Julia
Roberts
A SHORT BIOGRAPHY
FELBERG REAL LIFE STORIES
E WA W O L A Ń S KA
A DA M W O L A Ń S K I
Julia
Roberts
A short biography
Translation and glossary by
Aldona Stepaniuk
Warsaw 2003
Series Editor
Adam Wola ski
Reviewer
Dariusz K tla
Copy editor
Natica Schmeder
Production editor
Barbara Gluza
Cover designer
Andrzej-Ludwik W oszczy ski
DTP
A.L.W GRAFIK
.
Copyright © by FELBERG SJA Publishing House, 2003
Acknowledgements
All illustrations in this publication reproduced by
courtesy of Imperial Entertainment Home Video
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise,
without the prior written permission of the Publisher.
Printed in Poland
ISBN 83 - 88667-19 -X
INTRODUCTION
Critics claim she keeps playing the same character over
and over again—a young woman from lower classes whose
attractive appearance is unveiled and then used by privileged
social circles.
Popular culture specialists say she owes her success to
the expertise of script writers, directors and producers, who
have been cunning enough to fit her screen image into the
taste of the masses.
Millions of movie lovers all over the world don’t care
what the explanation for this phenomenon is. They simply
adore Julia Roberts. In the eyes of women she embodies the
age-old myth of Cinderella. In the eyes of the men she remains
someone to be loved and desired, but also to be protected.
A vamp and waif in one.
Julia herself says she is so popular because she plays
ordinary girls, because she is Miss Everybody that any and
every woman can identify with.
What is Julia Roberts really like?
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CHAPTER ONE
A Southerner in New York
Julia Roberts was born in a family with acting tradi-
tions. Her parents—Walter (known as Rob) and Betty Lou
Roberts were both touring actors. For several years, they
traveled from one American military base to another with the
production of
George Washington Slept Here,
directed by Rance
Howard. They got married in 1955 and settled in the south
of the USA. They bought a large white Victorian house on
the outskirts of Atlanta and opened the Actors and Writers
Workshop. Betty Lou taught acting there and Walter wrote
plays which they later staged with trainee casts.
The Roberts had three children. Eric was born in 1956,
later to become a film and TV actor. Lisa came next, in 1965,
and is now an actress and off-Broadway producer in New
York. Finally, on October 28, 1967, Julia (or, properly, Julie)
was born.
In 1972, Walter and Betty Lou got divorced. The
mother took Lisa and Julia to the nearby Smyrna and Eric
stayed with his father in Atlanta. The divorce also meant
the end of the Actors and Writers Workshop. Walter Roberts
started selling vacuum cleaners for a living. Betty Lou was
a secretary in a local parish first, then she became a real
estate agent.
For Julia, her parents’ divorce and parting with brother
Eric was a painful experience. Another tragic event marked
her tenth birthday: her father died of cancer in 1977. Years
later Julia would still remember those dramatic changes and
even see them as reasons for her adult-life problems, especially
those connected to relationships with men.
Julia grew up in Smyrna in an atmosphere that can
only be described as completely unrestrained hippie culture.
She enjoyed walking barefoot, wearing flowers in her hair
and . . . stealing other girls’ boyfriends just for fun. She was
extremely bored with school and studying. After finishing
Campbell High School, at the tender age of 17, she gave
up any further education. “I had a choice: to get married,
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