Photograph of Mia Farrow.
Mia Farrow

Overview

Mia Farrow (born Maria de Lourdes Villiers-Farrow on February 9, 1945) is an American actress. Farrow has appeared in more than forty films and won numerous awards, including a Golden Globe award (and seven additional Golden Globe nominations), three BAFTA Film Award nominations, and a win for best actress at the San Sebastian International Film Festival. Farrow is also notable for her extensive humanitarian work as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. Her latest effort is www.miafarrow.org containing a guide on how to get involved with Darfur activism, along with her photos and blog entries from Darfur, Chad, and the Central African Republic.

Biography

Early life
Farrow is the daughter of John Farrow, an Australian film director, and Irish actress Maureen O'Sullivan. Both parents were practicing Catholics and Mia, born Maria de Lourdes Villiers-Farrow (in Los Angeles, California), had a Catholic upbringing. Her sister, Prudence Farrow, inspired The Beatles' song "Dear Prudence" when she locked herself in her room having a breakdown while in India with them. Farrow was stricken with polio as a child and spent a year in an iron lung. For the most part she grew up in Beverly Hills in Southern California, and often traveled with her parents for films that were produced on location.

She made her film debut in a 1947 short subject with her mother; the short was about famous mothers and their children modeling the latest fashions for families. In the 1950s, she appeared in the Cold War educational film, Duck and Cover.
Career
Farrow screen-tested for the role of Liesl Von Trapp in The Sound of Music. That footage has been preserved, and appears on the fortieth Anniversary Edition DVD of The Sound of Music. Farrow began her acting career by appearing in supporting roles in several 1960s films. However, she achieved stardom on the popular nighttime soap opera Peyton Place as naive, waif-like Allison Mackenzie, a role she later abandoned at the urging of husband Frank Sinatra. Her first leading film role was in 1968's Rosemary's Baby, which was a major critical and commercial success at the time and continues to be widely regarded as a classic of the horror genre.

Farrow's performance in Rosemary's Baby garnered numerous awards and established her as a leading actress. Film critic and author Stephen Farber described her performance as having an "electrifying impact… one of the rare instances of actor and character achieving a miraculous, almost mythical match. If Ira Levin's story shrewdly taps into every pregnant woman's fears about the stranger growing inside her, Mia Farrow gives those fears an achingly real and human force". Film critic Roger Ebert noted that "the brilliance of the film comes more from Polanski's direction, and from a series of genuinely inspired performances… The characters emerge as human beings actually doing these things. A great deal of the credit for this achievement must go to Mia Farrow, as Rosemary". Following Rosemary's Baby, Farrow starred in Secret Ceremony, opposite Elizabeth Taylor. The film divided critics, but has gone on to develop a devoted following. Farrow's other late '60s films include John and Mary, opposite Dustin Hoffman.

In the 1970s, Farrow appeared in a number of notable films, including the 1971 thriller See No Evil, legendary French director Claude Chabrol's 1972 film Docteur Popaul, and the 1974 version of The Great Gatsby, in which Farrow played "Daisy Buchanan". She also appeared in director Robert Altman's cult classic A Wedding in 1978. Farrow also appeared in a number of made for television films in the 1970s, most notably portraying the title role in a 1976 musical version of Peter Pan. In 1979, Farrow appeared on Broadway opposite Anthony Perkins in the play Romantic Comedy by Bernard Slade.

In the 1980s and early '90s, Farrow's relationship with director Woody Allen resulted in numerous film collaborations. She appeared in nearly all of Allen's critically acclaimed films during this period, including leading roles in Hannah and Her Sisters (playing the title role of "Hannah"), The Purple Rose of Cairo, Broadway Danny Rose, and 1990s Alice, again as the title character. Farrow also played Alura, mother of "Kara" (Helen Slater), in the 1984 movie Supergirl and voiced the title role in 1982's animated film The Last Unicorn.

Citing the need to devote herself to raising her young children, Farrow worked less frequently during the '90s. Nonetheless, she appeared in leading roles in several notable films, included 1994's Widows' Peak (an Irish film) and the 1995 films, Miami Rhapsody and Reckless. She also appeared in several independent features and made for television films throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s. She also wrote an autobiography, What Falls Away (New York: Doubleday, 1997).

Farrow most recently appeared as "Mrs. Baylock", the Satanic nanny, in the 2006 remake of The Omen. Though the film itself received a lukewarm critical reception, Farrow's performance was widely praised, with the Associated Press declaring "thank heaven for Mia Farrow" and calling her performance "a rare instance of the new Omen improving on the old one." Filmcritic.com added "it is Farrow who steals the show," and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer described her performance as "a truly delicious comeback role for Rosemary herself, Mia Farrow, who is chillingly believable as a sweet-talking nanny from hell."

Farrow has completed work on several films released in 2007, including the romantic comedy The Ex and the first part of director Luc Besson's planned trilogy of fantasy films, Arthur and the Invisibles. In September 2006, she began shooting director Michel Gondry's Be Kind Rewind, opposite Jack Black and Danny Glover.
Activism
Farrow has been a high profile advocate for children's rights, working to raise funds and awareness for children in conflict affected regions, predominantly in Africa. She is a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and has worked extensively to draw attention to the fight to eradicate polio, which she survived as a child. She has traveled to Darfur three times to advocate for Darfuri refuges. She traveled there, in November 2004 and June 2006, joining her son Ronan Farrow, who has also worked for UNICEF in Sudan. Her third trip was as part of a documentary film expidition in 2007. Farrow's photographs of Darfur appeared in People magazine in July 2006 and she authored an article on the crisis, published in the Chicago Tribune on July 25, 2006. On February 5, 2007, Farrow authored an editorial for the Los Angeles Times.. On August 7, 2007, Farrow offered to "trade her freedom" for the freedom of a rebel leader, being treated in a UN hospital but afraid to leave. She wanted to be taken captive in exchange for him being allowed to leave the country.

Her latest effort is www.miafarrow.org, containing a guide on how to get involved with Darfur activism, along with her photos and blog entries from Darfur, Chad, and the Central African Republic.
Personal life and relationships
In 1968, Farrow famously traveled to India, where she spent the early part of the year at the ashram of the Maharishi in Rishikesh, Uttarakhand, studying transcendental meditation. The visit gained worldwide media attention due to the presence of all four Beatles, Donovan, Mike Love (the Beach Boys lead singer), Prudence Farrow (Mia's younger sister who inspired John Lennon to write Dear Prudence), and Mia Farrow.

Farrow married singer Frank Sinatra on July 19, 1966, when she was 21 and he was 50. While she was filming Rosemary's Baby with director Roman Polanski, Sinatra served her divorce papers in front of the cast and crew. The move came as a shock to Farrow, who did not think that Sinatra would divorce her because she had refused his prior demand that she quit filming in order to work on his movie The Detective. The split was finalized two years later. Farrow married German-American Jewish pianist André Previn in 1970. His former wife, songwriter Dory Previn, blamed Farrow for his leaving her and wrote a scathing attack in a song entitled "Beware of Young Girls". Farrow and Previn had three biological children (twins Matthew and Sascha, born in 1970; and Fletcher, born in 1974) together and adopted three children, one from Korea, the other two from Vietnam, Soon-Yi, Lark Song, and Daisy. André and Mia divorced in 1979, but they remained on good terms. Fletcher Previn appears in one of Farrow's Woody Allen films, Radio Days; Fletcher plays with the children in a scene set on a roof-top.

In the 1980s and early 1990s, Farrow spent many years with director Woody Allen, but did not marry or live with him. The two had one biological son named Ronan Seamus Farrow. They also adopted a son and daughter together. They separated after Allen began a sexual relationship with Farrow's adopted daughter Soon-Yi Previn, whom he later married. Their marriage reportedly left Farrow devastated. During the custody battle, Farrow filed child abuse charges against Allen, involving her other daughter, Dylan. Those charges were later dropped, because the Connecticut state's attorney investigating the case found that although probable cause existed for prosecuting Allen, it was not worth subjecting the child to the possible trauma of a court trial.

Farrow has been a high profile advocate of adoption since the 1970s, adopting children from poverty stricken regions, many of whom were deemed "difficult to place" due to biological handicaps. She adopted three children and has three biological children with Andre Previn. She also adopted two children and has one biological child with Woody Allen. Farrow went on to adopt five additional children as a sole parent thereafter. Her last adoption was in 1995. Farrow has fifteen children, eleven of them adopted. She is active in agencies that encourage adoption, as evidenced by her involvement with UNICEF. Farrow is estranged from Soon-Yi Previn since Soon-Yi's marriage to Woody Allen. She called the loss a "tragedy" in The Observer (a U.K. Sunday newspaper) and remarked that "she's not coming back". Farrow said of Soon-Yi: "She was on the streets in Korea when she was captured and brought to the state orphanage. And in a way I can see from her perspective — a very limited perspective — that she's improved her situation. For a little orphan kid from Korea ... Perhaps she's not to be blamed." In a widely circulated quote, Soon-Yi dismissed Mia as "no Mother Teresa."

Farrow's adopted daughter Tam Farrow died in March 2000 at 21 years-old, after a long illness. Farrow splits her time between her spacious SoHo Loft in NYC's Greenwich Village and her estate/farm in Roxbury, Connecticut near the Town of New Milford.
List of children
With André Previn
*Matthew Phineas Previn (born in 1970) *Sascha Villiers Previn (born in 1970) *Fletcher Farrow Previn (born in 1974) Adopted *Soon-Yi Previn, (born in South Korea 8 Oct 1970, adopted c. 1978 ) *Lark Song Previn, (born in Vietnam 1973, adopted 1973) *Summer Song Previn (also known as Daisy), (born in Vietnam c. 1975, adopted 1976)
With Woody Allen
*Ronan Seamus Farrow (1987—), (birth name Satchel O'Sullivan Farrow) Adopted *Moses Amadeus Farrow (also known as Misha Farrow) (1978, adopted 1980) *Dylan O'Sullivan Farrow (also known as Eliza Farrow, current name is Malone)
Later adopted by Mia Farrow as a single mother
*Tam Farrow (1979–2000) *Isaiah Justus Farrow (c. 1991) *Quincy Farrow (now known as Kaeli-Shea, adopted 1994) *Frankie-Minh (1991, adopted 1995) *Thaddeus W. Farrow (c. 1988, adopted 1994) *Gabriel Wilk Farrow

Filmography

References

Who is Mia Farrow connected to?
Add a Connection

This biography says:

*Interview with Mia Farrow about Darfur on Guernica: a magazine of art and politics *Official MiaFarrow.org website * * * *http://www.farrow-osullivan.com *Bella Mia: Mia Farrow Message Board *Mia & Ronan Farrow Report from Darfur, published on the Genocide Intervention Network website *London Observer interview, printed on The Guardian *Mia Farrow: 'My faith helps me through hard times' The Independent * Farrow Interview on The Hour with George Stroumboulopoulos *Farrow Interview as part of Public Relations Society of America International Conference Overview on WebmasterRadio.FM with Brandy Shapiro-Babin

This biography says:

In 1968, Farrow famously traveled to India, where she spent the early part of the year at the ashram of the Maharishi in Rishikesh, Uttarakhand, studying transcendental meditation. The visit gained worldwide media attention due to the presence of all four Beatles, Donovan, Mike Love (the Beach Boys lead singer), Prudence Farrow (Mia's younger sister who inspired John Lennon to write Dear Prudence), and Mia Farrow...

That biography says:

...The visit gained worldwide attention thanks to the presence of (for a time) all four Beatles as well as Beach Boys lead singer Mike Love and actress Mia Farrow and her sister Prudence (who inspired John Lennon to write "Dear Prudence"). According to a 1968 Paul McCartney interview with Radio Luxembourg http://www.geocities.com/~beatleboy1/db1968.1120.beatles.html, it was during this time that Donovan taught John Lennon and Paul McCartney various finger-picking styles such as the claw hammer which he had learned from his St Albans buddy, Mac MacLeod...

That biography says:

...Rumors circulated about John Lennon, who said he had left the course because he had heard that Maharishi had made improper advances towards a young woman. Another popular rumor of the time involved Mia Farrow, although her autobiography is ambiguous on the matter. According to several authors, (Brown and Gaines, 1983; Miles, 1998; Spitz, 2005; Cynthia Lennon, 1978 ) Alexis Mardas deliberately engineered these rumors because he was bent on undermining the Maharishi's influence on the Beatles...

This biography says:

...Farrow has completed work on several films released in 2007, including the romantic comedy The Ex and the first part of director Luc Besson's planned trilogy of fantasy films, Arthur and the Invisibles. In September 2006, she began shooting director Michel Gondry's Be Kind Rewind, opposite Jack Black and Danny Glover.

This biography says:

...She appeared in nearly all of Allen's critically acclaimed films during this period, including leading roles in Hannah and Her Sisters (playing the title role of "Hannah"), The Purple Rose of Cairo, Broadway Danny Rose, and 1990s Alice, again as the title character. Farrow also played Alura, mother of "Kara" (Helen Slater), in the 1984 movie Supergirl and voiced the title role in 1982's animated film The Last Unicorn...

This biography says:

...In the 1980s and early '90s, Farrow's relationship with director Woody Allen resulted in numerous film collaborations. She appeared in nearly all of Allen's critically acclaimed films during this period, including leading roles in Hannah and Her Sisters (playing the title role of "Hannah"), The Purple Rose of Cairo, Broadway Danny Rose, and 1990s Alice, again as the title character...

That biography says:

Starting around 1980, Allen began a 12-year relationship with actress Mia Farrow, who had leading roles in several of his movies from 1982 to 1992. Farrow and Allen never married, but they adopted two children together: Dylan Farrow (who changed her name to Eliza and is now known as Malone) and Moses Farrow (now known as Misha); and had one biological child, Satchel Farrow (now known as Ronan Seamus Farrow)...

That biography says:

...Capote's elevator man danced the night away with a woman who didn't know his pedigree. Norman Mailer sounded off about Vietnam, and Frank Sinatra danced with his young wife, Mia Farrow.

This biography says:

...If Ira Levin's story shrewdly taps into every pregnant woman's fears about the stranger growing inside her, Mia Farrow gives those fears an achingly real and human force". Film critic Roger Ebert noted that "the brilliance of the film comes more from Polanski's direction, and from a series of genuinely inspired performances… The characters emerge as human beings actually doing these things...

That biography says:

...The Washington Post wrote: "Even though she is authoritative in the role, Keaton suffers tremendously from having no real function except to nag Michael for his past sins." In 1993 Keaton starred in Manhattan Murder Mystery, her first film with Woody Allen since 1979. Her part was intended for Mia Farrow, but Farrow dropped out of the project after her notorious separation from Allen....

This biography says:

...Farrow married singer Frank Sinatra on July 19, 1966, when she was 21 and he was 50. While she was filming Rosemary's Baby with director Roman Polanski, Sinatra served her divorce papers in front of the cast and crew. The move came as a shock to Farrow, who did not think that Sinatra would divorce her because she had refused his prior demand that she quit filming in order to work on his movie The Detective...

That biography says:

...Shortly after, in 1968, Polanski went to the United States, where he established his reputation as a major commercial filmmaker with the success of his first Hollywood film, Rosemary's Baby. The film is a satirical horror-thriller set in New York about Rosemary (Mia Farrow), an innocent young woman from Omaha, Nebraska, who is impregnated by the devil after her narcissistic actor husband, Guy (John Cassavetes), offers her womb to a coven of local witches in exchange for a successful career...

This biography says:

...Both parents were practicing Catholics and Mia, born Maria de Lourdes Villiers-Farrow (in Los Angeles, California), had a Catholic upbringing. Her sister, Prudence Farrow, inspired The Beatles' song "Dear Prudence" when she locked herself in her room having a breakdown while in India with them...

That biography says:

...In 1968, Mia Farrow dropped out of the movie The Detective (1968), and the role went to Bisset. That same year, she was cast opposite Steve McQueen in Bullitt, and appeared in the 1970 disaster film Airport...

That biography says:

...From 1989 through 1995, West provided The Howard Stern Show with character voices such as Jim Backus, Raymond Burr, Connie Chung, Pat Cooper, Sammy Davis Jr., Doris Day, Ellen Degeneres, Louis "Red" Deutsch, David Dinkins, Mia Farrow, Larry Fine, Pete Fornatel, Frank Gifford, Kathy Lee Gifford, Mark Goddard, Bobcat Goldthwait, the Greaseman, Rudolph Giuliani, Jonathan Harris, Leona Helmsley, Elton John, Nelson Mandela, Jackie Martling, Ed McMahon, Al Michaels, Bill Mumy, Cardinal John Joseph O'Connor, Maury Povich, Soon-Yi Previn, Marge Schott, Frank Sinatra, Ray Stern (Howard Stern's Mother), George Takei, Joe Walsh, and Robin Williams until eventually leaving the show over money...

That biography says:

During this period he also wrote the screenplay for the critically and commercially unsuccessful 1974 adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby (starring Mia Farrow and Robert Redford)

That biography says:

...He later admitted that he had wanted Tate to star in the film and had hoped that someone would suggest her, as he felt it inappropriate to make the suggestion himself. The producers did not suggest Tate, and Mia Farrow was cast. Tate provided ideas for some of the key scenes, including the scene in which the protagonist, Rosemary, is impregnated...

This biography says:

...Film critic and author Stephen Farber described her performance as having an "electrifying impact… one of the rare instances of actor and character achieving a miraculous, almost mythical match. If Ira Levin's story shrewdly taps into every pregnant woman's fears about the stranger growing inside her, Mia Farrow gives those fears an achingly real and human force"...

That biography says:

...Levin's best-known novel is Rosemary's Baby, a horror story of modern day satanism and the occult, set in Manhattan's Upper West Side. In 1968, it was made into a film starring Mia Farrow and John Cassavetes. Ruth Gordon won an Oscar for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for her performance...

That biography says:

...In 1972 she had her first role in a movie "For The Love Of Ada". Her next film role was two years later in The Great Gatsby starring with Mia Farrow - whom she would later portray in the 1995 biopic Love and Betrayal: The Mia Farrow Story...

That biography says:

...A popular misconception still believed to be true is that Mansfield was a supporter of the Church Of Satan and had an affair with Satanist leader, Anton LaVey. In truth, Jayne posed with LaVey for publicity photos as did fellow stars, Sammy Davis Jr and Mia Farrow. Though Jayne was interested in the occult, she remained a devoted Christian throughout her entire life...

This biography says:

...However, she achieved stardom on the popular nighttime soap opera Peyton Place as naive, waif-like Allison Mackenzie, a role she later abandoned at the urging of husband Frank Sinatra. Her first leading film role was in 1968's Rosemary's Baby, which was a major critical and commercial success at the time and continues to be widely regarded as a classic of the horror genre...

That biography says:

...and Tina by his first wife Nancy Barbato. He was married three more times, to the actresses Ava Gardner and Mia Farrow and finally to Barbara Marx, to whom he was married at his death.

That biography says:

...When he suggested to Lennon and George Harrison that the Maharishi had been making sexual advances toward Mia Farrow and other women at the camp (a suggestion not fully supported in Farrow's autobiography What Falls Away), they took the suggestion seriously enough to confront him...

That biography says:

...Rose in the movie 3 Women (1977) starring Shelley Duvall and Sissy Spacek, and as Bishop Martin in A Wedding (1978) starring Desi Arnaz, Jr., Carol Burnett, Geraldine Chaplin, Mia Farrow, Vittorio Gassman, and Lillian Gish.
How is Mia Farrow connected to John Farrow? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to Bernard Slade? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to Luc Besson? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to André Previn? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to Theodore Roethke? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to Christine Andreas? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to Mildred Shay? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to Lois Chiles? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to Robert Hegyes? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to Tina Brown? Tell the world.
How is Mia Farrow connected to Mary-Louise Parker? Tell the world.