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Katherine Heigl

American Actress
Date of Birth : 24 Nov, 1978
Place of Birth : Columbia Hospital for Women, Washington, D.C.
Profession : Actress
Nationality : American
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Katherine Heigl is an American actress. She played Izzie Stevens on the ABC television medical drama Grey's Anatomy from 2005 to 2010, a role that brought her recognition and accolades, including the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series in 2007. 

Biography

Heigl started modeling while a child and eventually appeared in television commercials. In 1992 she made her movie debut in That Night, and minor roles in a series of films followed. After graduating from high school, she moved to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career. She quickly found regular work, including in the comic fantasy Wish upon a Star (1996) and the horror film Bride of Chucky (1998).

In 1999 she landed a role in the science-fiction TV series Roswell, which became a cult hit, and garnered much attention as the alien Isabel. After Roswell ended in 2002, she starred in several television movies, including Love Comes Softly (2003) and a sequel, Love’s Enduring Promise (2004). In 2005 Heigl got her big break when she was cast as Dr. Isobel (Izzie) Stevens in Grey’s Anatomy. The dramatic series, which was created by Shonda Rhimes, centres on the lives of surgical interns and was an immediate success, making Heigl a star. In 2007 she received an Emmy Award for best supporting actress. Heigl left the show in 2010.

In addition to her television work, Heigl continued to appear in feature films, but it was not until her role in Judd Apatow’s Knocked Up (2007) that she scored a major hit. The unconventional romantic comedy centred on an entertainment reporter (played by Heigl) who has a drunken one-night stand with a stoner (Seth Rogen). When Heigl’s character becomes pregnant and decides to keep the baby, the unlikely couple attempt to form a lasting relationship. Despite her later claim that the film was “a little sexist,” it was a critical and commercial success, grossing about $220 million worldwide.

Heigl’s subsequent movies included the lighthearted 27 Dresses (2008), in which she starred as a serial bridesmaid looking for Mr. Right, The Ugly Truth (2009), and Life As We Know It (2010), about a mismatched couple entrusted with raising an orphaned infant. She also appeared in the action comedies Killers (2010), as a woman who unknowingly marries a former assassin, and One for the Money (2012), as a novice bounty hunter. The latter film was based on a best-selling novel by Janet Evanovich. In the thriller Unforgettable (2017) Heigl played a woman who terrorizes her ex-husband’s fiancée. In addition to her starring turns, she had roles in the ensemble romantic comedies New Year’s Eve (2011) and The Big Wedding (2013). She voiced a squirrel in the computer-animated comedy The Nut Job (2014) and its sequel (2017).

Heigl returned to television in the drama State of Affairs (2014–15), in which she played a CIA liaison to the U.S. president. She then was cast as a defense attorney in Doubt (2017). In 2018–19 she had a recurring role on the legal series Suits. Heigl then starred in Firefly Lane (2021– ), a Netflix series that was adapted from Kristin Hannah’s best seller about a friendship that spans decades.

Quotes

Total 42 Quotes
A girl told me my lips looked like somebody had pressed strawberry yogurt against my face.
I love playing a smart, ambitious, talented woman. Who doesn't? That's really fun for me.
There are some things that, if you say them out loud, will hurt the other person's feelings. I tend to say them anyway. It's better to be honest.
It's more fun to think that there are other worlds.
I'm grateful people think I'm beautiful or sexy, and I suppose it's better than the alternative, but I do try to fight it a bit so it's not all people see me as. And I'd love to one day be in a position where I could choose a role to showcase my creativity versus just my bra size.
People make mistakes - they say things they shouldn't have or didn't necessarily mean. But I strongly believe in consequences. If there are none, someone might feel like they've gotten away with something, or that what they said couldn't have been that bad.
I think it's better to find somebody who's worse at everything than you. It just makes you constantly feel so good about yourself. And then, you can constantly talk about how good you are at everything, and how terrible they are at everything.
Adoption has been a part of my life and a part of my family, so it was how I wanted to start. It felt natural and right to me.
We are all human beings, part of the human race, and we need to be compassionate and giving and kind with one another.
I'm not out burning bras, but I'm very opinionated about women owning their power.