Adrienne King


Adrienne King is an American film, stage, and voice actress, visual artist, and former stuntwoman. She is best known for portraying Alice Hardy in Sean S. Cunningham's horror film Friday the 13th, a role she later reprised in Steve Miner's sequel Friday the 13th Part 2. A child actor, King made her film debut as Melinda in the television feature Inherit the Wind before appearing in Between the Lines, Saturday Night Fever, and Hair in uncredited roles.
After appearing in the Friday the 13th films, King suffered an aggressive stalker which prompted her to go into seclusion. King worked as a stunt performer and extra for the supernatural comedy film Ghostbusters. She reemerged doing voice acting and dubbing in the early 1990s, providing looping voices for a wide range of films including The Night We Never Met, The Man Without a Face, What's Eating Gilbert Grape, The Good Son, Wolf, While You Were Sleeping, Jerry Maguire, and Titanic.
In 2009, she made her first onscreen appearance in nearly three decades in the independent film Psychic Experiment, followed by supporting parts in All American Bully and The Butterfly Room.

Life and career

1960–1979: Early life and roles

Adrienne King was born July 21, 1960 in Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York. She is a first-generation American; her mother was English and from Liverpool. She appeared in her first commercial when she was six months old. In 1965 around age five, she appeared in the television film Inherit the Wind in a supporting role. The experience sparked an interest in performance, and King went on to appear in commercials and act in local theater and Off-Broadway productions throughout her childhood.
Beginning in ninth grade, she began auditioning for films in New York City: "As long as I kept my grades up, everyone was cool with it," she recalled. She soon began training under Bill Esper, a student of acting instructor Sanford Meisner. During this time, she worked as an extra, as well as performing as an uncredited dancer in the films Saturday Night Fever and Hair. She also had a small supporting role in the comedy film Between the Lines. During this time, she studied art at New York's Fashion Institute of Technology. Having done several television commercials, King began obtaining minor roles in a variety of soap operas.

1980–2008: ''Friday the 13th'' and aftermath

In 1979, while King was appearing in a commercial for Burger King, she was referred to producer Sean S. Cunningham through a mutual friend for a role in his directorial debut, the horror film Friday the 13th. Cunningham felt King embodied the qualities of the film's lead heroine, Alice Hardy, and he cast her in the film. Shot in New Jersey in the summer of 1979, Friday the 13th went on to become a massive box office success, grossing nearly $60 million worldwide.
The following year, she reprised her role as Alice Hardy in the sequel Friday the 13th Part 2, in which the character meets her demise. After the success of Friday the 13th, King was pursued by a male stalker who managed to learn areas she frequented, where she exercised, and ate lunch. The man took Polaroid photographs of King that he would slip under the door of her apartment in New York City, and at one point, broke into her apartment and defaced her artwork. On one occasion, the man confronted her in her apartment and held a gun to her head. The assailant was apprehended and spent some time imprisoned, but the incident traumatized King, prompting her to leave the public eye. Her last on-camera screen appearance at that time was a commercial for Downy which she filmed in 1983. Subsequently, King was hired as a stunt performer and background actor for the Ivan Reitman film Ghostbusters, having been acquainted to the stunt coordinator Cliff Cudney.
She subsequently relocated to London, where she enrolled at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, studying voice and dance. Upon finishing her studies, she returned to the United States, settling in Los Angeles, where she met her husband, Richard Hassanein, the founder of United Film Distribution. Reluctant to appear onscreen, King reemerged doing voice acting and ADR work, first for Mel Gibson's The Man Without a Face, and the Lasse Hallström-directed drama What's Eating Gilbert Grape?. She continued to provide voice work for numerous Hollywood productions throughout the 1990s, including Philadelphia, The Pelican Brief, Wolf, Cameron Crowe's Jerry Maguire, and James Cameron's Titanic. She would later state: "Voiceover work saved me. There's no question it came all around full circle, and I'm a better, more compassionate and stronger actor and artist."

2009–present: Film and other projects

In 2009, she signed on to the science fiction/horror film Psychic Experiment, marking her first onscreen film appearance in 27 years. In 2012, she starred in the Welsh Christmas horror film Silent Night, Bloody Night: The Homecoming, an unofficial sequel to the American horror film Silent Night, Bloody Night and The Butterfly Room. King is set to portray Jackie Winters, an investigative reporter, in the upcoming horror film William Froste and Theresa in the short film Admonition.
As of 2010, King also worked as a winemaker and wine company coordinator in southern Oregon. She has sold her own line of Friday the 13th-themed wines through the company, called Crystal Lake Wines, as well as paintings.

Filmography