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A Look At Sally Field's Career In Hollywood | TheRichest.com

Just this week she gained critical and fan acclaim for her speech, while receiving a Screen Actors Guild Lifetime Achievement Award, by merely recognizing her own privilege compared to others. The soft spoken, 5 ft 2in actress, singer, director and writer has managed to make nearly everyone in Hollywood her friend and has a massive fan following to show for it.

Who doesn’t love Sally Field?

With a net worth of $55 million and nearly 60 successful years in the industry, Field has a lot to be proud of and it’s clear many have taken notice.

Field was born and raised in Pasadena, CA. Her father served in World War II and her parents divorced shortly after his return, resulting in her mother, an actress, remarrying actor and stuntman, Jock Mahoney. With her friendly personality and soft spoken nature, she spent her high school days as a cheerleader and member of the drama team. According to Biography, after graduation, Field attended an acting workshop at Columbia Studios, further cementing her love for the stage and opening doors for her first television roles.

Fans may recall their earliest memories of Field in ABC’s Gidget or perhaps the popular sitcom, The Flying Nun. Throughout the mid-70’s, the actress landed roles in Alias Smith and Jones, Night Gallery and The Girl With Something Extra, however, the fear of getting typecast and a string of unsuccessful sitcoms, caused Field to take pause and reevaluate her career.

After studying with acclaimed acting coach Lee Strasberg, Field learned how to create versatility in her work and honed her skill. She landed the 1976 role in the television film Sybil, about a woman with multi-personality disorder and hit the performance out of the park, earning an Emmy Award.

The role convinced Hollywood that Field could take on deeper and more complex characters. She starred in Smokey and the Bandit with Burt Reynolds in 1977 and she and Reynolds continued their string of success with several films following. Norma Rae in 1979, earned Field an Academy Award for Best Actress.

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Field continued on the path to switching roles and showing off her talent in various films. According to Celebrity Net Worth, she played a prostitute in Back Roads alongside Tommy Lee Jones and won her second Oscar for Places in the Heart.

Throughout the 90’s Field was the name every director wanted and she landed everything from Steel Magnolias with Dolly Parton and Shirley MacLaine to Mrs. Doubtfire, alongside the late Robin Williams. The role of Forrest Gump’s mother, opposite Tom Hanks, began her transition to supporting roles in popular films.

After taking a break from the big screen, audiences delighted in her return with her portrayal of Aunt May in The Amazing Spider-Man, Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln and most recently, the sports comedy 80 For Brady.

When we think of Field’s love life, most minds would go directly to fellow actor Burt Reynolds, however, Field only dated Reynolds for a few years and the couple never married.

Her first marriage was to Steve Craig, her high school sweetheart, in 1968. They had two sons and then divorced nearly a decade later. After dating Reynolds, Field married Alan Greisman in 1984 and the pair had one child together before divorcing in 1993.

In 2005, the Kiss Me Goodbye actress was diagnosed with osteoporosis. After learning that women in her family had a history of the disease, Field launched a campaign to educate others and fight for early detection through bone-density scans and advanced technology.

According to WebMD, Field is active and enjoys hiking, biking and yoga, however, bone scans showed her hips and spine were beginning to thin. By adding calcium to her diet and working out a medication plan with her doctor, Field never stopped enjoying her lifestyle.

In 2018, Field published her memoir, “In Pieces”, an autobiography unlike the typical Hollywood biography. She shared details about an abusive childhood, an abusive entertainment industry and her rising above the negativity. According to the New York Times, the bestseller shared ‘pieces’ of Field’s life she could have kept secret and chose not to.

She tells her story in other ways as well. Field has long-since been an advocate for women’s rights, earning a Human Rights Campaign’s Ally for Equality Award in 2012, she’s co-hosted the Global Leadership Awards six times and was arrested in 2019 while attending Jane Fonda’s climate change protests in Washington D.C.

Field has won two Academy Awards, two Emmys, two Golden Gobles, including nine additional nominations, among others. Just shy of receiving EGOT status, Field was nominated for a Tony in her Broadway role as Amanda Wingfield in The Glass Menagerie. In 2014, she was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. She received Kennedy Center Honors in 2019 and received the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2023.

Despite a lifetime of ups and downs, Field shines brightly for fans and in the roles she’s been a part of; making her an iconic A-list celebrity.

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Sources: Biography, Celebrity Net Worth, WebMD, New York Times



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