• PICTURED
    The worst air disaster in Greece's history kills 121

LOGIN TO THE ARCHIVE Get FREE UNLIMITED ACCESS TO THE TIME ARCHIVE
>> SUBSCRIBE TO TIME MAGAZINE FOR JUST $1.99
News Magazine - Current Events
US News - National News - Political News
World News - Global News - International News
Business News - Personal Finance News - Tech News
Arts and Entertainment News - Books - Movie Reviews - Music Reviews
Science News Articles - Health News Articles - Science Articles - Health Articles
Magazine Articles - News Articles - News Reports
News Photos - News Pictures - Photo Essays
Web Graphics - News Graphics - Photo News - Online Photo Gallery
Opinion Editorials - Opinion Columnist - Critical Essays
Magazine Newsstand - Current Issue - Current Magazine
TIME Magazine Covers - TIME Covers - TIME Magazine Cover Archive
TIME Life Books - Book Store - Photo Books
TIME Magazine Archives - TIME Archives - TIME Magazine Back Issues
Fashion Styles - Luxury Fashion - Fashion Magazine
Baby Boomer Generation - Senior Living - Retirement Living
International Business - Global Market - International Trade
Company Profiles - Business Information - Business and Economy
VINCENT KESSLER / REUTERS / LANDOV
Web Exclusive | Nation

Salma Hayek

The Hollywood Dynamo
By BELINDA LUSCOMBE

Posted Saturday, Aug. 13, 2005

When you have a body with curves more dangerous than a racetrack's and a face that stops traffic, you learn to love the public eye. But Salma Hayek has never been content to be a mere lens magnet. She plays the show-biz game like a true scrimmager, dodging, scrambling and tackling much bigger obstacles. Consider first her arrival in the U.S., in 1990 at age 23; already an enormous star in her homeland of Mexico, she had to return to the bottom of the filmic food chain in L.A. After director Robert Rodriguez saw her on TV and cast her in 1995's Desperado, she began to win roles in mainstream, if not always successful, films like Fools Rush In and Wild Wild West. Just 12 years after she arrived, Hayek produced and starred in her dream project, a biopic of fellow Mexican Frida Kahlo, a film that had stymied several richer, more famous and much taller women, not to mention studio executives, for years. But a passion project is just a brave, slightly quixotic thing to do, unless it makes a handsome profit (as Frida did) and gets nominated for six Academy Awards (as Frida did—winning two). Directing came next; Hayek's Maldonado Miracle, about how a bleeding statue changes a town, aired on Showtime in 2003. At this stage, she could be sitting by the pool, fending off the scripts, invitations and free frocks, but with Hayek, 38, nothing is show business as usual. She took PenČlope Cruz, a putative rival, under her wing when the Spanish actress arrived in Hollywood. She's trying to send more film productions Mexico's way to build up the industry there. And she's also developing two new U.S. films and two TV shows, plus writing a script for Jamie Foxx. Hayek may have been noticed for her body, but she's known for her body of work.

Photo Galleries

Columnists


      Cover Search

Apr. 8, 1966

Search Covers:
Copyright © 2005 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Subscribe | Customer Service | Help | Site Map | Search | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | RSS Feeds
Terms of Use | Reprints & Permissions | Opinion Leaders Panel
TIME Classroom | Press Releases | Media Kit | Try AOL for 1000 Hours FREE!

EDITIONS: TIME Europe | TIME Asia | TIME Pacific | TIME Canada | TIME For Kids