Evan Rachel Wood was born in Raleigh, NC, where her father Ira David Wood ran a theater company. Along with her
two brothers, she acted in her dad's stage productions before getting small roles in made-for-TV movies. In 1995,
she made several guest appearances on the CBS drama American Gothic, as the daughter of Mrs. Russell (played by
real-life mom Sara Lynn Moore). Her next regular role was Chloe on the NBC sci-fi police drama Profiler. She left
the show to join the cast of the popular ABC family drama Once and Again as Rick's daughter Jessie. Along with
child actor co-stars
Julia Whelan and
Meredith Deane, she won a Young Artist
Award for her work on the show. Other TV appearances include Touched by an Angel,
The West Wing, and CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation. In 1998, Wood made her first feature film in
Timothy Hutton's directorial debut
Digging to China. In the starring role of Harriet Frankovitz, she played a ten-year-old girl who befriends
mentally challenged adult Ricky (
Kevin Bacon).
More movie appearances followed in
Griffin Dunne's fantasy
Practical Magic,
Joey Travolta's crime movie
Detour, and
Andrew Niccol's sci-fi comedy
Simone. Her next leading role was in the family-friendly drama
Little Secrets as teenage concert violinist Emily Lindstrom.
Her big breakthrough came in 2003 as the star of
Catherine Hardwicke's
directorial debut
Thirteen, which was partially written by teenage co-star
Nikki Reed. Launched into semi-stardom by the well-marketed movie, she was then
offered a part in
Ron Howard's Western
The Missing, also starring
Cate Blanchett and
Tommy Lee Jones. Projects for 2004 include the family drama The Upside of Anger
and the teen comedy Pretty Persuasion. Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide.