Tatum O’Neal

Tatum O'NealTatum O'Neal, 2007.

Tatum O’Neal (born November 5, 1963, Los Angeles, California, U.S.) is an American actress who, at the age of 10, became the youngest person to win an Academy Award in competition when she received the Oscar for best supporting actress for her performance as Addie Loggins in Paper Moon (1973).

O’Neal was the daughter of actors Ryan O’Neal and Joanna Moore. When she was eight years old, director Peter Bogdanovich approached her father and her with a proposal for them to costar in a movie based on the novel Addie Pray (1971) by Joe David Brown, although Tatum had never before acted. Her grave performance as a shrewd cigarette-smoking nine-year-old who teams up with a bogus Bible salesman (who may be her father) to form an impressive con team in the Depression-set film won her critical praise and a Golden Globe Award for most promising new actress as well as the Oscar. In her next film, O’Neal played the pitching ace on a misfit youth baseball team in the popular comedy The Bad News Bears (1976). She also portrayed an enterprising prop girl in Bogdanovich’s less successful film Nickelodeon (1976), which featured her father and Burt Reynolds. O’Neal then starred with Christopher Plummer and Anthony Hopkins in International Velvet (1978), a sequel to National Velvet (1944).

O’Neal’s subsequent movies included Little Darlings (1980), in which she costarred with Kristy McNichol; the biopic Basquiat (1996); and The Scoundrel’s Wife (2002). During much of the time from the mid-1980s, however, O’Neal was better known for her troubled marriage to tennis star John McEnroe and for her struggles with drug addiction than for her work as an actress. She later starred in the 2006–07 television series Wicked Wicked Games and played the lead character’s troubled sister in a recurring role in the TV show Rescue Me (2004–11). O’Neal also continued to appear in movies, including the music biopic The Runaways (2010), The Assent (2019), and Troubled Waters (2020).

Patricia Bauer The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica