Academy, Emmy, and Golden Globe Award-winning actress Sally Field is known for her roles in “Forrest Gump,” “Brothers and Sisters,” “Lincoln,” and “Steel Magnolias.” The 76-year-old actress began her career with the titular role in “Gidget” in 1965. Since then, she has appeared in various TV shows, movies, and Broadway shows. Field has also been outspoken about her personal challenges. In her 2018 memoir “In Pieces,” she opens up about being sexually abused by her stepfather as well as her struggles with depression, self-doubt, and loneliness.
The Beginning of Her Career
Sally Field was born in Pasadena, California, on November 6, 1946. Her father, Richard Dryden Field, was a salesman and her mother was actress Margaret Field (née Morlan). After her parents divorced, her mother married actor and stuntman Jock Mahoney. Sally has a brother, Richard Field, and a half-sister, Princess O’Mahoney. [1]
Her Personal Life
Sally Field married Steven Craig in 1968, and they had two sons, Peter and Eli. They divorced in 1975, and she married Alan Greisman in 1984. They had one son together, Samuel, before divorcing in 1994. From 1976 to 1980, she dated Burt Reynolds, a difficult relationship she discusses in her memoir. She recounts his controlling behavior and how he convinced Field not to attend the Emmy ceremony where she won for “Sybil.” Reynolds actually died just before her book’s release, and in his own memoir, he called their failed relationship “the biggest regret of my life” in his 2015 memoir “But Enough About Me.” [3]
Meanwhile, Fields said they hadn’t spoken for 30 years before his passing. “He was not someone I could be around,” she explained. “He was just not good for me in any way. And he had somehow invented in his rethinking of everything that I was more important to him than he had thought, but I wasn’t. He just wanted to have the thing he didn’t have. I just didn’t want to deal with that.”
In hindsight, Field made connections between her relationship with Reynolds — which she described as “confusing and complicated, and not without loving and caring, but really complicated and hurtful to me” — and her relationship with her stepfather. In her memoir, she also talks about her stepfather’s abuse, when he would frequently call her to his room when she was 14. “I felt both a child, helpless, and not a child,” she wrote. “Powerful. This was power. And I owned it. But I wanted to be a child — and yet.” [4]
Field later found out that her mother had known about the abuse all along, but her husband had lied and said it only happened once when he was drunk. Field had told her it was “all through my childhood” and wrote the memoir after her mother died. “It was the only way I was going to find the pieces of my mother that I couldn’t put together. And until I could see that, I couldn’t forgive her, and I needed to forgive her or at least understand her. So I wrote the book to forgive her.” [5]
Sally Field Today
These days, Sally Field keeps her Oscars and Emmys in a TV room where she plays video games with her grandkids. So far, Field shows no signs of retiring with her film “Spoiler Alert” releasing next week, as well as “80 for Brady” coming in 2023.
“As an actor, she dared this town to typecast her, and then simply broke through every dogmatic barrier to find her own way — not to stardom, which I imagine she’d decry, but to great roles in great films and television,” said Steven Spielberg, her friend and “Lincoln” director. “Through her consistently good taste and feisty persistence, she has survived our ever-changing culture, stood the test of time and earned this singular place in history.”