Rachael Leigh Cook
- Actress
- Producer
- Writer
Minneapolis native Rachael Leigh Cook began her career as a model at
the tender age of 10, gracing Milk-Bone boxes and Target ads
nationwide in the USA. She also appeared in a now-famous (in the USA)
anti-drug TV spot in which, armed with a frying pan, she bashed her way
through a kitchen to show the disastrous effects of heroin. At 14, her
modeling agency sent her to read for a short film
(26 Summer Street (1996)) and
changed the course of her young life--from that moment on, Cook was
hooked on acting. When she reached L.A. later that year, Cook bypassed
the wannabe stage and nailed her first audition (for the part of a
budding entrepreneur in
The Baby-Sitters Club (1995)).
She returned to theaters three months later in the
Jonathan Taylor Thomas vehicle
Tom and Huck (1995), then filled her
calendar with appearances in independent and made-for-TV movies. She
divided her time between Minneapolis and Tinseltown, shuttling from
school events to movie shoots with her mother in tow. Cook's starlet
status crystallized in 1999, when she starred opposite
Freddie Prinze Jr. in the Pygmalion
retelling She's All That (1999).
Her on-screen transformation from ugly duckling to ravishing beauty
scored several teen-oriented awards and made Cook a hot commodity in
Hollywood. She signed for a handful of plum follow-up roles, including
a troubled adolescent in
Sylvester Stallone's
Get Carter (2000), a frontier gal in
Texas Rangers (2001), and the
caterwauling lead in the live-action version of
Josie and the Pussycats (2001).
Cook now lives primarily in Los Angeles, but she returns home
frequently to visit with friends and family. Her father, Tom (a former
stand-up comic), is a social worker in the public school system, and
her younger brother, Ben, is an aspiring filmmaker.