Dakota Johnson

Dakota Mayi Johnson (born October 4, 1989) is an American actress and model. The daughter of actors Don Johnson and Melanie Griffith, she made her film debut at age ten with a minor appearance in Crazy in Alabama (1999), a dark comedy film starring her mother. Johnson was discouraged from pursuing acting further until she graduated from high school, after which she began auditioning for roles in Los Angeles.

Dakota Johnson
Johnson in 2018
Born
Dakota Mayi Johnson

(1989-10-04) October 4, 1989
Occupation
  • Actress
  • model
Years active1999–present
Parents
Relatives
AwardsFull list

She was cast in a minor part in The Social Network (2010), and subsequently had supporting roles in the comedy 21 Jump Street, the independent comedy Goats, and the romantic comedy The Five-Year Engagement (all 2012). In 2015, Johnson had her first starring role as Anastasia Steele in the Fifty Shades film series (2015–2018). For her performance in the series, she received a BAFTA Rising Star Award nomination in 2016.

Following Fifty Shades, Johnson appeared in the biographical crime film Black Mass (2015), Luca Guadagnino's drama film A Bigger Splash (2015), and the romantic comedy film How to Be Single (2016). She reunited with Guadagnino, portraying the lead role in Suspiria (2018), a supernatural horror film based on the 1977 film by Dario Argento. That same year, she appeared in an ensemble cast in the thriller film Bad Times at the El Royale. In 2019, Johnson had starring roles in the psychological horror film Wounds and the comedy-drama film The Peanut Butter Falcon.

Early life

Dakota Mayi Johnson was born on October 4, 1989, at Brackenridge Hospital in Austin, Texas,[1] to actors Don Johnson and Melanie Griffith. When she was born, her father was shooting the film The Hot Spot in Texas.[2] Her maternal grandparents are advertising executive and former child actor Peter Griffith and actress Tippi Hedren, and she is the niece of actress Tracy Griffith and production designer Clay A. Griffin. Her former stepfather is Spanish actor Antonio Banderas.[3] She has four paternal siblings, including actor Jesse Johnson, and two maternal siblings.

Because of her parents' work, Johnson spent most of her childhood in various locations with them on film sets,[4] though she spent extended amounts of time in Aspen and Woody Creek, Colorado,[5] where she worked during summers at the local market as a teenager.[6] She attended the Aspen Community School for a time.[7] "I was so consistently unmoored and discombobulated. I didn't have an anchor anywhere," Johnson recalled.[4] At an early age, Johnson was diagnosed with hyperactivity (ADHD)[8] and changed schools seven times.[9] She attended the Santa Catalina School in Monterey, California, for her freshman year of high school before transferring to New Roads School in Santa Monica, California.[10]

Johnson became interested in modeling at age 12 after a photo shoot with children of other celebrities for Teen Vogue,[11] and subsequently earned an income modeling while attending high school in Santa Monica.[4] She has struggled with depression since around age 14[12] and checked into rehabilitation.[13] Johnson has said she was interested in acting as a child, having spent significant time on film sets with her parents, but they discouraged her from pursuing the profession until she graduated from high school.[14] After high school, she applied to the Juilliard School in New York City, but was not accepted after she covered a Radiohead song.[4]

Career

1999–2014: Beginnings

In 1999, Johnson made her film debut in Crazy in Alabama where she and her sister Stella Banderas played daughters to their real-life mother, Melanie Griffith. The film was directed by her then-stepfather, Antonio Banderas. In 2006, she was chosen as Miss Golden Globe 2006, where she served as the first second-generation Miss Golden Globe in the Globes' history.[15][16]

Johnson on set in 2014

In 2006, Johnson signed with IMG Models.[11] Though acting is her primary work, she has since modeled for MANGO brand's jeans line in 2009 and shot the "Rising Star" campaign for Australian fashion label Wish in 2011.[17][18]

Once Johnson graduated from high school, she took acting classes with teacher Tom Todoroff until 2008.[19] She signed with the William Morris Agency and started her acting career. She appeared in a minor role as Amelia Ritter in the Oscar-nominated hit film The Social Network (2010), directed by David Fincher.[20] She had a small role in the fantasy film Beastly (2011),[21] followed by So Yong Kim's drama For Ellen (2012) opposite Paul Dano and Jon Heder,[17] about a struggling musician in the midst of a custody battle. Also in 2012, she had roles in Christopher Neil's independent comedy Goats, portraying a student at a prep school; Nicholas Stoller's romantic comedy The Five-Year Engagement; and the comedy 21 Jump Street.[22] She also played the female lead in Chris Nelson's film Date and Switch written by Alan Yang.[23]

In March 2012, Johnson was cast as Kate in the Fox comedy series Ben and Kate, marking her television debut.[24] The show was canceled on January 25, 2013 after one season.[25] Johnson quickly resumed her film career, with a small role in Need for Speed (2014).[26] In 2013, she had a role as one of the new hires on the series finale episode of the NBC comedy series The Office.

2015–present: Breakthrough

Johnson's breakthrough came with her leading role as Anastasia "Ana" Steele in the erotic romantic drama film Fifty Shades of Grey, which was released in February 2015 and brought her international recognition.[27] Johnson won the role over Lucy Hale, Felicity Jones, Elizabeth Olsen, Danielle Panabaker and Shailene Woodley. In response to questions regarding her stance on gender rights with respect to her character in the Fifty Shades film series, Johnson stated: "I'm proud of [the film]. I completely disagree with people who think Ana's weak. I think she's actually stronger than he is. Everything she does is her choice. And if I can be an advocate for women to do what they want to do with their bodies and not be ashamed of what they want, then I'm all for that."[28]

Johnson at the 2016 BAFTA Awards

On February 15, 2015, Johnson appeared on Saturday Night Live's 40th anniversary special and hosted SNL on February 28, 2015, making her the second daughter of a former SNL host (after Gwyneth Paltrow, whose mother Blythe Danner hosted during the show's seventh season in 1982) to host the show. Also in 2015, she reunited with her 21 Jump Street cast member Johnny Depp, playing the mother of his character's child in the feature film Black Mass.[29] In 2015, Johnson starred in Luca Guadagnino's thriller A Bigger Splash,[30] alongside Tilda Swinton, Matthias Schoenaerts and Ralph Fiennes.[31] Writing for Rolling Stone, Peter Travers stated that Johnson showed that her character "has more on her mind than slithering seductively".[32] According to Christy Lemire from RogerEbert.com: "A Bigger Splash allows Johnson to be both funnier and sexier than she was in Fifty Shades of Grey".[33] The same year saw the release of Cymbeline, a modern film adaptation of the William Shakespeare play, in which she starred opposite Ethan Hawke and Ed Harris.[34] She also played a lead in the 2016 comedy How to Be Single, with Leslie Mann and her Date and Switch co-star Nicholas Braun.[35]

Johnson trained in dance to prepare for Luca Guadagnino's Suspiria (2018), a supernatural horror film and remake of the 1977 film by Dario Argento, in which she plays an American dancer in Berlin who enrolls in an academy run by a coven of witches.[6] David Ehrlich of IndieWire described Johnson's performance in the film as "thrillingly unrepentant".[36] Also in 2018, she starred in Drew Goddard's neo-noir thriller Bad Times at the El Royale, with Jeff Bridges, Jon Hamm and Chris Hemsworth. In the film, she plays a hippie staying at a resort on the California-Nevada border where the lives of various people with suspicious pasts intersect.[37] Screen Rant ranked Johnson's performance as the fourth-best in the film and stated that "she brings a reserved, under-the-surface power to her role".[38]

In 2019, Johnson starred in the psychological horror film, Wounds, opposite Armie Hammer, directed by Babak Anvari, based upon a horror novella The Visible Filth by Nathan Ballingrud.[39] It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 26, 2019.[40] She then starred in the well-reviewed independent adventure film, The Peanut Butter Falcon, opposite Shia LaBeouf and Bruce Dern,[41] which had its world premiere at South by Southwest on March 9, 2019.[42] She appeared in the drama film Our Friend, opposite Casey Affleck and Jason Segel, and directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite. The film is based upon real life couple Nicole and Matthew Teague, faced with Nicole's impending death, see their best friend move in with them to help them out.[43] Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal wrote that the "intimacy of Ms. Johnson's performance is extraordinary. She is the least assertive of movie stars, yet the courage, despair and fury she finds in Nicole will lift you up and spin you around".[44] While Gary Goldstein from the Los Angeles Times stated that Johnson "impresses with affecting range — from flirty, ebullient and adoring to stalwart, enraged and resigned; it's a lovely performance".[45] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle praised her performance writing that she "doesn't play Nicole as some glorious life force, but as an average 34-year-old woman dealt the worst hand imaginable".[46]

Johnson during an interview with Architectural Digest in 2020

Johnson founded the production company TeaTime Pictures, alongside former Netflix development executive Ro Donnelly, to develop film and television projects.[47] In 2020, Johnson made her directorial debut, co-directing (with Cory Bailey) the music video for Coldplay's "Cry Cry Cry", which featured her boyfriend Chris Martin.[48] Johnson starred alongside Tracee Ellis Ross in the comedy-drama film The High Note, which was released on May 29, 2020.[49] Her performance was seen as "maybe her best and certainly most lovable performance" according to the Chicago Sun Times.[50] Scott Mendelson of Forbes stated that Johnson and Kelvin Harrison Jr. had "a relaxed, natural chemistry, and their slow-burn scenes form the film's emotional backbone".[51] According to Richard Lawson from Vanity Fair if the film feels lopsided it's because "some of that is made up for by Johnson's gentle magnetism, the smart shading she brings to even the most mundane of scenes" and that she has "become one of the more reliable young actors working today, both in her tasteful choice of projects and the focused, but unaffected, commitment she brings to each one".[52]

Upcoming projects

She will next star in The Lost Daughter directed by Maggie Gyllenhaal, based on the novel of the same name by Elena Ferrante,[53] Am I Ok?[54] and in Crackpot for director Elaine May.[55] Additionally, Johnson signed on to star and produce Rodeo Queens, a mockumentary series directed by Carrie Brownstein for Amazon Studios.[56]

Johnson will serve as an executive producer on several films under TeaTime Pictures, formerly known as Silhouette Productions. She will produce and star in Forever, Interrupted, in which she will play a young widow,[57] Unfit, in which she will portray Carrie Buck in a fact-based 1920s courtroom drama based on the novel Imbeciles: The Supreme Court, American Eugenics, and the Sterilization of Carrie Buck by Adam Cohen,[58] and Queens of the Stoned Age, based on the GQ article by Suketu Mehta.[59] Additionally, she will star and produce the limited series Cult Following.[60]

Personal life and other ventures

Johnson was previously involved in long-term relationships with American musician Noah Gersh[19][61] and American actor Jordan Masterson.[62] She dated, on and off, Matthew Hitt, the lead vocalist of Welsh indie rock band Drowners, for almost two years until 2016.[4][63] She has been in a relationship with British musician and singer Chris Martin since October 2017.[64] They reside in Malibu, California.[65][66]

Johnson is a tattoo enthusiast.[67][68] In 2020, she endorsed the "defund the police" movement.[69]

In November 2020, it was announced she became an investor and co-creative director of Maude, a sexual wellness brand.[70]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1999 Crazy in Alabama Sondra [71]
2010 The Social Network Amy Ritter [72]
All That Glitters Dianica French Short film
2011 Beastly Sloan Hagen [72]
2012 For Ellen Cindy Taylor [72]
Goats Minnie [72]
21 Jump Street Fugazy [72]
The Five-Year Engagement Audrey [72]
Transit Elizabeth Short film [73]
2014 Date and Switch Em [72]
Need for Speed Anita Coleman [72]
Closed Set Leading Lady Short film
2015 Fifty Shades of Grey Anastasia Steele [72]
Cymbeline Imogen [72]
Chloe and Theo Chloe [72]
Black Mass Lindsey Cyr [72]
A Bigger Splash Penelope Lannier [72]
In a Relationship Willa Short film [74]
Vale Rachel Short film [75]
2016 How to Be Single Alice Kepley [72]
2017 Fifty Shades Darker Anastasia Steele [72]
2018 Fifty Shades Freed Anastasia Grey [72]
Suspiria Susie Bannion [72]
Bad Times at the El Royale Emily Summerspring [72]
2019 Wounds Carrie [39]
The Peanut Butter Falcon Eleanor [41]
Our Friend Nicole Teague [43]
2020 The Nowhere Inn Herself [76]
The High Note Maggie Sherwoode [77]
TBA The Lost Daughter Nina Post-production [78]
Am I Ok? Lucy Filming; Also producer [54]

Television

Year Title Role Notes
2012–2013 Ben and Kate Kate Fox Main role; 16 episodes
2013 The Office Dakota Episode: "Finale"
2015 Saturday Night Live Herself (host) Episode: "Dakota Johnson/Alabama Shakes"

Music video

Year Title Artist Notes
2020 "Cry Cry Cry" Coldplay Co-directed with Cory Bailey[79]

Awards and nominations

Among her accolades, Johnson received the Robert Altman Award from the Independent Spirit Awards as a part of the ensemble for Suspiria. For her work in the Fifty Shades film series, she received a People's Choice Award, as well as nominations for two MTV Movie & TV Awards and the BAFTA Rising Star Award.

References

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  2. "Melanie Griffith gives birth to girl". United Press International. October 4, 1989. Retrieved August 28, 2018.
  3. "Melanie Griffith and Dakota Johnson – Like Mother, Like Daughter – Hollywood's Hottest Moms". InStyle. Retrieved October 18, 2011.
  4. Haskell, Rob (January 13, 2017). "Fifty Shades's Dakota Johnson on Sex, Fame, and Building a Career on Her Own Terms". Vogue. Archived from the original on July 5, 2017.
  5. Johnson, Dakota (September 19, 2015). "Dakota Johnson Dishes on "50 Shades Darker"" (Interview). Interviewed by Ellen DeGeneres. NBC. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
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