
This fresh-faced former child model made her film debut at age 12, seen in flashbacks as the young incarnation of Elizabeth McGovern’s character in Sergio Leone’s gangster epic “Once Upon a Time in America” (1984). Horror cultists may remember her as the girl who has a peculiar relationship with the insect world in Dario Argento’s Italian fear opus “Creepers” (1985).
Jennifer Connelly subsequently was featured in mostly forgettable teen fare, with the possible exception of Jim Henson’s “Labyrinth” (1986), in which she was overshadowed by David Bowie and a cast of Henson creatures. That same year she was the bright one among a trio of friends–Byron Thomas, Maddie Corman–in the lightweight “Seven Minutes in Heaven”. Connelly traded on her attractive looks as the only innocent among Southern schemers in Dennis Hopper’s thriller, “The Hot Spot” and as the voluptuous town beauty in the teen comedy “Career Opportunities” (both 1990). She was perfectly cast as a 1940s Hollywood starlet who got the guy in “The Rocketeer” (1991; Connelly and co-star Bill Campbell also enjoyed an off-screen relationship as well).





