She began life feeling like a mistake, a lonely girl in Detroit trapped with a cold, violent mother and an absent father who saw her not as a daughter, but as “a hot babe.” By 18 she had fled, surviving on dates for dinner, using her beauty as currency because there was nothing else. An illegal abortion at five months left her unable to have children and haunted her for decades; she called it “probably the worst” pain of her life.
Yet this same woman reinvented herself again and again—Edna Rae, Erica Denn, Ellen McRae—until Ellen Burstyn finally emerged, fierce and undeniable. She broke through in The Exorcist and Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore while secretly enduring a schizophrenic husband who raped, stalked, and threatened to kill her as police refused to intervene. After his suicide, she chose solitude, therapy, and meditation, slowly making peace with her past, even with the mother who hurt her. Now, at 92, walking daily through Central Park, she works more than ever, living proof that survival can turn into grace, and that a life nearly broken can still blaze with light.
