Diane Ladd, Oscar-Nominated Wild at Heart Actress, Dead at 89

Diane Ladd, the Academy Award-nominated actress, passed away on November 3rd at the age of 89, her daughter Laura Dern announced. Dern shared with The Hollywood Reporter that her mother died peacefully at home in Ojai, California, with her by her side. She described Ladd as a remarkable mother, grandmother, artist, and actress – a truly special person. Ladd received three Best Supporting Actress Oscar nominations for her roles in Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, Wild at Heart, and Rambling Rose. Notably, Dern also appeared in all three of those films and was nominated for Best Actress herself for Rambling Rose, marking the first time a mother and daughter had both received Oscar nominations for the same movie.

Born on November 29, 1935, in Laurel, Mississippi, Diane Ladd always dreamed of being an actress, so much so that she gave up a college scholarship to pursue it. Acting runs in the family – she’s a second cousin of the famous playwright Tennessee Williams. She met her first husband, Bruce Dern, while performing in Williams’s play, Orpheus Descending, which was her first off-Broadway role, in 1959. They married in 1960 and later starred together in her first film, Wild Angels, in 1966. Diane and Bruce had two daughters: Diane Elizabeth, who tragically passed away at 18 months in a drowning accident, and Laura.

In 2018, Ladd received an incorrect diagnosis of lung disease and was told she had only six months to live. Doctors suggested walking as a way to improve her health. She began walking daily with Laura Dern, and they recorded their personal conversations, which covered everything from Ladd’s divorce from Dern’s father to the loss of her sister. In 2023, these conversations were published as a memoir, Honey, Baby, Mine. Ladd explained, “As parents, we often don’t share everything with our children because we want their love and respect, so we sometimes bend the truth.” She realized she had kept things from Dern that she should have shared, fearing it would make her feel bad, but ultimately, being open was a relief for both of them.

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2025-11-04 01:54