Juliette Lewis was born on 21th June 1973, in Los Angeles, California,  USA, Lewis was the daughter of film and television player Geoffrey Lewis  and mother Glenis, a graphic artist, who had seven marriages and 11  children between them. Lewis wanted to be an actor from the time she was  six, and when she was a teen she landed her first "daughter" roles in  the Showtime.

The  following year she gave a breakout performance as the thumb-sucking  nymphet struggling for independence from her warring parents in Martin  Scorsese's chilling remake of "Cape Fear" (1991), which earned her an  Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress.

Lewis  was back on the road in Oliver Stone's satirical take on the  media,"Natural Born Killers" (1994), where she shared sociopathic  tendencies with fellow love-thug Woody Harrelson during a Southwest  killing spree. To her credit, Lewis ably captured the frighteningly odd  emptiness of her character's moral inattention.

She  resurfaced with a vengeance in "Whip It" (2009), Drew Barrymore's  directorial debut in which Lewis co-starred as the coach of a female  roller-derby teen and the terrifying archrival of a newcomer on the  circuit (Ellen Page). With its all-star cast of favorite indie film  actresses, the film positioned Lewis to regain her big screen visibility  and remind viewers of her fiery onscreen appeal.