

One did not have to be a rabid fan to long remember Sarandon running around for most of the film in a bra and slip.Around the time she had a co-starring role in the Robert Redford film "The Great Waldo Pepper" (1975), Sarandon and her husband, Chris, divorced. Furter (Tim Curry), a transvestite claiming to be from another planet. Sarandon was Janet, one half of a WASP-ish couple (the other half played by Barry Bostwick) who stumble upon a mansion occupied by a motley crew of Transylvanian weird s led by Dr. After landing more substantial parts with bigger names, notably Sidney Lumet's "Lovin' Molly" (1974) and Billy Wilder's underwhelming remake of "The Front Page" (1972), Sarandon made herself known - with the midnight crowd, at least - when she starred in "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" (1975), the cult classic that survived for decades with successive midnight showings that created a subculture of freaks and geeks dressing like the characters and acting out scenes in the theater. She appeared in several smaller features roles, including "Fleur Blue" (1971) and "Mortadella" (1972), before turning to television with a regular role as Sara Fairbanks on "Search for Tomorrow" (CBS/NBC, 1951-1987). Less than a week later, Sarandon was sent to read for a leading role in "J " (1970), playing a drugged-out hippie thrown into a mental institution after her father (Dennis Patrick) guns down her dealer boyfriend (Patrick McDermott), who then teams up with a gun-crazed bigot (Peter Doyle) to track her down in Greenwich Village after she escapes.Despite stumbling upon an acting career, Sarandon took to her newfound calling with abandon, though not without its initial difficulties. On a whim, he brought Sarandon into the room with him in order to have a friendly face to read to - the agent came away impressed with both actors and signed both as his clients.

Shortly after getting married, Sarandon followed her husband to New York City, where he auditioned for an agent. In 1967, she married her first husband, Chris Sarandon, whom she had met at Catholic University. After graduation in 1964, she went to Catholic University in Washington, D.C., where she lacked direction or purpose, but did take acting classes, though without the intention of pursuing it as a career. She was a quiet, shy child who grew up in suburban Metuchen, NJ, where she attended Edison High School in nearby Edison. Sarandon also has a daughter, Eva Amurri Martino, from her prior relationship with director Franco Amurri, whom Robbins refers to as his daughter.Born in Jackson Heights, NY, Sarandon was raised the oldest of 10 siblings by Phillip, a nightclub singer during the big band era who later became an advertising executive, and Lenora, a homemaker. Despite never marrying, the couple were together for a little over two decades, breaking up in 2009, and have two adult sons together, Miles, 28, and John “Jack” Henry, 31. Robbins previously had a very lengthy, high-profile relationship with Susan Sarandon who he began dating in the late 80s after meeting on the set of Bull Durham. They were also spotted out several times together with Robbins's children, including at a hockey game in December 2019. The pair were first linked in February 2018 when Robbins brought Brancusi as his date to the premiere of his new show Here and Now, and the two have walked numerous red carpets together since.

While it's been rumored that he and Brancusi have been dating for around three years, the pair have never confirmed they were dating, let alone married. TMZ first reported that the actor filed legal documents in Los Angeles on Wednesday to terminate a relationship the public never knew he was in. Tim Robbins filed for divorce this week after getting secretly married to his girlfriend Gartiela Brancusi.
