Anna Thomson (born September 18, 1953) is an American actress recognized for her supporting roles in independent and mainstream films during the 1980s and 1990s.[1]Her breakthrough performances include the role of Delilah Fitzgerald in Clint Eastwood's Western Unforgiven (1992), where she portrayed a resilient brothel worker whose disfigurement sparks the film's central conflict, and the role of Lucy, a quirky film buff, in Tony Scott's crime thriller True Romance (1993).[1][2] She also gained early notice for her role as Crystal, Susan's friend, in Susan Seidelman's comedy Desperately Seeking Susan (1985), alongside stars like Rosanna Arquette and Madonna.[1]Thomson frequently collaborated with Israeli director Amos Kollek, starring as the lead in his dramatic features Sue (1997), in which she played a mentally unstable homeless woman; Fiona (1998), depicting a young woman grappling with abuse and identity; and Fast Food Fast Women (2000), exploring themes of love and aging among New Yorkers.[2][3] These roles highlighted her versatility in portraying complex, often marginalized female characters in low-budget, character-driven cinema.[4] Occasionally credited as Anna Levine, she has also appeared in films such as The Crow (1994) and Six Ways to Sunday (1997), contributing to a career spanning over 50 screen credits.[1]
Early life
Childhood and family background
Anna Thomson was born on September 18, 1953, in New York City.[1] Orphaned at an early age, she was adopted by fashion designer Beth Levine and business executive Herbert Levine, a prominent Jewish couple known for their innovative shoe designs and expatriate lifestyle.[5][6] Thomson later reflected on her origins, stating, "I'm an orphan. I don't know where I was born," highlighting the profound sense of displacement that marked her early years.[6]Thomson's upbringing was divided between New York City and France, where her adoptive parents spent significant time in Paris and Cannes due to their international business pursuits.[6] This bilingual environment exposed her to French culture from a young age, fostering fluency in the language that would later influence her career.[6] Raised as an only child in a family of means, she navigated the contrasts of urban American life and European sophistication, which shaped her adaptable worldview.[5]The adoption profoundly influenced Thomson's early identity, instilling a sense of rootlessness amid the stability provided by the Levines' affluent household.[6] Family dynamics revolved around her parents' creative and entrepreneurial endeavors, with Beth Levine's design legacy offering a backdrop of artistic inspiration, though Thomson has described periods of isolation during her childhood.[5] This foundational experience of being chosen into a new family amid personal loss contributed to her resilient persona.[6]
Education and early influences
Raised as an only child in a privileged environment after being orphaned at an early age and adopted by fashion designer Beth Levine and her husband, business executive Herbert Levine, Anna Thomson divided her time between New York and France.[5][6] This bicoastal upbringing, particularly her time in Paris and Cannes, fostered her bilingual proficiency in English and French, broadening her worldview and later enabling her to perform in French-language films.[6]Thomson's early artistic inclinations emerged through her formal training as a ballet dancer, which she pursued before transitioning to acting. This rigorous discipline in dance provided her foundational skills in physical expression and performance, igniting her passion for the performing arts and serving as a key influence on her career path. The structured environment of ballet classes in New York honed her dedication to artistic pursuits, while her exposure to European culture during family stays in France introduced her to theater and cinema traditions that resonated with her developing interests.[7][8]Although specific mentors or literary works from her youth are not well-documented, Thomson's adoptive mother's prominence in the fashion industry likely offered indirect exposure to creative circles in New York and Paris, where art, design, and performance intersected. Thomson has noted that she never attended drama school, relying instead on her ballet background and self-developed approach to acting.[9] Her multilingual background and ballet foundation not only shaped her personal growth but also equipped her with the versatility needed for her eventual entry into professional acting, bridging her formative years to her theatrical beginnings.[5][6]
Career
Early theater work
Thomson, performing under the name Anna Levine, made her professional stage debut in 1975 in the Off-Broadway production of Thomas Babe's Kid Champion at The Public Theater's Anspacher Theatre. In this rock musical directed by John Pasquin, she portrayed Alice, a supporting role as a delicate waifish teenager and disillusioned groupie navigating the chaotic world of fame and the music scene.[10][11]The production, featuring a score by Jim Steinman and starring Christopher Walken in the lead, ran for 52 performances and received mixed reviews for its ambitious but uneven exploration of post-stardom disillusionment; however, Levine's performance was highlighted for its promise and subtlety, with one critic praising her delicate portrayal of the character's vulnerability.[11][12]Building on this entry into the New York theater community, Thomson took on another supporting role in 1977 as Carter in Wendy Wasserstein's Uncommon Women and Others, an Off-Broadway premiere at the Phoenix Theatre directed by Jules Irving. Carter, a near-comatose and introspective member of a group of Mount Holyoke College alumnae reuniting to reminisce, allowed her to contribute to the play's ensemble focus on female friendship and post-college transitions.[13][14]The production, which transferred to Broadway in 1978 after 52 Off-Broadway performances, was a breakthrough for Wasserstein and earned acclaim for its witty, observational dialogue, with the cast's chemistry—including Thomson's understated depiction of Carter—underscoring the ensemble's emotional depth.[15][16]During the late 1970s, Thomson honed her craft in New York's experimental Off-Broadway circuit, affiliated with influential venues like The Public Theater, where she engaged with innovative works blending music, drama, and social commentary amid the era's vibrant but competitive theater landscape.
Film breakthrough and notable roles
Thomson's entry into film came with a small role as Sandy in the 1979 drama Night-Flowers, marking her screen debut in a story of Vietnam veterans struggling with reintegration into society. She progressed to supporting parts in the 1980s, including the prostitute Little Dot in Michael Cimino's epic Heaven's Gate (1980), Kathy in Andrei Konchalovsky's Maria's Lovers (1984), and the eccentric Crystal in Susan Seidelman's Desperately Seeking Susan (1985), where she portrayed a quirky side character in the New York underground scene.[17][18]Her breakthrough arrived with the role of Delilah Fitzgerald in Clint Eastwood's revisionist WesternUnforgiven (1992), a film Eastwood directed, produced, and starred in as a retired gunslinger drawn back into violence.[19]Delilah, a prostitute viciously disfigured by cowboys in the Wyoming town of Big Whiskey, becomes the catalyst for the plot as her colleagues post a bounty for revenge, highlighting themes of justice, redemption, and the brutality of the frontier.[20] Thomson's portrayal of the vulnerable yet resilient Delilah earned praise for its emotional authenticity amid the ensemble, contributing to the film's critical acclaim and four Academy Awards, including Best Picture, which elevated her visibility in Hollywood.[19]In the mid-1990s, Thomson continued with notable supporting turns, such as the soft-spoken Lucy in Tony Scott's True Romance (1993), appearing in the opening scene as a woman Clarence briefly flirts with in a bar, and Darla Mohr, the troubled, drug-addicted mother in Alex Proyas's gothic superhero filmThe Crow (1994), emphasizing themes of loss and urban decay.Thomson formed a significant creative partnership with Israeli director Amos Kollek, starring in several of his independent dramas exploring the lives of marginalized women in New York City. In Sue (1997), she played the titular unemployed psychology graduate teetering on the edge of madness while seeking companionship, delivering a haunting performance noted for its "sad-eyed gravity" that captured the film's blend of gritty realism, loneliness, and unintended comedy.[21] This was followed by Fiona (1998), where Thomson portrayed a impulsive prostitute undergoing psychological meltdown amid crack houses and fleeting relationships, including a poignant reunion with her mother, underscoring themes of abandonment and self-destruction in a one-note yet intense depiction.[22] Their collaboration peaked with Fast Food Fast Women (2000), in which she embodied Bella, a 35-year-old diner waitress navigating romantic entanglements and maternal yearnings, her "endearing, little-girl-lost look" lending charm to the quirky comedy about truth and love in modest urban lives.[23] These roles, complex portrayals of desperate, introspective women, earned Thomson cult following in France for their raw emotional depth.[21]Thomson's final major film lead was as the alcoholic single mother Bridget in Kollek's Bridget (2002), a beleaguered woman resorting to extreme measures like drug smuggling to regain custody of her son, showcasing her determination in a narrative of absurdity and resilience that marked the culmination of her Kollek era.[24] This period represented her career peak in character-driven independents, after which her output diminished, reflecting a shift away from frequent screen work while favoring nuanced, non-blockbuster roles throughout her filmography.[24]
Television appearances
Anna Thomson began her television career in the mid-1980s with a recurring role as Anna Rostov in the soap operaThe Colbys, appearing in six episodes during the 1986 season as part of the show's ensemble exploring family dynamics and intrigue in a wealthy Colorado family.Transitioning to comedy, she made multiple guest appearances on The Tracey Ullman Show from 1987 to 1990, portraying various characters in the sketch-based format, including Darla in a 1989 episode and Julie the writer in another, which highlighted her range in short, humorous vignettes.In 1988 and 1989, Thomson took on the role of Marti in four episodes of the NBC sitcom Tattinger's (later retitled Nick & Hillary), contributing to the series' depiction of life at a Manhattan restaurant through her character's interactions in the ensemble.Her television work in the 1990s included a featured role as Cindy in the HBO adult sketch comedy series Hardcore TV, where she appeared in several episodes from 1993 to 1994, engaging in the show's irreverent, boundary-pushing humor.[25]These roles, often embodying multifaceted and eccentric female figures in episodic storytelling, underscored Thomson's adaptability to television's concise narratives, though her overall output remained modest with under ten significant credits, prioritizing her established commitments to film and theater.[26]
Personal life
Marriages and relationships
Anna Thomson was married to Canadian-born actor Davidson Thomson from 1989 to 1993.[27] They met while working on the Off-off-Broadway play The Poets' Corner.[28] The marriage ended amid the demands of their acting careers, though specific reasons were not publicly detailed. During her marriage to Davidson Thomson, she briefly used the hyphenated professional name Anna Levine-Thomson in some credits.[29] She later remarried, adopting the surname Thomson-Wilson, as indicated in her mother's 2006 obituary.[30] No further details on subsequent relationships have been publicly verified as of 2025.
Children and family life
Anna Thomson gave birth to twin sons in 1992 during her marriage to Davidson Thomson.[31] Details about the sons' names and early life remain private, as Thomson has consistently shielded her family from public scrutiny. Following Davidson Thomson's death in 1993,[32] she raised the twins as a single mother while navigating the demands of her acting career in the 1990s. As of 2025, her sons are adults, and Thomson maintains a private family life.
Filmography
1970s–1980s
Anna Thomson appeared in 18 feature films during this period, often credited as Anna Levine in her early roles.[1]
Thomson had 16 feature film roles in the 1990s, including several notable supporting parts in major productions.[1]
Year
Title
Role
Director
1990
Love or Money
Nora
Dennis Snee
1991
The Lemon Sisters
Ella
Joseph Cates
1991
He Said, She Said
Woman Cop (as Anna Levine)
Marisa Silver, Ken Kwapis
1992
Unforgiven
Delilah
Clint Eastwood
1993
True Romance
Lucy
Tony Scott
1993
The Night We Never Met
Janet
Warren Leight
1994
Baby's Day Out
Cab Passenger
Patrick Read Johnson
1994
The Crow
Darla
Alex Proyas
1994
Natural Causes
Ms. Jacobs
James Becket
1995
Bad Boys
Theresa
Michael Bay
1995
Angus
Ms. Schell
Patrick Read Johnson
1995
Cafe Society
Sandy
Raymond De Felitta
1995
Angela
Mae
Rebecca Miller
1995
Drunks
F.L.
Peter Cohn
1996
I Shot Andy Warhol
Duchess
Mary Harron
1997
Sue
Sue
Amos Kollek
1997
Trouble on the Corner
The Butcher's Wife
Amos Kollek
1997
Six Ways to Sunday
Anna
Adam Bernstein
1998
Safe Men
Carol
John Hamburg
1998
Fiona
Fiona
Amos Kollek
1998
Jaded
Alex Arnold
C. Jay Cox
1999
Limbo
Frankie
John Sayles
1999
Stringer
Ashley
Jamie Payne
2000s
In the 2000s, Thomson appeared in 5 feature films, with her last credit in 2002; no verified feature film roles have been added since as of November 2025.[1]
Anna Thomson's television credits span the late 1980s to the mid-1990s, consisting primarily of recurring and guest roles in series, along with a few TV movies.[1] Her work includes two episodes in the soap operaThe Colbys and multiple appearances in sketch comedy shows, reflecting a focus on dramatic and comedic guest spots rather than long-running series leads. In total, she has approximately 20 credited television appearances across five projects, with no verified new credits since 1994, indicating an apparent hiatus from television work post-mid-1990s as of November 2025.[1]The following table lists her verified television roles chronologically: