After this feisty, highly offbeat actress from Chattanooga, Tennessee broke into
TV in the 1980s, she immediately set herself apart from the norm with a prime
role as new owner
Bud Cort's female friend in the bizarre mini-movie
Bates Motel (1987). This inauspicious beginning would also set Lori Petty off on a
career as a kinetic fighter and a misfit, types for which she would be best-known.
Lori was born on October 14, 1963, and spent her childhood traveling the US with her
father, a Pentecostal minister. Her keen talents first lent themselves to being a graphic
artist in Omaha, Nebraska, but an impulsive desire to act quickly took precedence and
soon she was off for New York City, where she took acting classes and pounded the
pavement for jobs.
Going nowhere fast, she eventually headed for Los Angeles and finally found an "in".
Following a number of mediocre TV roles, she won a bit of attention on the short-lived
series
Booker (1989) as a lippy secretary, then hit pay dirt in secondary roles as an
outrageous
Cyndi Lauper wannabe in
Cadillac Man (1990) and as
Patrick Swayze's
ex-girlfriend/waitress who hooks up with
Keanu Reeves in
Point Break (1991).
It looked like mainstream stardom might happen for the tomboyish actress, especially after
she was cast as
Geena Davis' bratty baseball-playing sister in the highly-successful
A League of Their Own (1992). However, while Lori proved to be an intriguing, kooky sort, she also proved
more difficult to cast. Such disparate roles as a kind-hearted animal trainer in
Free Willy (1993)
and the sole female recruit in
Pauly Shore's inane comedy
In the Army Now (1994) only proved
the point.
She seemed bent towards playing scrappy, hard-edged figures alongside the big action guys but
started off on the wrong foot when she was replaced by
Sandra Bullock in
Sylvester Stallone's
Demolition Man (1993) because of "artistic differences". She did play a lone female cop in the thriller
The Glass Shield (1994), then found her true calling as bizarre cartoon heroine
Tank Girl (1995), which was
billed as "a post-apocalyptic comedy." Playing along the same hard lines, Lori portrayed an FBI agent
who teams up with a Tokyo policewoman
Yûki Amami in the crime thriller
Countdown (1996); a butch
lesbian in the social comedy
Relax... It's Just Sex (1998); and an aggressive, tough-talking stripper at odds with the
Mafia in the potboiler
The Arrangement (1999). She ended the decade on TV as motel clerk Max in the crime-drama
fantasy series
Brimstone (1998).
Into the millennium, the crop-haired, tough-as-nails actress continued to push limits. Following roles in the
action films
Firetrap (2001) and
Route 666 (2001), Lori co-starred alongside the similarly tough-styled
Gina Gershon in
Prey for Rock & Roll (2003) as members of a punk rock band. She later starred in the creature
vs. human horror opus
Cryptid (2006) and played "First Murderer" in a contemporary Hollywood update of
Shakespeare's
Richard III (2007); a deputy in the cross-country sports movie
Chasing 3000 (2010); a doctor
in the horror thriller
Dead Awake (2016); a female Marine in
Fear, Love, and Agoraphobia (2018); and a campy role in the low-budget
horror flick
A Deadly Legend (2020).
On TV, Lori guest-starred on shows like "The Beast", "NYPD Blue", "CSI:NY", "Masters of Horror",
"House", "Prison Break", and "Hawaii Five-0"; and, more notably, she had an amusing recurring role as
loony, paranoiac Lolly in the women's-prison series
Orange Is the New Black (2013). On the other side of the camera, she
wrote and directed the film
The Poker House (2008) starring
Jennifer Lawrence, a re-dramatization of Lori's teenage
years in Iowa. The film earned awards at the Los Angeles Film Festival.