Madeline Zima was born in New Haven, Connecticut,
to parents Dennis and Marie, and is the sister of actresses
Vanessa Zima and
Yvonne Zima. "Zima," a Polish surname, is
her mother's maiden name; Madeline's maternal grandfather was of Polish
descent, while her other ancestry is Italian, German, and Irish.
She and her sister Vanessa were discovered by
Woody Allen for his movie,
Alice (1990). Madeline had just given up on show
business when she was urged to come in for her sixth call-back for
The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (1992).
She did one final audition and booked the role of Emma, and has never stopped working since. It was both
Madeline and
Julianne Moore's first film,
which was directed by Academy Award-winning director and writer
Curtis Hanson. Madeline earned
critical notice for her first film role.
She followed the dramatic thriller with a short film that
Daryl Hannah directed, a Sundance
favorite called
The Last Supper (1995). Madeline played a wily child who scares away her mother's abusive
boyfriend by convincing him that she and her mother are cannibals. She
followed that with the comedies
Mr. Nanny (1993) and Our Song, a pilot
with
George Hamilton. By
this time, the pilot of
The Nanny (1993) was picked up, and
Madeline moved from New York to L.A. when
it became a hit show.
She went on to star in TV film
The Secret Path (1999).
Her sister,
Yvonne Zima, played the
seven-year-old counterpart to her characters. She played the daughter
of the late
John Ritter and
Marg Helgenberger on
Lethal Vows (1999).
After a worldwide search in all English-speaking countries, Madeline
was the choice to play
Lucille Ball as a
teenager in the CBS mini-series
Lucy (2003) (aka "Redhead"). She
followed that by playing the wicked stepsister of
Hilary Duff in
A Cinderella Story (2004).
In a return to television, she agreed to play the mysterious and
destructive character "Mia" on the hit Showtime series
Californication (2007).