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Elisabeth Shue Siblings: Meet William, Andrew and John Shue

Actress Elisabeth Shue PHOTO/Getty Images

Elisabeth Shue, born on October 6, 1963, in Wilmington, Delaware, is an American actress whose career has spanned decades, earning her a reputation as a versatile and enduring talent in Hollywood.

Raised in South Orange, New Jersey, Elisabeth grew up in a family that blended intellectual rigor with athletic prowess.

Her father, James William Shue, was a lawyer and real estate developer who ran for Congress, while her mother, Anne Brewster Wells, worked as a bank executive.

Elisabeth attended Columbia High School before enrolling at Wellesley College, later transferring to Harvard University to study government, though she left in 1985 to focus on acting—just shy of her degree, which she completed in 2000.

Siblings

Elisabeth is one of four siblings, each marked by their own achievements and a shared resilience shaped by tragedy.

Her older brother, William “Will” Shue, born in 1961, was a medical student at Rutgers University with a bright future until his untimely death in 1988 at age 26 in a freak accident during a family vacation in Maine—he fell from a tire swing into shallow water, striking his head.

His loss deeply affected the family, inspiring Elisabeth’s Oscar-nominated role in Leaving Las Vegas (1995).

Her younger brother, Andrew Shue, born on February 20, 1967, followed a dual path as an actor—best known for Melrose Place (1992-1999)—and a social entrepreneur, co-founding DoSomething.org and CafeMom.

The youngest, John Shue, born around 1969, has stayed out of the spotlight, reportedly working as a teacher in New Jersey and serving as a general manager for the Harlem Globetrotters at one point.

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Elisabeth Shue’s brother Andrew PHOTO/Wikipedia

Career

Shue’s career kicked off in the 1980s with commercial roles for Burger King and De Beers, but her breakthrough came with The Karate Kid (1984) as Ali Mills, the quintessential high school sweetheart.

She soared to fame as Jennifer Parker in Back to the Future Part II and III (1989-1990), stepping into the trilogy with ease.

Her range expanded with Cocktail (1988) and Adventures in Babysitting (1987), but it was her raw, heartbreaking performance as Sera in Leaving Las Vegas (1995) opposite Nicolas Cage that redefined her as a dramatic force.

Shue continued to diversify with films like The Saint (1997), Hollow Man (2000), and Piranha 3D (2010), blending action, thriller, and horror.

Her television resurgence came with CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2012-2015) as Julie Finlay, followed by standout roles in The Boys (2019-2022) as Madelyn Stillwell and Cobra Kai (2018-present), reprising Ali Mills.

Accolades

Shue’s talent has earned her significant recognition, most notably an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress for Leaving Las Vegas in 1996—a role that also won her the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award and the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress in 1995.

She secured an Independent Spirit Award for Best Female Lead that year as well, cementing her critical acclaim. Early in her career, she won a Young Artist Award for Best Young Supporting Actress for The Karate Kid in 1985.

Her work on CSI earned her a nod from the Saturn Awards in 2013, and her ensemble contributions to The Boys contributed to its 2021 Critics’ Choice Super Award win.

Beyond awards, Shue’s legacy includes her influence on ’80s cinema and her graceful transition to modern streaming hits, all while balancing motherhood—she has three children with husband Davis Guggenheim, married since 1994.

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