Drew Blyth Barrymore was born on February 22, 1975, in Culver City, California, into Hollywood royalty โ the Barrymore dynasty that included her grandfather John Barrymore, considered one of the greatest American stage actors of the early twentieth century. Her parents separated shortly after her birth; she was raised by her mother, Jaid Barrymore, in circumstances that were chaotic, often glamorous, and ultimately damaging. She appeared in a dog food commercial at eleven months old. Her breakthrough as Gertie in Spielberg's E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982) made her, at seven, one of the most recognized child actors in the world.
The early fame was followed by the chaotic adolescence that has become a defining narrative of her public life โ she began smoking at nine, drinking at eleven, was using marijuana and cocaine by twelve, attempted suicide at fourteen, and was committed to a psychiatric facility at fifteen. She published an autobiography, Little Girl Lost, at fourteen. The memoir established the pattern that has characterized her public life since: radical transparency about difficulty, paired with genuine resilience and the determination to see her own experience as material for understanding rather than simply as damage.
Barrymore's adult career has been built on reinvention. The poisoning scene in Poison Ivy (1992) signaled her transition from child star to adult performer. Scream (1996) was a genuine comeback coup. Charlie's Angels (2000), which she produced, demonstrated her business acumen alongside her acting range. 50 First Dates, The Wedding Singer, He's Just Not That Into You, and Blended established her as a reliable romantic comedy presence. Her production company, Flower Films, has produced most of her adult films, allowing her the creative control that her childhood lacked. The Drew Barrymore Show, launched in 2020, has become one of the most successful daytime talk shows in America.
Barrymore's ENFP nature is the story of her life: the extraordinary sensitivity that made her extraordinary as a child actor and that made her vulnerable to the damage of an unsupported childhood, the resilience that kept finding the next creative avenue, the warmth that makes audiences trust her completely. ENFPs cannot easily maintain facades โ their emotional reality is always at or near the surface โ and Barrymore's career has been built on exactly this quality: the sense that what you see is genuinely what is there. Her willingness to discuss her childhood, marriages, mental health, and current therapy on her talk show reflects the ENFP's conviction that authentic self-disclosure is both personally necessary and publicly useful.