Cate Blanchett was born in Melbourne, Australia, May 14, 1969, an Australian mother and a father of Texas. She is of French descent, was raised by his mother after his father died when she was ten. She attended Methodist Ladies College [MLC] where she was part of "Cato" theater of the House. One of his first play was "The Odyssey of Runyon Jones" ... a fantasy of a young boy whose dog dies. Cate also directed his comrades in "They Shoot Horses, is not it?". Growing up in Melbourne, she began studying fine arts and economics at Melbourne University, but left after a way to continue his education through travel. After the expiration of his tourist visa regularly forced to leave England at last found herself in Egypt, desperate for money. In an attempt to earn money and get a crack at a steady speed, she signed on as an extra in a movie Arab boxing.
Was the first time she had ever been on a movie set, but it would not, of course, be the last.
After she returned to Melbourne, she enrolled at the prestigious Australian National Institute of Dramatic Art. After graduation, she joined the Sydney Theatre Company production of Caryl Churchill's "Top Girls", and then played Felice Bauer, the wife of Timothy Daly musical "Kafka Dances". She won the Newcomer of Theatre Critics Circle for his performance in Sydney. Cate then interpreted as Carol opposite Geoffrey Rush in David Mamet's fiery polemic "Oleanna", also for the Sydney Theatre Company. Therefore, it achieved a superb performance, picking up his gong, the second of the year also won the Rosemont Best Actress. In 1995 she was nominated for Best Female Performance for her turn as Ophelia in the Belvoir Street Theatre Company production of "Hamlet."
His other theater credits include Helen in the Sydney Theatre Company's "Sweet Phoebe", Miranda, "The Tempest", and pink, "Dance Giant blind", so Belvoir Street Theatre Company. Later, as the "Oscar and Lucinda," co-star, Ralph Fiennes, he moved to Chekov, playing Nina in "The Seagull".
In the field of television, Cate co-starred in the ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) Television "Heartland", winning critical acclaim in the examination of rural aborigines. She also won notice as Bianca in ABC's "Bordertown" as Janie Morris in "GP", and in the popular ABC series "Police Rescue". Cate revised her character Rosie "Heartland" not the movie, the parks. She made her debut as a shy Australian nurse Bruce Beresford, Paradise Road. Then the first film starred Cherie Nowlan, thank God he met Lizzie, playing the lead role. To do this, Cate won the prestigious AFI (Australian Fim Institute) Award for Best Supporting Actress. Company follows Cate was critically acclaimed, Oscar and Lucinda, directed by noted Australian director Gillian Armstrong. Cate captivated audiences and critics, playing alongside Ralph Fiennes, with his haunting and fascinating portrait of Lucinda Leplastrier.
In June 1997, she was married to Andrew Upton, a script editor and cointinuity she had met in the shooting Parklands. It was Cate star-making portrait of Queen Elizabeth I in Shekhar Kapur Elizabeth, who shot him in the stratosphere in terms of both popular and critical success. Cate is surprised chameleon qualities of both industry and government. After Elizabeth, Cate was honored with numerous awards for his performance. Blanchett went on to star with Angelina Jolie, John Cusack and Billy Bob Thornton in Mike Newell's comedy Pushing Tin (1999). Although the film received a lukewarm response, Blanchett was praised for her performance as a housewife from Long Island. That same year, she played another housewife, albeit in a different band in Oliver Parker's adaptation of Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband.
Despite a uniformly strong cast including Jeremy Northam, Rupert Everett and Julianne Moore film received very mixed reviews, but as is usually the case, Blanchett won praise for his contribution to it.
Remaining remarkably busy through the year 2003, Blanchett appears as many as five films in 2001 alone. When the Pushing Tin with support for Talented Mr. Ripley, Blanchett joined Johnny Depp and Christina Ricci's role with the good heart though materialistic Showgirl in The Man Who Cried first starring as the clairvoyant, who can be the key to murder mystery by director Sam Raimi is a gift. Getting good points in his unfathomable ability to move effortlessly and convincingly from a wide range of characterizations, Blanchett appeared in a hostage of love comedy Bandits before re-Guard collaboration with co-star Giovanni Ribisi in director Tom Tykwer's Heaven. His busy year already for a hectic start, Blanchett then faced the difficult task of appearing in not one but three films with her role as Galadriel, Queen of Lothlorien waiting for the Lord of the Rings. As if his plate is full enough, Blanchett also appears in the 2001 and the news of the expedition, and director Gillian Armstrong's Charlotte Gray before completing the Lord of the Rings, with the Two Towers in 2002 and the Return of the King in 2003.
Was the first time she had ever been on a movie set, but it would not, of course, be the last.
After she returned to Melbourne, she enrolled at the prestigious Australian National Institute of Dramatic Art. After graduation, she joined the Sydney Theatre Company production of Caryl Churchill's "Top Girls", and then played Felice Bauer, the wife of Timothy Daly musical "Kafka Dances". She won the Newcomer of Theatre Critics Circle for his performance in Sydney. Cate then interpreted as Carol opposite Geoffrey Rush in David Mamet's fiery polemic "Oleanna", also for the Sydney Theatre Company. Therefore, it achieved a superb performance, picking up his gong, the second of the year also won the Rosemont Best Actress. In 1995 she was nominated for Best Female Performance for her turn as Ophelia in the Belvoir Street Theatre Company production of "Hamlet."
His other theater credits include Helen in the Sydney Theatre Company's "Sweet Phoebe", Miranda, "The Tempest", and pink, "Dance Giant blind", so Belvoir Street Theatre Company. Later, as the "Oscar and Lucinda," co-star, Ralph Fiennes, he moved to Chekov, playing Nina in "The Seagull".
In the field of television, Cate co-starred in the ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) Television "Heartland", winning critical acclaim in the examination of rural aborigines. She also won notice as Bianca in ABC's "Bordertown" as Janie Morris in "GP", and in the popular ABC series "Police Rescue". Cate revised her character Rosie "Heartland" not the movie, the parks. She made her debut as a shy Australian nurse Bruce Beresford, Paradise Road. Then the first film starred Cherie Nowlan, thank God he met Lizzie, playing the lead role. To do this, Cate won the prestigious AFI (Australian Fim Institute) Award for Best Supporting Actress. Company follows Cate was critically acclaimed, Oscar and Lucinda, directed by noted Australian director Gillian Armstrong. Cate captivated audiences and critics, playing alongside Ralph Fiennes, with his haunting and fascinating portrait of Lucinda Leplastrier.
In June 1997, she was married to Andrew Upton, a script editor and cointinuity she had met in the shooting Parklands. It was Cate star-making portrait of Queen Elizabeth I in Shekhar Kapur Elizabeth, who shot him in the stratosphere in terms of both popular and critical success. Cate is surprised chameleon qualities of both industry and government. After Elizabeth, Cate was honored with numerous awards for his performance. Blanchett went on to star with Angelina Jolie, John Cusack and Billy Bob Thornton in Mike Newell's comedy Pushing Tin (1999). Although the film received a lukewarm response, Blanchett was praised for her performance as a housewife from Long Island. That same year, she played another housewife, albeit in a different band in Oliver Parker's adaptation of Oscar Wilde's An Ideal Husband.
Despite a uniformly strong cast including Jeremy Northam, Rupert Everett and Julianne Moore film received very mixed reviews, but as is usually the case, Blanchett won praise for his contribution to it.
Remaining remarkably busy through the year 2003, Blanchett appears as many as five films in 2001 alone. When the Pushing Tin with support for Talented Mr. Ripley, Blanchett joined Johnny Depp and Christina Ricci's role with the good heart though materialistic Showgirl in The Man Who Cried first starring as the clairvoyant, who can be the key to murder mystery by director Sam Raimi is a gift. Getting good points in his unfathomable ability to move effortlessly and convincingly from a wide range of characterizations, Blanchett appeared in a hostage of love comedy Bandits before re-Guard collaboration with co-star Giovanni Ribisi in director Tom Tykwer's Heaven. His busy year already for a hectic start, Blanchett then faced the difficult task of appearing in not one but three films with her role as Galadriel, Queen of Lothlorien waiting for the Lord of the Rings. As if his plate is full enough, Blanchett also appears in the 2001 and the news of the expedition, and director Gillian Armstrong's Charlotte Gray before completing the Lord of the Rings, with the Two Towers in 2002 and the Return of the King in 2003.




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