MIRANDA RICHARDSON


'Miranda Jane Richardson' (born 3 March 1958) is an Academy Award nominated English actress.

Contents
Biography
Personal life
Theatre
Film and television career
Theatre roles
Filmography
Awards and nominations
Academy Award
BAFTA Award
Golden Globe Award
References
External links

Biography


Personal life

Richardson was born in Southport, Merseyside to Marian Georgina (Townsend), a homemaker, and William Alan Richardson, a marketing executive.[1] The second daughter in a middle-class family, she revealed a talent for acting from an early age. She had originally intended to study veterinary medicine, but her squeamishness made this impractical.
Richardson currently lives in London, but she also has a Somerset retreat, with her two cats, two dogs and an axolotl.
Theatre

Richardson enrolled at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, where she studied alongside Daniel Day-Lewis. In 1981, she made her stage debut in ''Moving'' at the Queen's Theatre in London. Before making a name for herself as a screen star Miranda Richardson enjoyed a hugely successful and extensive theatre career. Starting out with juvenile performances in ''Cinderella'' (the title role) and ''Lord Arthur Saville's Crime'' (as Sybil Merton) at the Southport Dramatic Club, the young thespian enrolled at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, making her stage debut in ''Moving'' at the Queen's Theatre, London. Soon afterwards, Richardson appeared in reportory theatre, until she found recognition in the West End for a series of highly praised stage performances, ultimately receiving an Olivier Award nomination for her performance in ''A Lie of the Mind'', and in 1996 being cited as 'the greatest actress of our time in any medium' by one critic after she appeared in ''Orlando'' at the Edinburgh Festival.
Film and television career

In 1985, she made her big screen debut as platinum blonde nightclub hostess Ruth Ellis, the last woman to be hanged in the United Kingdom in Mike Newell's critically acclaimed biographical drama, ''Dance With A Stranger''. Her performance won her much praise, and within a year she had been cast by Steven Spielberg to appear in his World War II drama ''Empire of the Sun'' (1987).
Richardson is well known for her role as infantile Queen Elizabeth I, aka Queenie, in the British television comedy ''Blackadder II''. Her portrayal of a troubled theatre-goer in "Secret Friends" (BBC 2 TV, 1990) was described as "a miniature tour de force... Miranda Richardson's finest hour, all in ten minutes" (The Sunday Times). Other television roles include the bitchy Pamela Flitton in ''A Dance to the Music of Time'' (1997), Miss Gilchrist in ''St. Ives'' (1998), Bettina (the obsessive compulsive interior decorator) in ''Absolutely Fabulous'', the sadistic Queen Elspeth in Hallmark's "Snow White: The Fairest Of Them All" (2001), and the emotionally repressed Queen Mary in ''The Lost Prince'' (2003).
As well as a number of high profile supporting roles in the cinema, including Vanessa Bell in ''The Hours'', Lady Van Tassel in ''Sleepy Hollow'' and Patsy Carpenter in ''The Evening Star'', she has also won acclaim for her performances in ''The Crying Game'' and ''Enchanted April'', for which she won a Golden Globe, beating a quartet of Hollywood heavyweights: Geena Davis, Whoopi Goldberg, Shirley MacLaine and Meryl Streep.
Two Academy Award nominations (for ''Damage'' and ''Tom & Viv'') have not altered the actress's modesty. She refuses to discuss her private life in interviews, and takes both leading and supporting roles in a variety of different genres.
Her extensive film credits include worthy stints in a number of critically acclaimed independent features, among them Robert Altman's ''Kansas City'' (1996), Robert Duvall's ''The Apostle'' (1997) and Richard E. Grant's ''Wah-Wah'' (2005). In 2002, Richardson wowed critics with a triple-role stint (as Mrs Cleg, Yvonne and Mrs Wilkinson in a hallucination) alongside Ralph Fiennes in David Cronenberg's acclaimed thriller ''Spider'', a film that won her a bevy of international critics awards.
More recently, Richardson appeared as Queen Rosalind of Denmark in the Julia Stiles vehicle ''The Prince and Me'', and as the ballet mistress Madame Giry in the long-awaited film version of ''The Phantom Of The Opera'', starring Gerard Butler and Emmy Rossum. She has also reprised her role as Queen Elizabeth in Blackadder for both a Christmas Special (''Blackadder's Christmas Carol'' 1988), and a special edition for the Millennium ('', 2000) which was originally screened at the Millennium Dome. In 2005 she appeared in the high profile role of Rita Skeeter, the toxic Daily Prophet journalist in ''Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire'', and has since appeared in a number of critically acclaimed but low-profile feature films. In 2006 she appeared alongside Bill Nighy in Stephen Poliakoff's multi Golden Globe winning BBC drama, ''Gideon's Daughter''.
Participating in several conservational television shows including ''Final Chance to Save'' in and ''Extinct'' in 2006. Richardson will return to the big screen in November 2007, playing the role of Mrs. Claus in the film ''Fred Claus''. In addition, the actress will team up with Jennifer Saunders in ''The Life and Times of Vivienne Vyle'' a BBC sitcom scheduled for transmission at the end of the year.
She also reads the ''Horrid Henry'' series on cassette and CD.

Theatre roles



★ ''Savage Amusement'' (Hazel)

★ ''Stags and Hens'' (Linda)

★ ''All My Sons'' (Ann)

★ ''Sisterly Feelings'' (Brenda)

★ ''Ten Times Table'' (Phillipa)

★ ''Whose Life Is It Anyway?'' (Kay Sadler)

★ ''Play It Again, Sam'' (Linda Christie)

★ ''Tom Jones'' (Sophie Western)

★ ''Educating Rita'' (Rita)

★ ''Moving'' (Jane Gladwin)

★ ''The Table of the Two Horseman'' (Katie Wyld)

★ ''Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'' (Honey)

★ ''The Maids'' (Madame)

★ ''Insignificance'' (The Actress)

★ ''Life of Einstein'' (?)

★ ''Edmond'' (Glenna)

★ ''A Lie of the Mind'' (Beth)

★ ''The Changeling'' (Beatrice-Joanna)

★ ''Mountain Language'' (Young Woman)

★ ''Etta Jenks'' (Etta Jenks)

★ ''The Designated Mourner'' (Judy)

★ ''Orlando'' (Orlando)

★ ''Aunt Dan and Lemon'' (Aunt Dan)

★ ''The Play What I Wrote'' (Herself)

Filmography



★ ''Dance with a Stranger'' (1985) Ruth Ellis

★ ''Underworld'' (1985) Oriel

★ ''The Innocent'' (1985) Mary Turner

★ ''Blackadder II'' (1985) (TV) Queenie

★ ''After Pilkington'' (1986) Penny

★ ''The Death of the Heart'' (1986) Daphne Heccomb

★ ''Blackadder the Third'' (1987) Amy Hardwood [episode ''Amy and Amiability'']

★ ''Eat the Rich'' (1987) DHSS Blonde

★ ''Empire of the Sun'' (1987) Mrs. Victor

★ ''Ball Trap on the Cote Sauvage'' (1989) Early Bird

★ ''Blackadder Goes Forth'' (1989) Nurse Mary [episode ''General Hospital'')

★ ''The Mad Monkey'' (1989) Marilyn

★ ''Secret Friends'' (1990) (TV) Olivia

★ ''The Bachelor'' (1990) Frederica

★ ''The Fool'' (1990) Columbine/Rosalind/Ophelia

★ ''Twisted Obsession'' (1990) Marilyn

★ ''Old Times'' (1990) Anna

★ ''Die Kinder'' (1990) (TV) Sidonie Reiger

★ ''The Crying Game'' (1992) Jude O'Hara

★ ''Damage'' (1992) Ingrid Fleming

★ ''Enchanted April'' (1992) Rose Arbuthnot

★ ''Century'' (1993) Clara

★ ''The Line, the Cross and the Curve'' (1993) Mysterious woman

★ ''Absolutely Fabulous'' (1994) Bettina [episode ''New Best Friend'']

★ ''Tom & Viv'' (1994) Vivienne Haigh-Wood

★ ''Fatherland'' (1994) Charlie Maguire

★ ''The Night and the Moment'' (1994) Julie

★ ''The Evening Star'' (1996) Patsy Carpenter

★ ''Kansas City'' (1996) Carolyn Stilton

★ ''The Designated Mourner'' (1997) Judy

★ ''Saint-Ex'' (1997) Consuelo

★ ''The Apostle'' (1997) Toosie

★ ''St. Ives'' (1998) Miss Gilchrist

★ ''Merlin'' (1998) Queen Mab/The Lady of the Lake

★ ''Alice in Wonderland'' (1999) Queen of Hearts/Society Woman

★ ''The Big Brass Ring'' (1999) Dinah Pellarin

★ ''Sleepy Hollow'' (1999) Lady Mary Van Tassel/Crone

★ '' (1999) Queen Elizabeth the First/Queenie

★ ''Get Carter'' (2000) Gloria Carter

★ ''Chicken Run'' (2000) Mrs Tweedy

★ '' (2001) Elspeth/Queen

★ ''The Hours'' (2002) Vanessa Bell

★ ''Spider'' (2002) Yvonne/Mrs. Cleg

★ ''The Lost Prince'' (2003) (TV) Queen Mary

★ ''The Rage In Placid Lake'' (2003) Sylvia Lake

★ ''The Prince and Me'' (2004) Queen Rosalind

★ '' (2004) Eva Braun

★ ''The Phantom of the Opera'' (2004) Madame Giry

★ ''Absolutely Fabulous'' Bettina [episode ''White Box'']

★ ''Midsummer Dream'' (2005) Queen Titania (voice)

★ ''Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire'' (2005) Rita Skeeter

★ ''Gideon's Daughter'' (2006) [TV] Stella

★ ''Merlin's Apprentice'' (2006) [TV] Lady of the Lake

★ ''Wah-Wah'' (2006) Lauren Compton

★ ''Provoked'' (2006) Veronica Scott

★ ''Paris, je t'aime‎'' (2006) The Wife (segment: Bastille)

★ ''Fred Claus'' (2007) Mrs. Claus

★ ''Southland Tales'' (2007) Nana Mae Van Adler-Frost

★ ''Spinning Into Butter'' (2007) Catherine Kenney

★ ''The Life and Times of Vivienne Vyle'' (2007) Helena

★ ''The Young Victoria'' (2008) Duchess of Kent

★ ''Caitlin'' (2008) Caitlin Thomas

Awards and nominations


Academy Award


★ Nominated: Best Supporting Actress, ''Damage'' (1992)

★ Nominated: Best Actress, ''Tom & Viv'' (1994)
BAFTA Award


★ Nominated: Best Actress, ''After Pilkington'' (1988) (TV)

★ Nominated: Best Supporting Actress, ''The Crying Game'' (1993)

★ 'Won: Best Supporting Actress, ''Damage'' (1993)

★ Nominated: Best Actress, ''Tom & Viv'' (1994)

★ Nominated: Best Actress, ''A Dance to the Music of Time'' (1998) (TV)

★ Nominated: Best Actress, ''The Lost Prince'' (2004) (TV)
Golden Globe Award


★ Nominated: Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture, ''Damage'' (1993)

★ 'Won: Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical/Comedy, ''Enchanted April'' (1993)'

★ Nominated: Best Actress - Motion Picture Drama, ''Tom & Viv'' (1995)

★ 'Won: Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for TV, ''Fatherland'' (1995)'

★ Nominated: Best Actress in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for TV, ''Merlin'' (1999)

★ Nominated: Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for TV, ''The Big Brass Ring'' (2000)

★ Nominated: Best Actress in a Mini-Series or a Motion Picture Made for Television, ''The Lost Prince'' (2005)

References


1. http://www.filmreference.com/film/79/Miranda-Richardson.html

External links





Unofficial website

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