Cate
Blanchett was born in Melbourne, Australia
on May 14, 1969, to an Aussie mother and a Texan father. She is
of French ancestry,
was raised by her mother following her father's passing when she
was ten. She attended Methodist Ladies College [MLC] where she
was part of "Cato" House drama group. One of her very
first plays was "Odyssey of Runyon Jones"...a fantasy
about a young boy whose dog dies. Cate also directed her fellow
students in "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?". After growing
up in Melbourne, she began studies of fine arts and economics at
the University of Melbourne, but, departed, after a fashion, to
continue her education via travel. After the expiration of her
vistor's visa forced her to leave England, she eventually found
herself in Egypt, desperate for money. In an effort to earn some
cash, and get a crack at craft services, she signed on as an extra
in an Arabic boxing film. It was the first time she had ever been
on a film set, but, it wouldn't, obviously, be the last.
Upon her return to Melbourne, Cate
Blanchett enrolled
at Australia's prestigious National Institute of Dramatic Art.
After graduation she joined the
Sydney Theatre Company's production of Caryl Churchill's "Top
Girls", then played Felice Bauer, the bride in Timothy Daly's
musical "Kafka Dances". She won the Newcomer Award from
the Sydney Theatre Critics Circle for her performance. From there,
Cate went on to star as Carol opposite Geoffrey Rush in David Mamet's
searing polemic, "Oleanna", also for The Sydney Theatre
Company. Consequently, she achieved an unprecendented feat, picking
up her second gong of the year by also winning the Rosemont Best
Actress Award. In 1995, she was nominated for Best Female Performance
for her turn as Ophelia in the Belvoir Street Theatre Company's production
of "Hamlet". Her other theatre credits include Helen in
the Sydney Theatre Company's "Sweet Phoebe", Miranda in "The
Tempest", and Rose in "The Blind Giant Is Dancing",
both for the Belvoir Street Theatre Company. Later, like "Oscar
and Lucinda" co-star, Ralph Fiennes, she moved on to Chekov,
playing Nina in "The Seagull".
In the realm of television, Cate
Blanchett co-starred
in ABC (Australian Broadcasting Company) Televsion's "Heartland",
winning critical acclaim in this examination of rural aborigines.
She also earned notice as
Bianca in ABC's "Bordertown", as Janie Morris in "G.P.",
and in ABC's popular series, "Police Rescue". Cate revised
her character of Rosie from "Heartland" in the non-feature
film, Parklands. She made her feature debut as a shy Australian nurse
in Bruce Beresford's, Paradise Road. She next starred in Cherie Nowlan's
debut feature, Thank God He Met Lizzie, playing the title role. For
this, Cate won the prestigious AFI (Australian Fim Institute) Best
Supporting Actress Award. Cate's next venture was the critically
acclaimed, Oscar and Lucinda, directed by noted Australian director,
Gillian Armstrong. Cate captivated audiences and critics alike, playing
opposite Ralph Fiennes, with her bewitching and mesmerizing portrait
of Lucinda Leplastrier.
In June of 1997, she married Andrew Upton, a script and cointinuity
editor she had met on the Parklands shoot. It was Cate's starmaking
portrayal of Queen Elizabeth I in Shekhar Kapur's Elizabeth that
shot her into the stratosphere in terms of both popular and critical
acclaim. Cate's chameleonlike qualities astounded both the industry
and the public. As a result of Elizabeth, Cate was honored with many
awards for her performance. Blanchett went on to star with Angelina
Jolie, John Cusack, and Billy Bob Thornton in the Mike Newell comedy
Pushing Tin (1999). Although the film got a lukewarm response, Blanchett
was praised for her performance as a Long Island housewife. The same
year, she played another housewife, albeit one of an entirely different
stripe, 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, the film received very mixed reviews,
although, as was usually the case, Blanchett won praise for her contribution
to it.
Remaining remarkably busy through 2003, Blanchett would appear in
no less than five films in 2001 alone. After following Pushing Tin
with a supporting role in The Talented Mr. Ripley, Blanchett joined
Johnny Depp and Christina Ricci with her role as a kindhearted though
materialistic showgirl in The Man Who Cried before starring as a
fortune teller who may hold the key to a mysterious murder in director
Sam Raimi's The Gift. Gaining positive notes for her uncanny ability
to move effortlessly and convincingly between a wide range of characterizations,
Blanchett appeared as a hostage of love in the crime comedy Bandits
before re-teaming with Gift co-star Giovanni Ribisi in director Tom
Tykwer's Heaven. Her busy year already off to a hectic start, Blanchett
then faced the daunting task of appearing in not one but three films
with her role as Galadriel, Queen of Lothlorien, in the eagerly anticipated
Lord of the Rings trilogy. As if her plate wasn't full enough, Blanchett
would also appear in 2001 in both The Shipping News and director
Gillian Armstrong's Charlotte Gray before rounding out the Lord of
the Rings trilogy with The Two Towers in 2002 and The Return of the
King in 2003.
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