Franka Potente Movies
Best known to international audiences for her portrayal of the flame-haired, hyper-kinetic heroine of
Tom Tykwer's
Run Lola Run (1998),
Franka Potente is one of Germany's fastest rising young actresses. Born on July 22, 1974, in the town of Dülmen,
Potente was educated at Munich's Otto Falkenberg Schule and the Lee Strasberg Institute in New York. According to legend, she was "discovered" as an actress by a casting agent who saw her in a bar restroom one night and asked her to describe herself in one sentence.
Potente made an auspicious film debut in
Hans-Christian Schmid's 1996 film
Nach Fünf im Urwald, for which she won that year's Bavarian Film Prize for Young Talent; she subsequently did a good deal of television work before enjoying her international breakthrough in
Run Lola Run. A huge hit in Germany and a sleeper success in the States, the film featured
Potente in a state of constant locomotion, running through time and fate to save her boyfriend from the clutches of his gangster employers. Her performance, which combined urgency, unflappable verve, and surprising warmth, earned her the respect of any number of critics, and she found herself -- alongside director and then-boyfriend
Tom Tykwer -- being hailed as one of the European cinema's most exciting new talents.
Earning a German Shooting Stars award from the European Film Promotion in 1998,
Potente went on to do starring work in a number of films, including
Tykwer's The Princess and the Warrior (2000), which cast her as a lonely mental hospital nurse who falls in love with a disturbed army veteran-cum-thief. The actress' growing international stature was also reflected in her casting as
Johnny Depp's girlfriend in
Blow (2001),
Ted Demme's account of the life of George Jung (
Depp), a drug dealer who was instrumental in the rise of cocaine use in the 1970s. International fame continued to grow for the striking actress when, following a small role in the
Todd Solandz satire
Storytelling (2001), she was cast opposite
Matt Damon in director
Doug Liman's fast-paced thriller
The Bourne Identity. Inspired by
Run Lola Run (it not only utilized that film's star, but prominently featured a track from the
Lola soundtrack in its advertising campaign), the action thriller started to expand
Potente's strong cult appeal into full-blown commercial viability.
After spending the next two years mostly absent from movie houses,
Potente re-teamed with
Damon for the sequel,
The Bourne Supremacy in 2004. Potente would continue to enjoy stateside success in the years to come, appearing on shows like The Shield and House M.D., and starring on the series Copper. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi