Cate Blanchett Movies
With her regal and elegant visage, Aussie actress
Cate Blanchett broke through the mob of aspiring actors and instantly ascended the ranks to Hollywood stardom with her Academy Award-nominated turn as Elizabeth I in
Shekhar Kapur's
Elizabeth (1998). Her concomitantly poignant and fierce portrayal won admiration from critics and filmgoers, but she had maintained a low enough profile in years prior (and her celebrity materialized so quickly) that the
Elizabeth triumph appeared to pull the heretofore unseen actress from out of thin air and caught just about everyone off guard.
Born in Melbourne on May 14, 1969,
Catherine Elise Blanchett entered the world as the daughter of an Australian mother and a Texas-born American father, with two siblings. Her dad died of a heart attack when she was ten; her mother subsequently raised her.
Blanchett studied economics and fine art at the University of Melbourne, but -- reeling from ennui and dissatisfaction -- she set off in search of an alternate vocation and traveled for a period of time, perhaps in search of herself.
Blanchett ultimately landed in Egypt, where a chance bit part in an Arabic boxing film introduced her to a newfound love of acting. Taking this as a firm cue,
Blanchett harkened back to Sydney, where she enrolled in (and ultimately graduated from) the highly esteemed National Academy of Dramatic Art.
Blanchett later joined the Sydney Theatre Company, where she earned positive notices in a production of Caryl Churchill's Top Girls. A subsequent role in Timothy Daley's musical Kafka Dances won
Blanchett a 1993 New Comer Award from the Sydney Theatre Critics Circle, an honor doubled that same year when she gleaned a Rosemont Best Actress Award for her performance opposite future
Elizabeth co-star
Geoffrey Rush in
David Mamet's Oleanna.
The considerable prestige that accompanied these theatrical triumphs led
Blanchett to the small screen, where she appeared in various programs for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, including the drama
Heartland and the cop series
Police Rescue. Her television performances caught the attention of director
Bruce Beresford, who cast her in his 1997 POW drama
Paradise Road as a shy Australian nurse, opposite
Glenn Close and
Frances McDormand. 1997 proved to be a busy year as it also found her staring in the comedy
Thank God He Met Lizzie, for which she netted an Australian Film Institute Best Actress Award. By the end of the year she had an even bigger event than any successful acting gigs as she was married in December to British film technician
Andrew Upton. With the considerable amount of praise and recognition
Blanchett was receiving in her native country and a partner in her personal life to share it with, it was only a matter of time and opportunity before she became known to a wider audience. Her opportunity arrived that very same year, with her role in
Gillian Armstrong's adaptation of
Peter Carey's novel Oscar and Lucinda. Opposite
Ralph Fiennes,
Blanchett won almost uniform praise for her performance in a tepidly received film.
Blanchett came first-billed in the following year's
Elizabeth. The film drew swift and unequivocal praise, and
Blanchett's portrayal of the queen turned her into Los Angeles' newest
cause célèbre. A plethora of awards greeted
Kapur's feature and
Blanchett's performance, including a Best Actress Academy Award nomination and eight additional Oscar nods. The actress won a Golden Globe and British Academy Award, in addition to a host of critics' circle awards.
With that experience under her belt,
Blanchett starred opposite
Angelina Jolie,
John Cusack, and
Billy Bob Thornton in the
Mike Newell comedy
Pushing Tin (1999). Although the film dive-bombed at the box office, critics singled out
Blanchett's fine performance as a Long Island housewife. The same year, she played another domestic, 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 divided critics, although
Blanchett herself again earned favorable notices.
Blanchett maintained a busy schedule after the
Newell project, appearing in a plethora films throughout the early 2000s. She joined
Johnny Depp and
Christina Ricci with her role as a kindhearted albeit materialistic showgirl in
The Man Who Cried, then starred as a fortune-teller who holds the key to a mysterious murder in director
Sam Raimi's
The Gift, an unwitting accomplice in the crime comedy
Bandits, a British schoolteacher in
Tom Tykwer's
Kieslowski update
Heaven, and Galadriel, Queen of Lothlórien, in
Peter Jackson's
Lord of the Rings trilogy.
Blanchett also appeared in 2001's
The Shipping News (as Petal) and director
Gillian Armstrong's
Charlotte Gray as the title character. That same year, she gave birth to her first son, Dashiell John.
Blanchett's appeared as ill-fated Irish journalist Veronica Guerin in director
Joel Schumacher and producer
Jerry Bruckheimer's eponymously titled 2003 biopic. The film drew very mixed reviews and died a quick death in cinemas during its late-autumn run, but those reviewers who did respond favorably again singled out the actress' stunning interpretation of the role. The following year,
Blanchett appeared in
Wes Anderson's quirky film
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou alongside
Bill Murray and
Owen Wilson.
Blanchett wore a prosthetic belly in the film for her role as a seven months pregnant journalist and, interestingly enough, she later found that she was actually pregnant during filming. She gave birth to her second son, Roman Robert, later that same year. First, however, she effortlessly lit up the screen with a performance as film legend
Katharine Hepburn in director
Martin Scorsese's lavish
Howard Hughes epic
The Aviator. If
The Aviator's Best Picture loss to
Million Dollar Baby proved somewhat disappointing to
Scorsese fans when the Oscars were handed out,
Blanchett landed her greatest triumph that evening: she won the Best Supporting Actress award for her turn as
Hepburn.
Perhaps despairing the paucity of solid scripts in Hollywood,
Blanchett went global after the
Scorsese affair. She returned to her native Australia for a low-key follow-up,
Rowan Woods' harrowing and skillful
Little Fish (2005). 2006's multi-national production
Babel, directed by
Alejandro González Iñárritu, won the Best Director Award at Cannes; one of the narrative strands in its array of subplots featured
Blanchett and
Brad Pitt as husband and wife, grieving over the death of a child, and thrust into a desperate situation.
Babel turned out to be a major critical success, as did another film
Blanchett appeared in that same year,
Notes on a Scandal. In the film,
Blanchett played a mother and schoolteacher who becomes deeply embroiled in a maze of power and deception when she betrays her job and family by carrying on an affair with a student. The tautly suspenseful and intimate film also starred
Judi Dench as
Blanchett's friend and confidant, who soon becomes a source of emotional blackmail. The actresses were each praised for their performances, and each received both Golden Globe and Oscar nominations for their work in the film.
Blanchett went on to play Lena Brandt in
The Good German,
Steven Soderbergh and
Paul Attanasio's tale of a man (
George Clooney) searching for his former mistress (
Blanchett) in post-WWII Berlin. She also signed on for
Poison helmer
Todd Haynes'
I'm Not There: Suppositions on a Film Concerning Dylan, slated for release in 2007. The eccentric bio of the pop singer co-starred
Richard Gere,
Julianne Moore,
Adrien Brody, and
Charlotte Gainsbourg with numerous varied performers playing the musician in different sequences. Also set for release in 2007 was
Blanchett's return to one of her greatest triumphs as Elizabeth I in
The Golden Age,
Shekhar Kapur's sequel to his 1998 arthouse hit
Elizabeth, which would take place later in the Virgin Queen's reign.
Geoffrey Rush agreed to reprise his role as Sir Francis Walsingham, and the film would also feature
Clive Owen as Sir Walter Raleigh, establisher of the first New World colony and controversial figure of the Elizabethan court.
Blanchett also agreed to join the cast of the
David Fincher-directed fantasy
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button -- a critically acclaimed hit of 2008 -- before moving on to play a nefarious baddie in the unique thriller Hanna in 2012. Soon, the actress was reprising the role of elvin queen Galadriel for the Lord of the Rings prequel, The Hobbit. ~ Cammila Collar, Rovi