Kate Mara Movies
American actress
Kate Mara realized many an ingenue's dream in late 2005, when she nearly stole
Ang Lee's film
Brokeback Mountain. As Ennis Del Mar's (
Heath Ledger) 19-year-old daughter, Alma Jr., who becomes one of the first familial recipients of Ennis' newfound ability to project love and affection,
Mara walked away with one of the most powerful scenes in the picture. It marked a small contribution but a masterful one, and it made audiences take notice of her for the first time. Admirers of this scene may not have realized that
Mara's onscreen history stretched back a decade prior to this.
As the granddaughter of
Pittsburgh Steelers founder Art Rooney and
New York Giants progenitor Tim Mara,
Kate Mara began life in Bedford, NY, and came of age in the Westchester neighborhood of the City of Angels.
Mara debuted on-camera in her early teens, in a 1997 episode of
Law & Order, and took her cinematic bow two years after that, as
Kristin Scott Thomas' daughter in
Sydney Pollack's romantic drama
Random Hearts. The film struck audiences as laborious and unsatisfying, but great things lay in store for
Mara -- and if she scraped bottom with the direct-to-video slasher flick
Urban Legends: Bloody Mary (2005) and paid her dues with bit roles in such blockbuster series as
CSI and
24, her extraordinary contribution to
Brokeback (playing, ironically, the daughter of an actor only a few years older than the actress herself) paved the way for more covetable assignments.
Thanks in no small part to an inherited football passion,
Mara particularly warmed to the part of Annie Cantrell in
McG's sports drama
We Are Marshall.
Mara then appeared as Sarah Fenn, opposite
Mark Wahlberg, in
Antoine Fuqua's action saga
Shooter (2007). She followed that up with a role in
Machinist director
Brad Anderson's tense thriller
Transsiberian, alongside
Ben Kingsley and
Woody Harrelson. In 2010 she appeared in the indie films Peep World and happythankyoumoreplease, as well as having a key role in the Oscar-nominated drama 127 Hours. She had a leading part in the 2011 twentysomething drama Ten Year. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi