Elizabeth Banks Movies
Possessing the kind of elegant screen beauty that often draws comparisons to a
Breakfast at Tiffany's-era
Audrey Hepburn, actress
Elizabeth Banks' onscreen career has been steadily rising since the up-and-coming actress won the Young Hollywood Award for "Exciting New Face" back in 2003. With roles in such notable Hollywood hits as the
Spider-Man films and
Seabiscuit,
Banks has not only had the pleasure of sharing the screen with hot-property actor
Tobey Maguire multiple times, but has also been nominated -- alongside
Maguire,
Jeff Bridges,
William H. Macy, and
Gary Stevens -- for an "Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture" award by the Screen Actors Guild for her performance in the latter. The Pittsfield, MA, native got her first taste of fame when nominated Harvest Queen in her hometown's annual fall celebration, and in the years that followed,
Banks would receive her bachelor's degree from the University of Pennsylvania and go on to pursue her graduate degree at the American Conservatory Theater.
In 1998,
Banks made her feature debut in the controversial addiction drama
Surrender Dorothy, with subsequent small-screen roles in
Third Watch and
Sex and the City only serving to contribute to her rapidly growing profile in film and television. Of course, a move from New York to Los Angeles also may have had something to due with her landing more film roles, and though she would appear under her real name,
Elizabeth Mitchell, in the 2000 action thriller
Shaft, she soon had to change her name to avoid conflict with another actress who had already established a career under that surname. Undaunted,
Banks forged on with roles in the cult comedy
Wet Hot American Summer and the romantic drama
Ordinary Sinner in 2001, with a supporting performance as Betty Brant in the 2002 box-office smash
Spider-Man providing her most substantial onscreen performance to date. With roles opposite
Madonna in
Swept Away and
Leonardo DiCaprio in
Catch Me If You Can, it was obvious that
Banks' career was on the rise, but it was her winning performance in
Seabiscuit that truly put her on the map. Though the Screen Actors Guild award that the she and the cast were nominated for would ultimately go to the cast of
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, it was obvious to all who had been following her career that
Banks was only at the beginning of her Hollywood ascent. In 2003,
Banks appeared in the drama The Trade before reprising her role as Betty Brant for
Spider-Man 2, and with increasingly prominent roles in
Heights, The Sisters, and
The Baxter scheduled through 2005, audiences could rest assured that they would be seeing plenty more of
Banks in the years to come.
By the time
Banks turned in a standout supporting role as a bookstore employee who may hold the means of solving The 40 Year Old Virgin's titular dilemma in the 2005 Steve Carell hit, it seemed that she was an actress capable of brightening most any screen. A substantial role as a small-town trophy wife in director James Gunn's comic-frightener Slither found
Banks having noticable fun in front of the cameras, with a pair of appearances on the popular television medical comedy Scrubs preceding a more serious-minded turn in the inspirational 2006 sports drama Invincible.
2008 was a very busy year for
Banks in which she continued to build her career as a comedic presence in films as varied as Role Models, Meet Dave, and Kevin Smith's Zack and Miri Make a Porno, and was also allowed to stretch her dramatic wings as Laura Bush in Oliver Stone's biopic W.
In 2009 she first played the role of a conservative television commentator who becomes a romantic partner for Alec Baldwin's character on the award-winning sitcom 30 Rock, a role she would return to intermittently for the next few years.
In 2011 she co-starred in the comedy Our Idiot Brother, and in 2012 she had a supporting part in the phenomenally successful adaptation of The Hunger Games.
~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi