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KATE BECKINSALE was born 26 July 1973 in England,
and has resided in London for most of her life. Her mother is Judy
Loe, born in Manchester, England, and graduated from the University
of Birmingham with a degree in English and Drama. Ms. Loe has appeared
in a number of British dramas and sitcoms, and continues to work
as an actress, predominantly in British television productions.
Her father was Richard Beckinsale, born in Nottingham, England.
He starred in a number of popular British television comedies during
the 1970s, most notably the television series Rising Damp and The
Lovers. He passed away in 1979. Kate has one older half-sister,
Samantha Beckinsale, who is also an actress and has appeared in
some recent British television programmes and commercials. Kate
was not close to her half-sister as she grew up; after a brief meeting
when she was very young, the two did not meet again until 1995.
Kate attended the public (private school to U.S. readers) Godolphin
and Latymer School in London for her grade and primary school education.
In her teens, she twice won the British bookseller W. H. Smith Young
Writers' competition--once for three short stories and once for
three poems.
After a tumultuous adolescence, she gradually took
up the profession of acting. Adults would ask her if she was going
to be an actress while she grew up, so the career path was always
there as a possibility for her. She stated, "I fell into acting
quietly and gently, starting with parts in the school play, then
little bits in films." Kate's first professional acting experience
was playing the anguished young Alice Mair (a very minor voiceover
part) in the 1991 Anglia Television serial production of P.D. James's
Devices and Desires.
Her major acting debut came later that year in a World
War II television movie called One Against the Wind, filmed in Luxembourg
during the summer of 1991. She played the part of Barbe, the rebellious
daughter of Mary Lindell (Judy Davis). It first aired on American
television that December. Kate also had a "forgettable"
part in a short film about industrial accidents before she left
for university. A career set-back came that year in the last-minute
decision to cast Juliette Binoche, not Kate, as Cathy in the 1991
film of Wuthering Heights.
Kate began attending Oxford University's New College
in the fall of 1991, majoring in French and Russian literature.
In an interview, Kate said she chose this study because "I
was thinking of acting in different languages." She had already
decided that she wanted to act, but to broaden her horizons she
chose university over drama school. Kate planned to study during
the regular year, and work in the film industry during the summer.
Becoming involved with the Oxford student community theatre groups
led to her appearance in their early 1992 production of View From
The Bridge. The play had an added bonus; in the production, she
also met her first real love, a fellow student by the name of Edmund
Moriarity.
While in her first year at Oxford, Kate received her
big break in Kenneth Branagh's film adaptation of Shakespeare's
Much Ado About Nothing. She traveled to Tuscany, Italy, in the summer
of 1992 to appear in the film, cast as the innocent Hero. Working
to play Hero in a light that she would find favourable, a role in
other productions that has sometimes portrayed the character as
a naive girl in a minor role, she stated, "In Much Ado, I had
to be careful not to make Hero a wimp. I don't want to play any
drippy women, because I don't know any."
Kate worked in three other films while attending Oxford,
beginning with a part in the medieval historical drama Prince of
Jutland (1993), cast as Ethel. The film was shot during spring 1993
on location in Denmark, and she performed her supporting part during
New College's Easter break. Later in the summer of that year, and
after a dramatic--and captivating--change in her hair length and
colour, she performed as the lead in the now-unobtainable contemporary
mystery drama Uncovered (1994), filmed in Barcelona, Spain. Before
she went back to school, Kate also worked in the first installment
of Anna Lee, a short-lived Carnival Films/London Weekend Television
detective series that appeared on Britain's ITV in the fall of 1993.
She played Thea Hahn, the main character in the episode "Headcase".
Her third year at university was spent at Oxford's
study-abroad programme in Paris, France, immersing herself in the
French language, Parisian culture, and those awful French cigarettes.
Putting her language classes to work, she co-starred (while bedecked
with a large reddish-brown wig) in a French-language romantic comedy
filmed in the French capital, Marie-Louise ou la permission (1994).
A year away from the academic community and living
on her own in the French capital caused her to re-evalate the direction
of her life. She faced a choice: continue with school, or concentrate
on her flourishing acting career. After much thought, she chose
the acting career. In the spring of 1994 Kate left Oxford, after
finishing three years of study. Kate stated in an interview, "I
thought, `I'm not staying here. I don't really like it.'" And
she kept open the option of eventually obtaining her degree, declaring
"I could still go back, when university's no longer just about
leaving home and doing kissing."
Kate appeared in the BBC/Thames Television satire
Cold Comfort Farm filmed in London and East Sussex during late summer
1994. When she was 14, she read Stella Gibbons' book and thought
it a wonderful satire. However, despite her fondness for the book,
she almost did not get the part. "I was so desperate to play
it. They thought I was too young," she said. She wrote to the
film's director, John Schlesinger, to see her again while they were
both in Paris, and persuaded him to cast her as the film's lead,
Flora Poste. The film played once on BBC1-TV during New Year's Day
1995, and was released to the American art-film market in the spring
of 1996. Cold Comfort Farm opened to spectacular reviews in the
United States, grossing over US$5 million during its American cinema
run. It was re-released to U.K. theatres in the spring of 1997.
Acting on the stage consumed the first part of 1995;
she toured in England with the Thelma Holts Theatre Company production
of Chekov's The Seagull. The production was an interesting combination
of her talents--she practiced her Russian while taking direction
from a Georgian who spoke no English. In June, she travelled to
Italy once again with her current boyfriend, British actor Michael
Sheen, whom she met earlier that year when performing in The Seagull,
while he appeared in the Kenneth Branagh production of Othello.
After turning down several mediocre scripts, "and
going nearly berserk with boredom," she waited seven months
before another interesting role was offered to her. Her big movie
of 1995 was the romance/horror movie Haunted, starring opposite
Adian Quinn and Sir John Gielgud, and filmed in West Sussex. In
this film she wanted to play `an object of desire', unlike her past
performances where her characters were much less the siren and more
the worldly innocent. The several nude scenes in Haunted were played
by another actress; Kate refused to bare all to the camera. "They
took that much sex from the script," she said in an interview,
showing a millimetre of space between her thumb and forefinger,
"and made it into nearly 15 minutes of uninspired writhing.
I despise that."
In early 1996 she appeared in three off-West End
London plays: Sweetheart in February, Clocks and Whistles in April,
and Faithless in the spring. In Sweetheart, she played the main
character's neglected girlfriend, Toni. Clocks and Whistles was
a different kind of part; Kate played Anne, a narcissistic actress
who uses for her own ends the play's central character. (I do not
have any information about her work in Faithless.)
Kate's first film project of 1996 was the British
ITV production of Jane Austin's novel Emma. "Emma is such an
extraordinary character that I couldn't say no," she said.
"She's quite unpleasant sometimes, which I always relish."
Dialect coaching, costume fittings, hair extensions, and even singing
lessons followed as Kate stepped into the role of the vivacious
Emma Woodhouse. "I love to do comedy," she says, adding
that there's plenty of comedy in her character: "She's not
very nice a lot of the time, so that's always fun, and if she had
any idea what she was doing it would be a bit of a tragedy. But
because she hasn't got any idea, it's funny."
Emma completed production during the summer of 1996,
and aired in the U.K. on the ITV television network in late November
1996. Unlike some of her earlier work, the reaction to her Emma
varied wildly; some critics panned her acting while others applauded
her less frivolous interpretation of the manipulative Miss Woodhouse.
"She is kind of screwed up in several fairly major ways,"
Kate explained of the character. "She is rather spoiled, she
is rather isolated, she is rather blind, and she can be very, very
ruthless. You shouldn't necessarily like Emma. You do love her,
but in the way the family of a teen-age girl could be exasperated
by her outrageous behavior and still love her."
Her last film of 1996 was the comedy Shooting Fish,
filmed at Shepparton Studios in London during early fall. She played
the part of Georgie, an altruistic con artist. It was released to
European cinemas beginning in fall 1997. Shooting Fish was partially
financed by British National Lottery proceeds, and was expected
to do extremely well because of the very favourable reviews it has
received at a number of European film festivals. It earned enought
to become England's third-highest grossing film for 1997.
While exploring new film projects for 1997, Kate participated
in other British entertainment industry opportunities, providing
the Nottingham-accented voice for a February BBC Radio 4 reading
of Diana Hendry's "The Proposal," and composing with Michael
Sheen (and a number of other notable British thespians, including
her mother) a reading of William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
She also completed a reading of an abridged version of Jane Austen's
Emma. In the spring of 1997 Kate appeared in the video for George
Michael/Toby Bourke's single "Waltz Away Dreaming". She
was the flamboyant spirit inhabiting a whimsical dreamland as the
singer remembered his late mother.
She told a reporter in 1996 that she probably would
not be moving to California and appearing in a Hollywood production,
stating, "I don't want to put on tight frocks and hope somebody
will give me work. And I think I'd miss my mum." But she would
not rule out the States altogether: "If there was a jolly film
being done in America, I'd do it."
And her American adventure happened: first arriving
in the U.S. in late spring 1997, Kate has completed a temporary
move to Los Angeles, California, where she considered some American
film industry projects. "I'd go there and work but I'd always
come home," she said. She found a well-crafted project in which
to appear; she played a young American facing life after college
in the 1970s-era romantic comedy The Last Days of Disco, directed
by Whit Stillman, and filmed in New York City in the waining days
of summer 1997. Kate played a selfish young American recently graduated
from college, who spends her time at a disco seeking romance and
the answers to post-graduate life. The film was released in the
U.S. in late May 1998, and in England later that fall.
Kate's other 1997 project entailed more travel, this
time to the other side of the world. Brokedown Palace, a drama that
was filmed beginning late November 1997 in Manila, Philipines, and
featured Kate and the American actress Claire Danes. They played
recent American high-school graduates who after secretly travelling
to Bangkok, Thailand, are framed for smuggling heroin and are sentenced
to 33 years imprisonment in a nightmare Midnight Express-like Thai
prison. Brokedown Palace is expected for U.S. cinematic release
in February 1998.
Kate finished shooting Brokedown Palace in late February
1998, and stopped over in New York City on her way back to London.
She spent some time in NYC doing numerous interviews for the American
premieres of Shooting Fish and Last Days of Disco. Having been away
from her new flat for over six months, she said in an interview
that she was looking forward to decorating her house, and spending
time with her boyfriend and five cats. She even liked coming back
to America, saying that "she wouldn't mind living here [New
York City]."
After taking a few months off, she agreed to star
in the U.K.'s Channel 4 film adaptation of Lewis Carroll's Through
The Looking Glass. She played a grown-up Alice, who is transported
to Never-Never Land while she reads the story to her daughter. After
being shot during August and September 1998 on the Isle of Man,
it is scheduled to be shown on British television during Boxing
Day.
Her life changed due to the arrival of her and her
long-time boyfriend, Michael Sheen, first child, (31 January 1999).
Since that time she has been a busy lady with her appearance in
the 2001 hit movie Pearl Harbour. She eventually got the role of
Lieutenant Evelyn Johnson (nurse) opposite Ben Affleck as Gwyneth
Paltrow turned down the chance to play her ex-boyfriend love interest
again because there wasn't enough money involved.
Affleck wanted the role and received a slashed salary
to just $250,000 for the film and as Paltrow was unwilling to do
this Kate received the role thta has pushed her back into stardom.
Affleck says, "Gwyneth had another thing she wanted to do.
I mean you flirt with different choices as film makers and you try
to figure it out. This film also required a level of commitment.
It's a year of your life, there's no money. It's not an easy sell."
But Affleck was pleased with Paltrow's replacement. He says, "We
ended up with the best choice possible - Kate is an amazing woman
and I totally fell in love with her and I could not possibly say
enough good about her."
2001 also bought with it the hit movie Serendipity
where she stars as Sara Thomas a girl who meets her love but isn't
sure their love is meant to be. They decided to test fate by splitting
up and seeing if destiny brings them back together.
No wonder she has been named as England's Number #1
Beautyin 2002 by Hello Magazine
With her new found fame she is enjoying the high life
but has found that with the benefits of being an A-list celebrity,
come the pitfalls. She says she has been flashed at three times
while using London's underground system, and she claims a naked
man jumped out at her as she sat outside a pub. But her biggest
shock, she says, was when a motorist stopped her for help reading
a map. She explains, "I need glasses to read and there seemed
to be an obstruction on the map - then I realised it was his manhood
lying on the book."
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