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Biography
She was born Catherine Elise Blanchett on
the 14th of May, 1969, at the Jessie McPherson Hospital in Melbourne
(popularly known as the Jessie Mac, now - like so many hospitals - a
vacant lot). Her father, Bob, was a Texan and ex-US Navy man who'd met
Cate's mother, a teacher named June, and moved into advertising in
Melbourne. There were two siblings: older brother Bob, now in computers,
and younger sister Genevieve, a theatre designer. Cate claims there's
some French ancestry in there somewhere, one antecedent being Louis
Bleriot, the first aviator to fly across the English Channel. Or La
Manche, depending on how you look at it. The biggest event of her young life was a terribly sad one, her father dying of a heart attack when she was just 10. "The day dad died", she said in Joan Sauer's Brothers And Sisters "I was playing the piano and he walked past the window and I waved goodbye . . . and he died. After that I thought I would have to kiss everybody goodbye before I left the house. It was like I had an obsessive compulsive disorder. I'd just be going down the street to get
some milk, and I'd do it. If I had to come back in the house because I'd
forgotten something, I'd have to go through the whole ritual
again". At the hospital, she was left in a room with one of her
dad's co-workers who told the kids "This is going to be a very,
very hard time for your mother. You have to be very, very good".
Cate believes that this "framed my whole relationship with the
family". Crucially, it also made her a perfectionist. Initially believing the play to be "a misogynist piece of crap", she did it because it made her so angry - moving people was, after all, what she wanted to do. It worked. Cate was named Best Actress, becoming the first to ever win Best Newcomer and Best Actress in the same year. In the meantime, there were screen roles
too. After a couple of TV appearances, she took on Heartland. Here the
mysterious death of an Aborigine girl in a small coastal town brought
bigotry into the spotlight. As divorcee Beth Ashton, conducting an
affair with an Aborigine Liaison Officer (played by Ernie Dingo), Cate
stirred up all manner of controversy. But she was wildly acclaimed for
her performance, and Heartland was described as ABC's "most
significant production to date". Next came another well-received
role, in the shortlived series Bordertown, set in a 1950's migrant camp
peopled by European immigrants. Next came a short feature film,
Parklands, where a woman returns home after the death of her ex-cop
father and discovers, through his diaries and the testimony of others,
that he may have been corrupt - throwing all her memories into painful
disarray. The role of Rosie was exceptionally demanding and emotionally
fraught and writer and director Kathryn Millard, who'd worked on the
script for five years, thought Cate the only one to play it. She was right. Not only did Cate's efforts win her awards from the Australian Film Critics Circle and the Australian Film Institute, but she now stepped up a gear. Director Gillian Armstrong (My Brilliant Career, Little Women) wanted Cate to star alongside Ralph Fiennes in her production of Peter Carey's classic novel Oscar and Lucinda, but the producers weren't keen. With Fiennes playing a renegade priest,
questioning his faith and transporting a glass church into the Outback,
the film would be expensive and they believed a name (read American)
actress was needed. Thankfully, by showing them Cate's performance in
Paradise Road, Armstrong won them over, and Cate became Lucinda
Leplastrier, the Australian heiress trying to liberate women from a
male-dominated society. laying the wife of hot-headed air traffic controller John Cusack, she got herself up in tight pants, gold bracelets and big hair - more Dolly Parton than Elizabeth I - even sporting a special bra for that big-breasted look. After this came The Talented Mr Ripley. Director Anthony Minghella really wanted her for the part of a girl who falls for Matt Damon's sinister lead (literally a copycat killer), but thought she'd refuse a part so small. Liking the script, she took it anyway and, once she had, Minghella extended the role to make better use of her. The parts just got weirder and wilder. In
The Man Who Cried she was a Russian cabaret dancer, and engaged in her
first serious onscreen love scene. Unusually (of course), this was with
John Turturro. In The Gift, written by her Pushing Tin co-star Billy
Bob Thornton, she was sweet psychic Annie Wilson, drawn into a
murder case and taking an almighty punch from redneck nut-job Keanu
Reeves. Then she starred alongside Thornton once again, as Kate
Wheeler, a girl kidnapped by bank robbers Billy
Bob and Bruce
Willis - and winning both their hearts - in the comedy thriller
Bandits. She missed him sorely, director Shekhar Kapur noting that Upton was "very, very stabilising" for her, lending her the confidence she needed to perform. In summer 1999, after appearing on the London stage as the frustrated and unstable Susan Traherne in David Hare's Plenty, she played a soused housewife in Andrew's short Bangers. Andrew would move on to translate and adapt Cyrano de Bergerac for the Sydney Theatre Company, set design courtesy of Genevieve Blanchett. He and Cate would live for a while in a
beachside apartment in Sydney (usually rented out while they travelled
for work), then move to north London, and then down to the south coast,
taking a place on Hove seafront. By this time Cate would have given
birth to a son, Dashiell, named after the crime writer Hammett. At $27 million, Charlotte Gray was the most expensive British film ever made. But, making just $3 million in the UK and only $700,000 in the States, it was a painful failure. Blanchett, though, had delivered another sterling performance and remained untainted by the disaster. She moved on to The Shipping News, based on another bestseller, this time by E. Annie Proulx. Here she'd appear as Petal Bear, as the
name suggests a bohemian star-child, who engages in a one-night stand
with Kevin
Spacey and, falling pregnant, is consequently trapped in unhappy
conformity. For Spacey, though, it's love and, when Petal is killed in
an accident, he takes the child off to Newfoundland to find a new life
among such kicking thespians as Judi Dench and Julianne
Moore. Identifying the drug baron behind this
chaos, she seeks revenge by planting a bomb in his office, only to kill
four innocents. The grief, rage and horror she exhibited were awesome
and it was no wonder that Giovanni Ribisi's police translator (Ribisi
having earlier played her doomed patient in The Gift) should fall for
her and try to help her escape. Though well-filmed and performed, it was hardly believable stuff - a woman and child and drunk outwitting a gang of cut-throat renegades schooled in outback life. Audiences reacted well but The Missing suffered somewhat beside Open Range, Kevin Costner's return to Western form. Blanchett moved on to The Life Aquatic, directed by Wes Anderson, on a high after the success of The Royal Tenenbaums. This was the tale of a Jacques Cousteau-style documentary maker (Bill Murray again) who enjoys a series of wild adventures with his formerly estranged son (Owen Wilson), tracking down a rare shark who killed his crew-mate. Cate would play a pregnant journalist onboard to research a profile on Murray, and would become the object of both Murray and Wilson's affections. For her pregnancy scenes she was fitted
with a prosthetic belly. After fainting one day, she would discover that
she actually was pregnant with her second child. The news would cause
her to drop out of Mike Nichols' production of Patrick Marber's hit play
Closer. The child, Roman Robert, would be born in April 2004. One of the movie's finest scenes involves
her breaking up with Leonardo DiCaprio's Hughes, delivering a clearly
practised speech with strained bonhomie. Told by Hughes to stop acting,
she immediately deflates, recognising his anger and pain but socially
conditioned to over-ride any unpleasantness with smart repartee.
Deservedly, Cate would find herself Oscar-nominated for the second time.
This time she'd win, as Best Supporting Actress. Following this, she would return to Australia to film Little Fish, playing a recovering junkie in Sydney's Little Saigon area. Attempting to keep on the straight and narrow by starting her own business, her chances are severely reduced by the presence of her brother and ex-boyfriend, both of whom are dedicated to a life of crime. Her co-stars would include Sam Neill and
Hugo Weaving, Weaving having appeared alongside her in The Blind Giant
Is Dancing, The Lord Of the Rings and a 2004 run of Hedda Gabler for the
Sydney Theatre Company, where she'd performed brilliantly as the titular
heroine, a dangerous, insecure and powerful wrecking-ball. Throughout,
there would be rumours, many emanating from director Shekhar Kapur, that
she would reprise her role as Elizabeth I in Golden Age, concerning the
glorious middle years of the monarch's reign and culminating in the
defeat of the Spanish Armada. |
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