Gwyneth Paltrow
| Birth Name: | Gwyneth Kate Paltrow |
| Birth Date:
| September 28, 1972
|
| Birth Place:
| Los Angeles,
California, USA |
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Filmography
Biography
Although she initially gained fame for her real-life role as Brad Pitt's
girlfriend, Gwyneth Paltrow went on to build a solid reputation as one
of the leading actresses of her generation. Repeatedly summoning
comparisons to such classic presences as Grace Kelly,
the blonde, blue-eyed Paltrow has won acclaim for her parts in a number
of films, most notably Shakespeare
in Love, for which she won a Best Actress Oscar in 1999.
The daughter of actress Blythe
Danner and producer/director Bruce
Paltrow, Paltrow was born in Los Angeles on September 28, 1972. When
she was 11, her family moved to Massachusetts so that her father could
direct summer stock productions -- it was there that the actress began
to receive theatrical training under her parents' tutelage. Schooled at
Manhattan's exclusive Spence School, Paltrow went on to study
anthropology at the University of California before deciding to drop out
to pursue her acting career. She got her first screen role in the 1991
movie Shout
and in the same year she played the young Wendy in Steven
Spielberg's Hook.
Two years later, Paltrow made her first significant impression with a
chilling turn as a young con artist in Flesh and
Bone. She went on to minor but memorable roles in Mrs.
Parker and the Vicious Circle (1994) and Jefferson
in Paris (1995) before earning her first true taste of fame with
her part as Brad Pitt's
wife in Seven
(1995). Unfortunately, she got more attention for her status as the
actor's girlfriend than for her work in the film, becoming one of the
world's most photographed arm ornaments.
However, the actress was able to come into her own the following
year with the title role in Douglas
McGrath's adaptation of Emma. She won
acclaim for her work and her flawless British accent, and the same year
she could be seen in two more films: The
Pallbearer, with David
Schwimmer, and Paul
Thomas Anderson's Hard Eight.
However, it was not until 1998 -- having broken off her engagement with
Pitt
the previous year -- that Paltrow became better-known for her acting
than for her ability to look good in designer evening gowns. That year,
she had starring roles in no less than five films. Although both Hush and A Perfect
Murder proved disappointments, and Great
Expectations received mixed reviews, Paltrow's two English
excursions, the comedy Sliding
Doors and John
Madden's Shakespeare
in Love, netted positive receptions. The latter film drew
particular acclaim, eventually winning seven Academy Awards, including
Best Picture and Best Actress for Paltrow.
The following year, she had the lead in another high-profile
project, Anthony
Minghella's The
Talented Mr. Ripley. Starring opposite Matt Damon,
Jude Law,
and Cate
Blanchett, Paltrow took part in a film that boasted one of the most
photogenic collections of young stars that audiences had seen that year
and it further enhanced her reputation as one of the most celebrated
members of her generation to step in front of a camera. As photogenic as
she may be, however, Paltrow's healthy sense of humor would give the
delicate actress the gusto she needed to take on the role of a 300-pound
object of funnyman Jack Black's
affection in the Farrelly
brothers' cheerfully offensive Shallow Hal
in 2001. With roles in The
Anniversary Party, Possession,
and Wes
Anderson's The
Royal Tenenbaums that same year, Paltrow's versatility and
popularity showed no signs of waning - even if the subsequent flight
attendant comedy View From the Top didn't even climb high enough at the
box office to take a nosedive.
Of course the failure of View From the Top could not be placed
squarely on the shoulders of Paltrow, and given the film's troubled
production history it's a small wonder that the film was released at
all. If that film had simply been a glazed-over comedy that gave its
starlet little chance to shine, Paltrow would close out the year with a
commendable and notably heavier performance in Sylvia. A film based on
the life of literary legend Sylvia Plath, Sylvia couldn't have been more
different than A View From the Top and provided Paltrow with a role she
could truly sink her teeth into. Both her performance as well as the
film itself fared fairly well through the duration of its limited
art-house run, despite the fact that Plath's real life daughter Frieda
Hughes publicly denounced the endeavor. The film also provided Paltrow
with the opportunity to appear onscreen opposite her real-life mother
Danner, who also played her ill-fated character's mother in the film.
In the wake of her accolades from Sylvia, Paltrow closed out 2003 by
wedding Coldplay singer Chris Martin. The new family would soon expand
five months later with the birth of their first child, a girl they
bestowed with the unique moniker Apple Martin. But family life didn't
slow Paltrow's film career too much. By Autumn she could be seen
opposite Jude
Law in the sci-fi actioner Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow,
and before the close of the year, audiences could catch her in director John
Madden's Proof. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
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