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Filmography
Biography
With a major part in the most anticipated film of the 1990s, George
Lucas' Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace, repeated
comparisons to Audrey
Hepburn, and the drool of a thousand critics at her feet, Natalie
Portman has emerged as one of the most promising actresses of her
generation.
Born in Jerusalem on June 9, 1981, to an artist mother and doctor
father, Portman moved to New York when she was three. Raised on Long
Island, she was discovered by a modeling agent who signed her on the
spot. Her modeling stint led to an audition for Luc Besson's
Leon
(or The
Professional, as it was called in the United States). Due to her
age (she was 12 when the film was cast), Portman was initially turned
down for the lead role of Mathilda, a girl who asks a hit man (Jean Reno)
to train her as an assassin to avenge her brother's death and falls in
love with him in the process. However, she ultimately won the part and
her 1994 film debut earned a number of positive notices. In interviews,
Portman allowed that making her first film in the toughest sections of
Spanish Harlem was frightening, but not quite so frightening, she
claimed, as going back to school once shooting wrapped.
Portman then took on the role of Al Pacino's
step-daughter in another demanding film, Michael
Mann's Heat
(1995). She followed this up with lighter fare as Jack
Nicholson's daughter in Mars Attacks!
(1996). Despite a triumph of casting (the ensemble also included Glenn Close,
Annette
Bening, and Rod Steiger)
and the direction of the dependably original Tim Burton,
the film was a critical and financial disappointment. Portman emerged
relatively unscathed, going on the same year to make Woody Allen's
musical comedy Everyone
Says I Love You. The film met with a decidedly happier fate among
critics and filmgoers than her previous venture and Portman continued to
ride high with the success of her third film of 1996, Beautiful
Girls. For her performance as Marty, the precocious teen who nearly
steals a much older Timothy
Hutton away from his fiancée, Portman received adulation from a host
of critics, some of whom stated that she was the best part of the whole
movie.
After turning down title roles in both Lolita and William
Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet, Portman took on another title role
with her 1997 Broadway debut in The Diary of Anne Frank. She stayed with
the show until May 1998, during which time she received positive
notices for her performance. After lending her voice to The
Prince of Egypt (1998), Portman took on her most talked-about role
to date, that of Queen Amidala in The
Phantom Menace (1999). Despite very mixed reviews, the film went
into box-office hyperdrive, further propelling Portman toward her status
as a rapidly emerging talent for the new millennium.
Portman ended the 20th century with more positive reviews for her
role as Susan
Sarandon's moody daughter in Wayne Wang's
Anywhere
But Here and then, appropriately enough, kicked off the new century
with her first more adult role in Where the
Heart Is. For her portrayal of the film's protagonist, who ages
from 17 to 22 over the course of the story, Portman was required to do
her first love scene, something she professed a distaste for in various
interviews.
Offscreen, Portman also did some growing up, enrolling for her
college education at Harvard University. A psychology major, she made it
clear upon her enrollment that, aside from her role as Queen Amidala in
the Star Wars films, she would not accept any film roles for the
duration of her education. Perhaps to the disappointment of fans, she
stuck to her word, remaining absent from the screen (save Star Wars,
Episode II: Attack of the Clones) until she received her degree in 2003.
Luckily, upon her return to acting, it was immediately evident that it
had been worth the wait.
Portman's first foray following graduation was the 2003 Civil War
ensemble drama Cold Mountain, a film that saw her overshadowed a bit by
Renee Zellweger and Nicole Kidman, as the latter actresses had larger
parts. But in 2004, Portman was at the forefront of both Garden State
and Closer, a pair of films that garnered the young actress some of the
biggest accolades of her career and, in the case of Closer, her first
Oscar nomination.
In 2005, as the curtain finally closed on the Star Wars franchise
with the release of Star Wars, Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, Portman
could be seen sans-hair as the lead in the graphic-novel adaptation V
for Vendetta. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
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