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Emily Mortimer

Emily Mortimer
Born:
Career: 1994-2010
Countries: USA
UK
Genre/Type: Comedy Drama
Comedy
Romance
Drama
Thriller
Biography by Mark Deming
An attractive and talented actress who is as comfortable in historical dramas as in modern day thrillers and comedies, Emily Mortimer was born in Great Britain in 1971. Mortimer's father is author John Mortimer, best known for his series of Rumpole of the Bailey mystery novels, and she seems to have absorbed her father's literary influence -- before her career as an actress took off, Mortimer wrote a column for the London Telegraph, and she's served as screenwriter for an screen adaptation of Lorna Sage's book Bad Blood. Mortimer was a student at the prestigious St. Paul's Girls School when she first developed an interest in acting, appearing in several student productions. After graduating from St. Paul's, she moved on to Oxford, where she majored in Russian. Mortimer found time to perform in several plays while studying at Oxford, and while acting in a student production she impressed a producer who cast her in a supporting role in a television adaptation of Catherine Cookson's The Glass Virgin in 1995. Several more television roles followed, including the British TV movie Sharpe's Sword, before she won her first film role, playing the wife of John Patterson (Val Kilmer) in 1996's The Ghost and the Darkness. Mortimer had a much showier role in the Irish coming-of-age story The Last of the High Kings, released later the same year, and in 1998, Mortimer played Miss Flynn in the TV miniseries Cider With Rosie, which was adapted for television by her father, John Mortimer. Also in 1998, Mortimer appeared as Kat Ashley in the international hit Elizabeth, and in 1999, she enjoyed three showy roles that raised her profile outside the U.K.: She was the ill-fated "Perfect Girl" dropped by Hugh Grant in Notting Hill, appeared as Esther in the American TV miniseries Noah's Ark, and was Angelina, the star of the film-within-a-film, in the upscale slasher flick Scream 3. In 2000, Mortimer was cast as Katherine in Kenneth Branagh's ill-fated musical adaptation of Love's Labour's Lost, but the experience had a happy ending for her -- she met actor Alessandro Nivola, and the two soon fell in love and have been together ever since. That same year, Mortimer took on her biggest role in an American film to date, playing opposite Bruce Willis in The Kid, and 2002 promised to be a big year for her, with major roles in two major releases -- The 51st State, starring opposite Samuel L. Jackson, and a key supporting character in John Woo's war drama Windtalkers.

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Filmography

Movie/Film Released Rating Role Buy
Shutter Island 2010 Actor [Starring]
City Island 2009 Actor [Starring]
Harry Brown 2009 Actor [Starring]
The Pink Panther 2 2009 Actor [Starring]
Redbelt 2008 Actor [Starring]
Transsiberian 2008 Actor [Starring]
Chaos Theory 2007 Actor [Starring]
Lars and the Real Girl 2007 Actor [Starring]
Number Thirteen 2007 Actor [Starring]
Paris, Je T'Aime 2006 Actor [Starring]
Père-Lachaise 2006 Actor [Starring]
The Pink Panther 2006 Actor [Starring]
Match Point 2005 Actor [Starring]
Dear Frankie 2004 Actor [Starring]
Howl's Moving Castle 2004 Voice [Starring]
Bright Young Things 2003 Actor [Starring]
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What looks so cool about it? Is it just the big lens? Hard to tell what lens that is, but even if you used the cheapest analog canon body you could find, those L-series white lenses will still set you back $1000 at least.
I've always loved her work and one of the nice things about making movies is you get to not only work with old people, you get to work with new people, so if you've got a great casting agent, you've got wonderful casting people. Sherry Thom...
Emily Mortimer was born on December 1, 1971

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Awards

Year Movie/Film Role
2007 Golden Satellite Award Lars and the Real Girl Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy (Nom)
2007 Detroit Film Critics Society Lars and the Real Girl Best Supporting Actress (Nom)
2007 Ohio Film Critics Lars and the Real Girl Best Supporting Actress (Nom)
2002 Independent Spirit Awards Lovely & Amazing Best Supporting Actress (Won)
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