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Rachel Weisz

Who is ??

Birth name : Rachel Hannah Weisz
Date of birth : 7 March 1971
Place of birth:  London, England, UK
Nickname:  Rach

Height: 5' 7" (1.70 m) 
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Famous Quote

"When I'm playing a character, I use the American accent. But when I go back to England, I just glide right back into Englishness immediately. Every actor uses a dialect coach. Every actor, and if they say they don't, they're lying. Everybody does, yeah. You don't want to worry about it. You have someone listening out to check that you're not straying."

Information

Here you can find almost everything about Rachel Weisz, Profile, Biography, Trivia, Filmography, Movies (you can purchase and buy), Photos Gallery, Magazines, Icons, Posters (if you want to see the posters all over your walls you can get them here) , Books, Famous Quotes, and a beautiful collection of Rachel Weisz Wallpapers for your computer desktops.
Photos Gallery

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Contact Address

Rachel Weisz
Independent Talent Group Ltd.
Oxford House
76 Oxford Street
London W1D 1BS, UK


Biography Rachel Weisz Biography

 

Rachel Hannah Weisz (born March 7, 1971) is an Academy Award-winning English actress. She became well-known after her roles in the Hollywood films The Mummy and The Mummy Returns, and has since continued appearing in major film roles. 

Weisz (pronounced Vice) was born in London, England and grew up in the Hampstead Garden suburb. Her mother, Edith Ruth (née Teich), is a Vienna-born Austrian teacher turned psychotherapist. Her father, George Weisz, is a Hungarian-born inventor whose family fled to England to escape Nazi persecution. Weisz's father is Ashkenazi Jewish and her mother has been referred to as either Catholic, Jewish, or having Jewish ancestry. Weisz was raised in a cerebral Jewish household and refers to herself as Jewish. Weisz has a sister, Minnie Weisz, who is an artist.

Weisz was educated at North London Collegiate School. She was then sent to Benenden School and eventually settled in St Paul's Girls' School. She then entered Trinity Hall, Cambridge, where she graduated with a 2:1 in English. During her university years she appeared in various student productions, co-founding a student drama group called Cambridge Talking Tongues, which went on to win a Guardian Student Drama Award at the Edinburgh Festival for an improvised piece called Slight Possession.

Her breakthrough role was that of Gilda in Welsh director Sean Mathias's 1995 West End revival of Noel Coward's 1933 play Design for Living at the Gielgud Theatre. Having already worked for television, with parts in major UK series such as Inspector Morse (1993), Weisz started her cinema career in 1995 with Chain Reaction and then appeared in Bernardo Bertolucci's Stealing Beauty. She followed this work with more English films including My Summer with Des, Swept from the Sea, The Land Girls, and Michael Winterbottom's I Want You. 

Although she received favourable critical recognition for her work to this point, her breakout into wide audience recognition came from a popular serio-comic horror movie The Mummy, in which she played the lead female role. Since then she has starred in a number of films including The Mummy Returns (2001), which grossed higher than the original, as well as Enemy at the Gates (2001), About a Boy (2002), Runaway Jury (2003) and Constantine (2005). Her stage work includes the role of Catherine in a London production of Tennessee Williams' Suddenly Last Summer and Evelyn in Neil LaBute's The Shape of Things at the Almeida Theatre (also film).

British stage and film actress Rachel Weisz stood out from the pack of emerging U.K. actresses in the 1990s with her exotic, decidedly un-British looks, as well as the fierce intelligence of a woman who had been on a fast track to academia before early stage success altered her path. Weisz founded an innovative comedy group at Cambridge, but her film career mainly centered on ambitious, independent dramas until Hollywood invited her into the fray with roles in several comedy and adventure blockbusters. Alternately cast as the deceptively smart sex bomb, the pensive outsider, and the fierce independent in films of wildly unpredictable quality, Weisz was officially bumped up to top drawer projects when she earned Oscar, Golden Globe, and BAFTA awards for her starring role in the 2005 film adaptation of John LeCarre’s “The Constant Gardner.”

Rachel Weisz was born on March 7, 1970 and raised in London’s artistic and intellectually-oriented suburb of Hampstead. Her parents were both Jewish émigrés who had escaped the Nazi regime – her father, a scientific inventor who had fled Hungary; her mother, an Austrian psychoanalyst. Weisz and her sister, Minnie, grew up under the influence of educated, individualist parents who valued theater and the arts and encouraged their daughters to form their own opinions about the world through often lively household debates. This outspokenness was obviously not valued at the pair of schools that expelled Weisz before she was a teen. She fared better at the less-stodgy St. Paul’s Girls School in Hammersmith, from which she would eventually graduate. But prior to that, she found some success as a model in her early teens and got a bit of local press when she turned down an offer to appear alongside Richard Gere in the feature “King David” in 1984.

Weisz was not desperate to trade in her normal teen life for the limelight; instead continuing her academic pursuits at Cambridge University’s Trinity Hall. While majoring in English and churning out impressive treatises on great British and American literature, she toyed with the idea of shifting to law studies, while also beginning to appear in school theatrical productions. She and friend Sacha Hails formed their own performance group called Talking Tongues, staging both scripted and improvised comedic performances with considerable success. The duo was accepted to the renowned Edinburgh Fringe Festival three times; their final performance earning the Guardian Student Drama Award and an invitation to perform the piece, “Slight Possession,” at the National Theater on London’s West End. Weisz finished her English degree and was guaranteed a place at drama school, but she had begun landing small TV roles; instead choosing to go with the momentum of her blossoming acting career.

A co-starring role with Ewan McGregor in the BBC miniseries "Scarlet and Black" (1993) led to Weisz’s return to the West End in a revival of Noel Coward’s “Design for Living,” which earned her a Critic’s Circle Award for Best Newcomer. Weisz made a move to the big screen in two very different films: with a small role in Italian director Bernardo Bertolucci's "Stealing Beauty" (1996), and in a supporting role (opposite Keanu Reeves) as a scientist trying to save the world in “Chain Reaction” (1995). Her profile and reputation as an intelligent and versatile actress grew with a string of mostly panned British films including the Joseph Conrad adaptation “Swept from the Sea” (1997), Michael Winterbottom’s smoldering “I Want You” (1997), and the WWII comedy “The Land Girls” (1998). In 1999, Weisz returned to the West End in one of her proudest performances, Tennessee Williams’ Southern gothic drama “Suddenly Last Summer.” Weisz had studied the playwright at Cambridge and sank her teeth into the role of a mentally unstable woman grieving the loss of a cousin murdered under shrouded circumstances.

Despite her growing familiarity factor on British film screens and her respected position on the London stage, Weisz was still relatively unknown in Hollywood circles until her high-profile breakout as a clumsy but adventurous librarian opposite Brendan Fraser in the blockbuster "The Mummy" (1999). The fun romp was not quite on par with her ambitious art house fare, but it showcased Weisz’s wonderful comic chops and a versatility that prevented her from being typecast as strictly an earnest British dramatic actress. Her next two features did not enjoy nearly the broad success of “The Mummy.” The Holocaust-era "Sunshine" (1999), in which she co-starred with Ralph Fiennes as an adulterous wife involved with her dashing brother-in-law, was a festival favorite and multiple award nominee. The dark chick-revenge caper comedy “Beautiful Creatures” (2000) was universally panned for failing to deliver the “Thelma & Louise” (1991) goods it promised, while "Enemy at the Gates" (2001) was both well received by critics and a sizeable international hit. In the film, Weisz paired with another Fiennes brother, Joseph, to essay a German-speaking Russian soldier, fighting to save Stalingrad during WWII. That same year, she reprised her role as the buttoned up librarian with spunk in the box office success, "The Mummy Returns" (2001).

In 2001, Weisz appeared on the London stage again in a production of Neil Labute’s collegiate love story, “The Shape of Things.” Around that time, she stayed on in London to give a warm turn as a single mom and potential love interest for immature cad Hugh Grant in "About a Boy" (2002) – a film which proved her cache as a Hollywood rom-com actress. She turned femme fatale for the neo-noir con game flick "Confidence" (2003), delivering a seductive performance as the dangerous dame in the middle. She continued her Hollywood run alongside Dustin Hoffman, John Cusack and Gene Hackman in "Runaway Jury" (2003); a big-screen adaptation of John Grisham's legal potboiler, playing a mysterious woman entrenched in a deadly effort to influence a verdict. The actress then was seriously miscast as Ben Stiller's wife in the disastrously unfunny comedy "Envy" (2004), a film that failed to utilize either her acting talents or her beauty. Again flawlessly adopting an American accent, Weisz returned to horror-adventure with the comic book-derived "Constantine" (2005), playing a policewoman drawn into the horrific world of occult investigator John Constantine (Keanu Reeves) after the mysterious death of her twin sister.

Weisz at last found a role equal to her considerable abilities and was overwhelming lauded for "The Constant Gardener" (2005). In director Fernando Meirelles' gripping adaptation of the John LeCarre novel, Weisz played the charming but politically outspoken wife of a complacent British diplomat in Africa (Ralph Fiennes) whose murder sends him on a journey to unravel the dark, twisting secrets that led to her demise. Weisz delivered a startlingly three-dimensional performance in this engrossing, moving and poetic human drama set against a colorful, chaotic African backdrop. Weisz earned a Golden Globe Award, an Academy Award, a Screen Actors Guild Award, as well as both a BAFTA and a Critic’s Circle Awards in her home country – meaning, she took all international awards for this performance. She appeared at the 78th Academy Awards very pregnant with her first child, that of fiancé and film director Darren Aronofsky – most famous for helming “Pi” (1998) and “Requiem for a Dream” (2000).

In 2005, Weisz starred in Fernando Meirelles's The Constant Gardener, a film adaptation of a John le Carré thriller of the same title set in the slums of Kibera and Loiyangalani, Kenya. For this role, Weisz won the 2006 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, the 2006 Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress and the 2006 Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role. In her home country, she was recognized as a leading role for the film according to the nomination from the BAFTA awards and winnings from the London Critics Circle Film Awards and British Independent Film Awards.

The following year, Weisz and Aronofsky worked together for the first time in “The Fountain,” an ambitious sci-fi fantasy spanning time, space and philosophy – but ultimately missing the mark on most accounts. The film was inaccessible for broad audiences and failed to make back its budget, but Weisz was none the worse for her successful renditions of two challenging roles as a modern-day cancer patient and a 16th century Spanish queen. After another ill-advised foray into broad Hollywood fare with the Vince Vaughn holiday vehicle “Fred Claus” (2007), Weisz gave upscale romantic comedy another shot with “Definitely, Maybe,” playing an ambitious journalist and former lover of single dad Ryan Reynolds. Later in the year, Weisz was slated to appear in a co-starring role in “The Brothers Bloom” (2008), as a wealthy but sheltered heiress involved in an elaborate hoax by a pair of con-men played by Mark Ruffalo and Adrien Brody. 

In 2006 Weisz was invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The same year, she starred in The Fountain and also provided the voice for Saphira in Eragon. Her upcoming films include the Wong Kar-wai-directed drama My Blueberry Nights (in which she plays an "anti-Southern Belle") and director Rian Johnson's The Brothers Bloom, in which she plays a wealthy American woman targeted by two con man brothers (Adrien Brody, Mark Ruffalo). On 7 July 2007, Weisz presented at the American leg of Live Earth.

Weisz is engaged to American filmmaker Darren Aronofsky. They have been dating since 2002. They have a son, Henry Chance, born on May 31, 2006 in New York City. The couple reside in the East Village in Manhattan. They are considering getting married in a traditional wedding ceremony at the oldest synagogue in New York. Weisz previously dated actor Alessandro Nivola, actor Neil Morrissey, director Sam Mendes, and actor/comedian Ben Miller.

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