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Claire Danes Biography:
Since 1994, audiences have watched as Claire
Danes has matured from awkward teen to one of the most popular actresses
of her generation. Whether portraying the angst-ridden Angela Chase on
My So-Called Life or trailer park trash in Oliver Stone's U-Turn, Danes
has consistently displayed an uncommon maturity and insight in her performances
that belies her relative inexperience. Her ability has won over countless
critics and fans and has allowed her the opportunity to work with luminaries
ranging from Jeanne Moreau to Jodie Foster and Francis Ford Coppola.
Claire Catherine Danes was born
April 12, 1979 in New York City and began acting shortly thereafter. With
the support of her artistically-inclined parents (a painter mother and
photographer father), Danes enrolled in an acting class at the Lee Strasberg
Studio when she was nine years old. After attending the Professional Performing
Arts School for the sixth and seventh grade, she went to Los Angeles in
the hopes of being cast in Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List. While
she was waiting for Spielberg's decision, serendipity struck in the form
of the makers of a new TV show called My So-Called Life, who wanted Danes
to star in their production. Danes agreed to do the show after turning
down the role that Spielberg had decided to give her. Always someone interested
in learning, Danes rejected Spielberg's offer because she wouldn't be
able to receive schooling in Poland, where the movie was to be filmed.
Premiering in 1994, My So-Called
Life lasted only a couple of seasons, but garnered critical praise and
a cult following during its brief lifetime. Moreover, it made Danes, if
not a star, a star in the making. Hollywood opened its eyes and took notice,
and soon Danes was being touted as the Next Big Thing. During the run
of My So-Called Life, Danes starred as the saintly, sickly Beth in Gillian
Armstrong's adaptation of Louisa May Alcott's classic Little Women (1994).
The film was a success, and allowed Danes to perform in the company of
such well-respected actors as Susan Sarandon, Winona Ryder, and Gabriel
Byrne (who would later play her father in Polish Wedding).
Danes followed up Little Women
with How to Make an American Quilt (1995), which, despite a stellar cast
including Anne Bancroft, Alfre Woodard, and the great Jean Simmons, failed
to make much of a critical or popular impression. Danes' next project,
Jodie Foster's Home for the Holidays, met with a similar fate, but afforded
Danes the chance to work with Foster, who became a sort of mentor to the
young actress.
Danes made two more films that
continued Danes' pattern of starring in movies that behaved badly at the
box office despite having bankable actors, I Love You, I Love You Not
(1996) and To Gillian on Her 37th Birthday (1996)). Then Danes finally
hit it big with Baz Luhrmann's wildly popular William Shakespeare's Romeo
+ Juliet (1996). Her portrayal of Juliet broke the hearts and opened the
tear ducts of many, while her pairing with Hot Young Thing Leonardo DiCaprio
undoubtedly caused mass swooning incidents in theatres the world over.
The critical and commercial success
of the film meant that Danes was soon in great demand, as evidenced by
the people she was able to work with over the next couple of years. After
Romeo + Juliet, Danes worked with Oliver Stone on the lunatics-in-a-small-desert-town
picture U-Turn (1997), a film that caused consternation among critics
and at the box office. Danes' turn as Joaquin Phoenix's trashy girlfriend
represented a departure from her previous, more innocent roles. She continued
the trend both Francis Ford Coppola's The Rainmaker, where she played
an abused wife, and A Polish Wedding (1998), in which she portrayed the
rebellious Hala, although neither of the films was particularly successful.
Danes continued the streak in her next two efforts, Les Miserables (1998)
and The Mod Squad (1998), The latter of which, despite the high anticipation
surrounding its release, was panned by critics who complained it looked
more like a Diesel ad than a movie, and largely ignored by the public.
In 1999 Danes appeared in Brokedown
Palace. The movie was nothing special, but received a great deal of publicity
due to some remarks Danes made about the Phillipines during it’s
making. She was subsequently banned from that country.
In 1998 she enrolled at Yale
University. This was responsible for the small hiatus Danes took from
her acting career. She has just recently begun appearing in theaters again,
starting last fall with Igby Goes Down (2002). She has also appeared as
a supporting role in The Hours, a movie with lots of Oscar buzz surrounding
it. Coming up she will be in the much anticipated Terminator 3 (2003),
Shopgirl (2003), and Flora Plum (2004).
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