Carrie-Anne Moss

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Carrie-Anne Moss

Carrie-Anne Moss, August 1999
Born Carrie-Anne Moss
August 21, 1967 (1967-08-21) (age 40)
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
Spouse(s) Steven Roy

Carrie-Anne Moss (born August 21, 1967) is a Screen Actors Guild Award-nominated Canadian actress known for her roles in Memento, Chocolat and The Matrix trilogy.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Carrie-Anne Moss was born in Burnaby, British Columbia. She has an older brother, Brooke. Moss's mother Barbara named her after The Hollies' 1967 hit song, "Carrie-Anne." Moss lived with her mother in Vancouver as a child.[1] At the age of eleven, she joined the Vancouver children's musical theatre and later went on to tour Europe with the Magee Secondary School Choir in her senior year. She attended high school with Gil Bellows. She enrolled at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Pasadena upon her return. In 1985, she left Vancouver for Toronto and became a model. This career took her to Japan and Spain in the late 1980s.

[edit] Career

While in Spain, she landed a role in the drama series Dark Justice, her first television appearance. She moved from Barcelona to Los Angeles, California with the series in 1992. She starred in FOX's short-lived primetime soap opera Models Inc., a spin-off of Melrose Place, as one of the models. Her big breakthrough came when she was chosen to play the latex-clad hacker Trinity in the 1999 box office success The Matrix. She reprised the role of Trinity in two sequels as well as providing voice-overs for video game and animated spin-offs of the film. (Coincidentally, she had previously co-starred in an unrelated made-in-Canada television series also entitled Matrix.)

Following the release of the The Matrix, Moss was snapped up by some of Hollywood's most prominent producers for starring roles in four films. First, audiences saw her star opposite Burt Reynolds and Richard Dreyfuss in the Disney mobster comedy The Crew for producers Barry Sonnenfeld and Barry Josephson. Then they saw her star with Val Kilmer in Red Planet for Warner Bros. for producer Mark Canton. She then co-starred opposite Juliette Binoche, Johnny Depp and Dame Judi Dench in Miramax's Oscar-nominated film Chocolat for director Lasse Hallstrom and producer David Brown. Next, she starred with Guy Pearce in the critically acclaimed independent thriller Memento for which Carrie-Anne earned an Independent Spirit Award for her performance.

[edit] Personal life

Moss married fellow actor Steven Roy in 1999. They have two sons, one born at the end of 2003 and the second born in November 2005. Moss, very keen to protect her and her family's privacy, has only revealed her oldest son's name, Owen.

Moss's best friend is actress Maria Bello, who is the godmother of Moss's older son.

[edit] Filmography

[edit] Films

Year Title Role Other notes
1993 Flashfire Meredith Neal
1994 The Soft Kill
1996 Sabotage Louise Castle (uncredited)
Terrified Tracy
364 Girls a Year
1997 Lethal Tender Melissa Wilkins
The Secret Life of Algernon Madge Clerisy
1999 The Matrix Trinity
New Blood Leigh
2000 Chocolat Caroline Clairmont
Red Planet Cmdr. Kate Bowman
Memento Natalie
The Crew Detective Olivia Neal
2003 The Matrix Reloaded Trinity
Enter the Matrix Trinity
Kid's Story Trinity (voice)
The Matrix Revolutions Trinity
A Detective Story Trinity (voice)
The Animatrix Trinity Video
2004 Suspect Zero Fran Kulok
2005 The Chumscrubber Jerri Falls
Sledge: The Untold Story Girlfriend
2006 Fido Helen Robinson
Snow Cake Maggie
Mini's First Time Diane
2007 Disturbia Julie
Normal Catherine
2008 Fireflies in the Garden Kelly Hanson awaiting release
Pretty/Handsome Bob's wife post-production

[edit] Television

Year Title Role Other notes
1991 Dark Justice Tara McDonald
1992 Forever Knight Monica Howard 1992
1993 Matrix Liz Teel 1993
Doorways
Silk Stalkings Lisa/Lana Bannon
1994 Models, Inc. Carrie Spencer
Baywatch Gwen Brown/Mattie Brown
1995 Nowhere Man Karin Stoltz 1995
1996 F/X: The Series Lucinda Scott (1996-1997)
Due South Irene Zuko
2008 Suspects announced

[edit] Awards and recognition

[edit] References

[edit] External links