Rose Byrne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rose Byrne

Rose Byrne, 2008
Born Rose Judith Esther Byrne
July 24, 1979 (1979-07-24) (age 28)
Sydney, Balmain, New South Wales, Australia
Years active 1994—present

Rose Judith Esther Byrne (born July 24, 1979) is a Golden Globe-nominated Australian actress.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Byrne was born in Sydney, Australia, the daughter of Jane, a primary school administrator, and Robin Byrne, a semi-retired statistician and market researcher.[1] She attended Balmain Public School and Bradfield Senior College in North Sydney. She has an older brother, George, and two older sisters, Alice and Lucy. She began taking acting classes at age eight, joining the Australian Theatre for Young People and also attended the University of Sydney. In 1999 Byrne studied acting at the Atlantic Theatre Company developed by David Mamet and William H. Macy. Known to family and close family friends as Chabs after a family cat she had in her youth named Chablis, after the wine, a favourite of her native Australia.

[edit] Career

Byrne[2] was cast in her first film role, Dallas Doll, when she was 12 years old. She has appeared in a variety of Australian television shows including Heartbreak High, Echo Point, and the film Two Hands alongside Heath Ledger. She appeared in The Date, My Mother Frank, and Clara Law's The Goddess of 1967 for which she obtained the Female Volpi Cup at the 2000 Venice Film Festival. Meanwhile, she appeared as a guest in an episode of the cop drama series Murder Call. She also acted on stage, playing a lead role in La Dispute and starred in a production of Anton Chekhov's classic Three Sisters at the Sydney Theatre Company.

Byrne appeared in the music video of Darren Hayes's single I Miss You and starred with Australian musician Alex Lloyd in the music video for his single Black The Sun and was featured on the cover artwork for the EP. She also appeared in the TV Commercial for Sony and reunited with Alex Lloyd, appearing in his music video for 1000 Miles from the album Distant Light.

In 2002, Byrne entered Hollywood with a small role as Dormé, the loyal handmaiden to Natalie Portman's Senator Padmé Amidala, in George Lucas' Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones. and appeared the same year in the movie City of Ghosts with Matt Dillon.

The next year, she flew to the UK to shoot I Capture the Castle, Tim Fywell's adaptation of the 1948 novel of the same title by Dodie Smith. In the film, which relates the adventures of the eccentric Mortmain family struggling to survive in a decaying English castle in the 1930s, she portrayed Rose Mortmain, the elder sister of Romola Garai's Cassandra. She starred the same year in three Australian films: The Night We Called It a Day alongside Melanie Griffith and Dennis Hopper; The Rage in Placid Lake for which she was named Best Actress at the Australian Film Institute with singer Ben Lee; and Take Away another comedy.

In 2004, Byrne starred as Briseis the Trojan priestess who was abducted during the Trojan War by Achilles (played by Brad Pitt), in Wolfgang Petersen's epic Troy,[3] also starring Eric Bana, Peter O’Toole, Sean Bean, and Orlando Bloom. She then reunited with Peter O'Toole in the acclaimed BBC TV drama Casanova. Byrne appeared with Snoop Dogg in Danny Green's film The Tenants, based on Bernard Malamud's novel, and starred with Josh Hartnett[4] and Diane Kruger in the romantic psychological thriller Wicker Park where she played Alex, the woman who manipulated Josh Hartnett's character to keep him apart from the woman he falls in love with.

In 2006 Byrne portrayed Gabrielle de Polastron, duchesse de Polignac a French aristocrat and friend of Marie Antoinette, in Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette, alongside Kirsten Dunst and The Dead Girl[5] directed by Karen Moncrieff.

In 2007, she played Cassie,[6] the pilot in Danny Boyle's science fiction suspense film[7] Sunshine,[8] and then portrayed Scarlett Ross, an army medical officer in Juan Carlos Fresnadillo's sci-fi horror 28 Weeks Later, the sequel to Boyle's 28 Days Later.

She will next be seen in the independent film Just Buried,[9] a Canadian dark comedy written and directed by Chaz Thorne as well as an Australian film noir The Tender Hook with Hugo Weaving.

Byrne[10] is currently in a FX[11] drama production Damages,[12] playing the regular lead role of Ellen Parsons,[13] a young attorney torn between her hard-hitting, high-stakes new boss (Glenn Close) and her own ambitions.

She and Marie Antoinette director Sofia Coppola have both played handmaidens in the Star Wars prequels: Coppola appeared in The Phantom Menace, Byrne in Attack of the Clones. She was the face of Max Factor between 2004 and 2006 and named in the Most Beautiful People of 2007 list in Who Magazine.[14]

Byrne has supported UNICEF Australia by being the face of the 2007 Designers United campaign and a member of tropfest jury in 2006 and tropfest@tribeca[15] in 2007. She is a graduate and ambassador for NIDA's (National Institute of Dramatic Art) Young Actors Studio. She was recently named the first patron of Chauvel Cinemas presented by the Brisbane International Film Festival and named in honour of Charles Chauvel.

Byrne has used several different accents in her films: Australian, British,[2] American,[10] and the Canadian.[16]

[edit] Personal life

Byrne has been in a relationship with Australian writer, director and actor Brendan Cowell for over four years. The couple maintained a long-distance relationship for much of their relationship, with work commitments meaning they were often on separate continents.

However, Cowell has planned a move from Sydney to New York City, due to Byrne's success on Damages. Previously she dated Australian writer, director Gregor Jordan who directed her in Two Hands.

[edit] Awards

Nominated
Won

[edit] Filmography

[edit] Films

Year Film Role Country
1999 Two Hands Alex Flag of Australia
2000 My Mother Frank Jenny Flag of Australia
The Goddess of 1967 BG Flag of Australia
2002 Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones Dormé Flag of the United States
City of Ghosts Sabrina Flag of the United States
2003 I Capture the Castle Rose Mortmain Flag of the United Kingdom
The Night We Called It a Day Audrey Appleby Flag of Australia
The Rage in Placid Lake Gemma Taylor Flag of Australia
Take Away Sonja Stilano Flag of Australia
2004 Troy Briseis Flag of the United States
Wicker Park Alex Flag of the United States
2005 The Tenants Irene Bell Flag of the United States
2006 Marie Antoinette Gabrielle de Polastron, duchesse de Polignac Flag of the United States
The Dead Girl Leah Flag of the United States
2007 Sunshine Cassie Flag of the United Kingdom
28 Weeks Later Major Scarlett Ross Flag of the United Kingdom
Just Buried Roberta Knickle Flag of Canada
2008 The Tender Hook (post-production) Iris Flag of Australia
Adam (post-production) Beth Flag of the United States
2009 Knowing (filming) Diana Whelan Flag of the United States

[edit] Television credits

Year Television Show Role Note
1995 Echo Point Belinda O Conor Lead character
1997 Fallen Angels Siobhan Guest(1 episode)
Wildside Heidi Benson Guest(2 episodes)
1999 Big Sky Angie Guest (1 episode)
Heartbreak High Carly Whitely Guest (3 episodes)
2000 Murder Call Sarah Watson Guest(1 episode)
2005 Casanova Edith BBC Mini series
2007—2009 Damages Ellen Parsons Lead character

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.filmreference.com/film/94/Rose-Byrne.html
  2. ^ a b Sacha, Molitorisz (July 5, 2007). Rose Byrne accidental star. The Age
  3. ^ Michael, Fitzgerard (May 18, 2004)The Goddess of Troy The Time
  4. ^ Josh, Hartnett (July, 2004).TV.com Rose Byrne Josh Hartnett's interview. Interview
  5. ^ Craig, Mathieson (June 15, 2007). Rose by another name. The Sydney Mornig Herald
  6. ^ Kevin, Maher (March 17, 2007). Byrne as hot as the sun. The Time
  7. ^ Stacy, Layne (july 16, 2007). Horror.com Rose Byrne Interview. Horror.com
  8. ^ Jack, Foley (April 18, 2007). Sunshine Rose Byrne Interview. Indie London
  9. ^ Sharaff, Amy (September 10, 2007). Byrne Confront gory scenes in Just Buried. Metro Canada
  10. ^ a b Michael, Flaherty (July 19, 2007). 60 Seconds With Rose Byrne LA Times
  11. ^ Stephanie, Balogh (September 19, 2007). Rose Byrne grows in New York. Herald Sun
  12. ^ Tim, Surette (Augustus 14, 2007). TV.com Q&A: Damages' Rose Byrne. TV.com
  13. ^ Moore, Frazier (October 12, 2007). Byrne is damaged lawyer on `Damages' . "Associated Press"
  14. ^ Olivia, Bishop (June 15, 2007) Most Beautiful People: Rose Byrne. Who.com
  15. ^ McCarthy, Sean L (Augustus 31, 2007). Tropfest@Tribeca comes to NYC . "Nydailynews"
  16. ^ Collins, Catarina (September 10, 2007).Just Buried a hilarious look at some dark truths. Toronto Film Festival

[edit] External links


Persondata
NAME Byrne, Rose
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Byrne, Rose Judith Esther
SHORT DESCRIPTION
DATE OF BIRTH 1979-07-24
PLACE OF BIRTH Sydney, Australia
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH