Annie Starke

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Annie Maude Starke (* 26. April 1988 ) is an American actress .

Life

Annie Starke was born in 1988 to actress Glenn Close and producer John Starke. Her parents met in 1982 while filming Garp and How He Saw the World and were officially a couple from 1987 to 1991. She attended Hamilton College in Clinton (Oneida County, New York) and studied art history . In 2011 she debuted in New York City at the Westside Theater alongside Rumer Willis in Love, Loss and What I Wore .

In 2001, Starke starred in the TV movie South Pacific , in which her mother played the lead role. In Albert Nobbs (2011) Starke played the role of a waitress, in We don't belong here (2017) she played alongside Catherine Keener as Nancy Green, her film daughter Madeline Green.

In The Nobel Laureate's Wife (2017) by director Björn Runge with Glenn Close as Joan Castelman, Starke can be seen in flashbacks as the young Joan. The film tells the story of Joan Castelman and her husband who travel to Stockholm to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature and look back on their lives. Also in Who is Daddy? (2017) directed by Lawrence Sher with Glenn Close as Helen, Starke portrayed the role of young Helen.

Starke has been married to finance manager Marc Albu since summer 2018.

Filmography (selection)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Annie Starke in the Internet Movie Database (English)
  2. a b Festal attraction: Mother of the bride Glenn Close is a dancing queen . Article dated July 2, 2018, accessed January 3, 2019.
  3. a b Annie Starke on Following Mom (Glenn Close) On Stage and Her Fashionable Debut in Love, Loss and What I Wore . Article dated March 31, 2011, accessed January 3, 2019.
  4. Film premiere of "The Wife": Glenn Close poses with daughter Annie Starke on the red carpet . Article dated July 24, 2018, accessed January 3, 2019.
  5. Glenn Close's Lookalike Daughter Is All Grown Up — and Ready to Step Into Mom's Shoes . Article dated October 3, 2017, accessed January 3, 2019.
  6. Hilary Weaver: Glenn Close May Be History's Greatest Mother of the Bride. In: Vanity Fair. July 2, 2018, accessed January 4, 2019 .