Juliette Binoche

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Juliette Binoche
Juliette Binoche, 2007
Other namesLa Binoche
Partner(s)Leos Carax (1987-91)
André Halle (1991-93, one son)[1]
Olivier Martinez (1994-97)
Benoît Magimel (1999-2003, one daughter)[2]
AwardsVolpi Cup for Best Actress
1993 Three Colors: Blue
NBR Award for Best Supporting Actress
1996 The English Patient
Silver Bear for Best Actress
1996 The English Patient

Juliette Binoche (in French IPA: [ʒylijɛt biˈnɔʃ]; born March 9, 1964) is an Academy Award-winning and Golden Globe-nominated French film actress. Affectionately nicknamed "La Binoche" by the French press, Binoche is well known worldwide for her roles in popular, award-winning films such as The English Patient (1996) and Chocolat (2000) as well as internationally successful arthouse films including Three Colors: Blue (1993) and Caché (2005).

Biography

Early life and career

Binoche was born in Paris, the daughter of Jean-Marie Binoche, a director, actor, and sculptor, and Monique Stalens, a teacher, director, and actress.[3] Binoche's mother is of Polish descent, and her maternal grandparents were imprisoned at Auschwitz because they were intellectuals.[4][5] Binoche also has French, Flemish, Brazilian and Moroccan ancestry.[6][7] Her parents divorced when she was four and Binoche, with her sister Marion, was sent to a boarding school.[8]

Binoche began acting in amateur stage productions, and at 17 directed and starred in a student production of the Eugène Ionesco play, Exit the King. The next year, she studied acting at the National Conservatory of Dramatic Arts of Paris (CNSAD). She found an agent through a friend and joined a theatre troupe in which she toured France, Belgium and Switzerland under the pseudonym of "Juliette Adrienne".

After quiting the CNSAD, she began acting lessons with famed coach Vera Gregh. Following in her mother's footsteps, she became a stage actress, occasionally taking small parts in French feature films.[8] Her first screen role was a small part in the 1983 television film Dorothée, danseuse de corde by Jacques Fensten, which was followed by a similarly small role in the provincial television film Fort bloque by Pierrick Guinnard. After Binoche secured her first big screen appearance with a small supporting role in Pascal Kané's Algeria-themed Liberty Belle, she decided to pursue a career in cinema.

1984 to 1991

Binoche's early films saw her firmly established as a French star of some renown.[8] The recurring themes of these films were of contemporary young women exploring their lives and their sexuality. Small roles in Les Nanas ([984) and Adieu blaireau (1985) led to more significant exposure in Jean-Luc Godard's Je vous salue, Marie and Jacques Doillon's La Vie de Famille which cast her as the teenage stepdaughter of Sami Frey's character. This film was to set the theme and tone of the early career.

In 1985, Binoche secured the lead role in André Téchiné's Rendez-vous. The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival that year, winning Best Director. In 1986, Binoche was nominated for her first César Award for Best Actress for the film. Binoche's next film was a role in Mon beau-frère a tué ma soeur by Jacques Rouffio, which was a critical and commercial failure. Later that year, she starred opposite Michel Piccoli in Léos Carax's Mauvais Sang. This film, however, was a critical and commercial success, leading to Binoche's second César Award nomination. In August 1986, she portrayed Tereza in Philip Kaufman's The Unbearable Lightness of Being based on the Milan Kundera novel. This was Binoche's first English language role and was a worldwide success with critics and audiences alike. After this success, Binoche decided to return to France rather than pursue an international career.

In 1988, she filmed the lead in Pierre Pradinas's Un tour de manège, a little-seen French film. Later that year she began work on Léos Carax's Les Amants du Pont-Neuf. The film was beset by problems and took three years to complete. When it was released in 1991, The Lovers on the Bridge was a critical success. Binoche won a European Film Award for best actress as well as her third César Award nomination.

1992 to 2000

Following the long shoot of Les Amants du Pont-Neuf, Binoche relocated to London for the 1992 productions of Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights and Damage, both of which considerably developed her international reputation. For Damage Binoche received her fourth César Award nomination. In 1993, she appeared in Krzysztof Kieslowski's Three Colors: Blue to much critical acclaim. The film premiered at the 1993 Venice Film Festival. The film also landed Binoche a Prize in Venice, a César Award for Best Actress as well as a Golden Globe nomination. Following this success, she took a short sabbatical during which she became mother of a son, Raphael.

In 1995, Binoche appeared in a big-budget adaptation of Jean Giono's The Horseman on the Roof directed by Jean-Paul Rappeneau. The film was a box-office success around the world and Binoche was again nominated for a César Award for Best Actress. This role as a romantic heroine was to color the direction of many of her roles in the late 1990s.

In 1996, Binoche appeared in A Couch in New York by Chantal Akerman. The film was a flop, but another 1996 film, The English Patient, based on the acclaimed novel and directed by Anthony Minghella, was a worldwide hit. It garnered nine Academy Awards, including Best Supporting Actress for Binoche.

After this international hit, Binoche returned to France and began work on Claude Berri's Lucie Aubrac opposite Daniel Auteuil, which was based on a true story. Binoche was released from the movie six weeks into the shoot, however, over differences with Berri regarding the authenticity of his script. Next she worked again with André Téchiné for Alice et Martin (1998) followed in 1999 by Children of the Century in which Binoche played the role of 19th-century French writer George Sand.

2000 saw Binoche appear in four successful, but different, roles. Firstly was La Veuve de Saint-Pierre by Patrice Leconte which saw Binoche nominated for a César Award for best actress. Next she appeared in Michael Haneke's Code Unknown, a film which was made following Binoche's approach to the Austrian director. Binoche made her Broadway debut in Harold Pinter's Betrayal for which she was nominated for a Tony Award. Back on screen, Binoche was the heroine of the Lasse Hallstrom film Chocolat for which she won a European Film Award for Best Actress and was nominated for an Academy Award and a BAFTA.

Between 1995 and 2000, Binoche was the advertising face of the Lancôme scent Poème, her image adorning print campaigns and a TV advertising campaign. There were three commercials featuring Binoche for the perfume, including an advert directed by Anthony Minghella and scored by Gabriel Yared.

2001 to 2006

Juliette Binoche and Jean Reno at Cannes, 2002

Following the success of Chocolat, Juliette Binoche returned to France for an unlikely role. Jet Lag (2002) opposite Jean Reno saw Binoche play a ditzy beautician. The film was a box-office hit in France and saw Binoche once again nominated for a César Award for best actress. In 2003, Binoche featured in an Italian TV commercial for the chocolates Ferrero Rocher. This ad played upon her Chocolat persona and featured Binoche handing Rochers to people on the streets of Paris. Next Binoche went to South Africa to film John Boorman's In My Country (2004) opposite Samuel L. Jackson.

Binoche then teamed up with Michael Haneke again for Caché in 2005. The film was an immediate success, winning best director at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival. Binoche was nominated for a European Film Award for Best Actress for her role. Binoche's next film was Bee Season with Richard Gere. Mary (2005) saw Binoche collaborate with Abel Ferrara for an investigation of modern faith and Mary Magdalene's position in the Catholic Church. The film was an immediate success, winning the Grand Prix at the 2005 Venice Film Festival.

2006 saw Binoche take part in the portmanteau work Paris, je t'aime appearing in a section directed by Nobuhiro Suwa. Binoche appeared at the 2006 Venice Film Festival to launch A Few Days in September, by Santiago Amigorena. Later in the month she traveled to the Toronto Film Festival for the premiere of Breaking and Entering, her second film with Anthony Minghella in the director's chair.

2007 onward

2007 marks one of Binoche's busiest years. The Cannes Film Festival saw the premiere of Le Voyage du Ballon Rouge by the Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-Hsien. The film was well received by international critics and will debut around the world throughout 2007. Dan in Real Life was released in October; currently awaiting release are Paris by Cédric Klapisch and Désengagement by Amos Gitai. As of July 2007 Binoche is busy at work on L'Heure D'été by Olivier Assayas. Following that Binoche will star in Certified Copy for Abbas Kiarostami and The Other Man for Richard Eyre opposite Liam Neeson. In the July 2007 issue of Cahiers du Cinema Binoche mentioned that she would be auditioning for the Rob Marshall musical Nine, currently in pre-production.

Personal life

Binoche has two children: Raphaël (born on September 2, 1993), whose father is André Halle, a professional scuba diver, and Hana (December 16, 1999), whose father is fellow French actor Benoît Magimel, with whom Binoche starred in the 1999 film Children of the Century. Binoche is currently romantically involved with Argentine writer/director Santiago Amigorena.

Painting

In the 1991 film Les Amants du Pont-Neuf, in which Binoche portrays an artist, the paintings used in the film were Binoche's own work. She also designed the poster for the film.

Binoche exhibited work done in collaboration with the French designer and artist Christian Fenouillat in 1993. They plan to collaborate again in the future and are currently working on pieces themed by Cinema.[9]

Charities

Binoche is involved with a number of charities, including being a patron of the Cambodian charity Aspecta since 1992. She is also godmother to nine Cambodian orphans.

In 2004 Binoche organised an auction for Médecins Sans Frontières in which disposable cameras were given to numerous celebrities and then auctioned off; the winner of each camera would then develop the pictures to reveal that celebrity's chosen subject.

Filmography and awards

Year Film Role Other notes
1983 Dorothée, danseuse de corde (Dorothy the Rope Dancer) Television
Liberty belle La fille du rallye
1985 Le Meilleur de la vie (A Better Life) Une amie de Véronique au bar
Rendez-vous Nina/Anne Larrieux Nominated - César Award for Best Actress
Adieu blaireau (Farewell Blaireau) Brigitte B., dite B.B.
La Vie de famille (Family Life) Natacha
Les Nanas (The Chicks) Antoinette
'Je vous salue, Marie' (Hail Mary) Juliette
Fort bloqué Nicole Television
1986 Mauvais sang (Bad Blood) Anna Nominated - César Award for Best Actress
Mon beau-frère a tué ma soeur (My Brother-in-law Has Killed My Sister) Esther Bouloire
1988 The Unbearable Lightness of Being Tereza
1989 Un tour de manège (Roundabout) Elsa
1991 Les Amants du Pont-Neuf (The Lovers on the Bridge) Michèle Stalens Nominated - César Award for Best Actress
Women & Men 2: In Love There Are No Rules Mara Television
1992 Damage Anna Barton Nominated - César Award for Best Actress
Wuthering Heights Cathy Linton / Catherine Earnshaw
1993 Trois couleurs: Bleu (Three Colors: Blue) Julie Vignon (de Courcy) César Award for Best Actress; Nominated - Golden Globe
1994 Trois couleurs: Blanc (Three Colors: White) Julie Vignon (de Courcy)
Trois couleurs: Rouge (Three Colors: Red) Julie Vignon (de Courcy)
1995 The Horseman on the Roof Pauline de Théus Nominated - César Award for Best Actress
1996 The English Patient Hana Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress; BAFTA Award;
Nominated - Golden Globe
A Couch in New York Beatrice Saulnier
1998 Alice et Martin (Alice and Martin) Alice
1999 Children of the Century George Sand/Baroness Aurore Dudevant
2000 Chocolat Vianne Rocher Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress;
Nominated - BAFTA Award; Nominated - Golden Globe
Code Unknown: Incomplete Tales of Several Journeys Anne Laurent
La Veuve de Saint-Pierre (The Widow of Saint-Pierre) Pauline (Madame La) Nominated - César Award for Best Actress
2002 Jet Lag Rose
2004 In My Country Anna Malan
2005 Mary Marie Palesi / Mary Magdalene
Bee Season Miriam
Caché (Hidden) Anne Laurent
2006 Breaking and Entering Amira
Quelques Jours en Septembre (A Few Days in September) Irène Montano
Paris, je t'aime (Paris, I Love You) Suzanne segment "Place des Victoires"
2007 Dan in Real Life Marie
Désengagement (Disengagement)
Le Voyage du Ballon Rouge (Flight of the Red Balloon)
2008 The Other Man (in production)
Paris Elise
L'Heure d'été (Summertime) Juliette
Une autre forme de silence (Another Kind of Silence)

Other awards

Won

Nominations

Template:S-awards
Preceded by César Award for Best Actress
1993
for Three Colors: Blue
Succeeded by
Preceded by Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
1996
for The English Patient
Succeeded by
Preceded by BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role
1996
for The English Patient
Succeeded by

References

External links