Juliette Binoche
was born
on 9th March 1964, in Paris. Her father was a sculptor and her
mother
a French teacher who gave drama classes. After a happy childhood
growing up in Loir-et-Cher, Juliette and her sister Marion moved to
Paris
to persue their studies. Juliette developed a strong interest in
the theatre, studying drama and mounting a school production of
Ionesco's Le
Roi se meurt at the age of 16. Having chosen to opt for
a career as an actress, she studied drama at the théâtre
au
Conservatoire de Paris. To earn a living, she worked as a shop
assistant
at the Bazar de l'Hotel de Ville in Paris, which she later claimed
allowed
her to make a close study of human behaviour.
Attracted by her
beauty,
the influential New Wave director Jean-Luc Godard gave her a small role
in his contraversial film Je
vous salue Marie. Her big break came in 1985 with a
leading
role in André Téchiné's film Rendez-vous,
which earned her instant recognition with critics and public
alike.
This was followed by appearances in two of Leos Carax's films which
cemented
her reputation as a promising acting talent, Mauvais Sang (1986)
and Les Amants de
Pont-Neuf(1991).
International stardom came her way in 1988 for her role in Philip
Kaufman's The
Unbearable Lightness of Being.
Since, Juliette
Binoche's
career has blossomed and she is now regarded as one of the finest
actresses
of her generation, much sought after by the world's leading film
directors.
She appeared opposite Jeremy Irons in Louis Malle's Fatale
(1992) and later starred in Krzysztof Kieslowski's Trois
Couleurs: Blue (1993) (for which she won a César and
the
best actress award at Venice). Further success followed with
Jean-Paul
Rappeneau's Le Hussard sur le toit (1995), before
Téchiné's
comparatively unsuccessful Alice
et Martin (1998).
Binoche was
awarded an Oscar
in 1997 for her supporting role in Anthony Minghella's The
English Patient (1996). In 1999, she starred opposite
Daniel
Auteuil in Patrice Leconte's moving historical drama La
Veuve de Saint-Pierre.
With the success
of Lasse
Hallström's English language film Chocolat (2000), for
which
she was nominated for an Oscar, Binoche has been able to consolidate
her
international reputation.
©
James Travers 2002
To
find
out more about Juliette Binoche, visit:
http://www.juliettebinoche.fr.st/ |