词条 | Tara Fitzgerald | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| name = Tara Fitzgerald | image = Tara Fitzgerald (cropped).jpg | alt = Tara Fitzgerald | caption = Fitzgerald in June 2012 | birth_name = Anne Tara Cassandra Fitzgerald Callaby | birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1967|9|18}} | birth_place = Cuckfield, Sussex, England | death_date = | death_place = | residence = London, England | occupation = Actress | yearsactive = 1991–present | spouse = {{marriage|John Sharian|2001|2003|end=div}} | parents = | relatives = }} Tara Anne Cassandra Fitzgerald (born 18 September 1967) is a British actress who has appeared in feature films, television, radio and the stage. She won the New York Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play in 1995 as Ophelia in Hamlet. She won the Best Actress Award at The Reims International Television Festival in 1999 for her role of Lady Dona St Columb in Frenchman's Creek. Fitzgerald's appeared in the West End production of The Misanthrope at the Comedy Theatre, and in Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House at the Donmar Warehouse. Since 2007, Fitzgerald has appeared in more than 30 episodes of the BBC television series Waking the Dead and played the role of Selyse Baratheon in the HBO series Game of Thrones. CareerFilmFollowing her graduation from Drama Centre London Fitzgerald appeared as the daughter of a beauty queen in the comedy Hear My Song (1991). She came to international attention in 1993 when she starred with Hugh Grant in the Australian comedy Sirens. The film landed Fitzgerald an Australian Film Institute nomination for Best Actress in a Lead Role. Two years later she again appeared with Grant in the comedy The Englishman who Went up a Hill but Came down a Mountain. Fitzgerald appeared in a steady stream of independent feature films through the 1990s and 2000s, among them A Man of No Importance (1994), Brassed Off (1996), the Czech World War II fighter pilot drama Dark Blue World (2001), and the 2004 drama, Secret Passage (UK title: The Lion's Mouth), set during the Spanish Inquisition. In 2006 she appeared in In a Dark Place, and in 2014 she played Miriam in Gods and Kings. Fitzgerald decided to expand her career into directing after becoming frustrated with what she saw as a lack of interesting roles for older actresses. She was one of 12 filmmakers selected for Film London's 2015 Microwave scheme, which provides training and mentoring to filmmakers who then pitch their ideas to a panel that selects the two best ideas for production, with budgets of £150,000 each. Fitzgerald's film, Amsterdam, was one of the two selected; it centers upon a love affair between two middle-aged women, and was released later that year with Cate Blanchett in a starring role.[1] StageFitzgerald's first major stage role came in 1992 when she appeared opposite Peter O'Toole in Our Song at the Apollo Theatre. She has alternated between stage and screen for almost two decades, with frequent theatre roles. In 1995, she starred as Ophelia in Hamlet at London's Almeida Theatre, which led to her American stage debut. The production transferred across the Atlantic and played more than 90 performances on Broadway at the Belasco Theatre. Since then she has played Antigone in a national UK tour and Blanche Du Bois in Tennessee Williams's A Streetcar Named Desire at the Bristol Old Vic[2] and appeared in A Doll's House at the Donmar Warehouse. Fitzgerald has also appeared in Molière's The Misanthrope in 2009 at the Comedy Theatre (now the Pinter).[3] She appeared in The Winters Tale at the RSC in 2013, performed as Lady Macbeth at Shakespeare's Globe theatre and appeared in Gaslight at the Royal and Derngate Theatre in 2015.[4] TelevisionA veteran of more than twenty television programmes and mini-series, Fitzgerald has portrayed Victorian heroines and modern police detectives. Her first TV role was in the 1991 BBC production The Black Candle, set in Yorkshire in the 1880s. In 1992, she was featured in The Camomile Lawn. After her feature film success, she landed her first starring role in a television film, The Vacillations of Poppy Carew. She won Best Actress at the 1999 Reims International Television Festival for the costumes-and-pirates love story Frenchman's Creek. In 2006 she was featured in The Virgin Queen, before taking on the role of Dr. Eve Lockhart on Waking The Dead, joining that cast in 2007. She also had a recurring role on Game of Thrones, playing Selyse Baratheon.[5] Personal lifeFitzgerald was born Tara Anne Cassandra Fitzgerald in 1967.[6][7] She is the daughter of artist Michael Callaby[8][9] and Irish portrait photographer Sarah Geraldine Fitzgerald.[10][11][12] She spent part of her childhood in the Bahamas, where her maternal grandfather ran a law firm. Her sister, Arabella, was born there. Following the family's return to England when she was three, Fitzgerald's parents separated, and her mother then married actor Norman Rodway. She has a half-sister from this marriage, Bianca Rodway.[13][14] Her birth father, Callaby, died when she was 11.[8] Her mother's aunt was actress Geraldine Fitzgerald;[15][16] other cousins through the Fitzgerald family are the Irish novelist Jennifer Johnston[17] and Irish actress Susan Fitzgerald.[18] In 2001, Fitzgerald married the American actor-director John Sharian, who directed her in the short film The Snatching of Bookie Bob. The couple separated in May 2003 and later divorced.[19] Fitzgerald resides in London.[20] FilmographyFilm
Television
Theatre
References1. ^{{cite news |first=Rashid |last=Razaq |url=https://www.standard.co.uk/showbiz/celebrity-news/game-of-thrones-star-tara-fitzgerald-driven-to-direct-by-lack-of-roles-for-older-women-a3126171.html |title=Game of Thrones star Tara Fitzgerald ‘driven to direct by lack of roles for older women’ |work=Evening Standard |date=30 November 2015 |accessdate=4 January 2019}} 2. ^{{cite journal|last=Logan|first=Brian|date=25 September 2000|title=Tara Fitzgerald, the fantastic flirt, A Streetcar Named Desire|journal=The Guardian|location=London|url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2000/sep/25/theatre.artsfeatures}} 3. ^"Keira_Knightley, Damian_Lewis and Tara Fitzgerald to star in West End production of The Misanthrope" {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091216035746/http://www.playbill.com/news/article/133685-Keira_Knightley_Damian_Lewis_and_Tara_Fitzgerald_to_star_in_West_End%27s_The_Misanthrope |date=16 December 2009 }}, playbill.com; accessed 22 October 2014. 4. ^{{cite journal|last=Bassett|first=Kate|date=24 May 2009|title=The Donmar's new Ibsen isn't so much a clever interpretation as a bit of questionable rewriting|journal=The Independent|location=London|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/reviews/a-dolls-house-donmar-londonbrthe-observer-nt-cottesloe-londonbrgrasses-of-a-thousand-colours-royal-court-upstairs-london-1689909.html|accessdate=20 October 2014}} 5. ^{{cite web|title='Game of Thrones': Meet New Arrivals for Season 3|url=http://www.ew.com/gallery/game-thrones-meet-new-arrivals-season-3/558512_tara-fitzgerald-selyse-baratheon|website=ew.com|accessdate=28 September 2016}} 6. ^https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp61035/tara-anne-cassandra-fitzgerald 7. ^https://beta.companieshouse.gov.uk/officers/2NMl4H39wwvgfbXufLeMGcrX6A4/appointments 8. ^1 http://people.com/archive/tara-tara-tara-vol-43-no-23/ 9. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20180414091845/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-138118747.html HighBeam] 10. ^The International Who's Who 2004, Europa Publications, 2003, pg 542 11. ^http://people.com/archive/tara-tara-tara-vol-43-no-23/ 12. ^https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/tara-fitzgerald-naked-ambition-102996.html 13. ^https://www.irishtimes.com/news/from-reilly-ace-of-spies-to-shakespeare-1.291693 14. ^https://www.theguardian.com/news/2001/mar/17/guardianobituaries.filmnews 15. ^https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/life/687153/Game-Of-Thrones-Brassed-Off-actress-Tara-Fitzgerald 16. ^https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/arts-sheer-naked-talent-1288774.html 17. ^https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/tara-fitzgerald-naked-ambition-102996.html 18. ^https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2013/sep/10/susan-fitzgerald 19. ^{{cite journal|last=Roger|first=Sylvia|date=10 July 2009|title=My Perfect Weekend: Tara Fitzgerald|journal=The Telegraph|location=London|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/celebritynews/5787448/My-Perfect-Weekend-Tara-Fitzgerald.html}} 20. ^{{cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/5787448/My-Perfect-Weekend-Tara-Fitzgerald.html |title=My Perfect Weekend: Tara Fitzgerald |first=Sylvia |last=Roger |work=The Telegraph |date=10 July 2009 |accessdate=10 May 2016 }} 21. ^And Then There Were None (2005 production); accessed 20 October 2014. 22. ^Antony Sher and Tara Fitzgerald lead Broken Glass, westend.broadwayworld.com; accessed 20 October 2014. External links
13 : 1967 births|Living people|Actresses from London|Alumni of the Drama Centre London|British expatriates in the Bahamas|Drama Desk Award winners|English film actresses|English stage actresses|English television actresses|English people of Irish descent|People from Cuckfield|20th-century English actresses|21st-century English actresses |
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