Vanessa Redgrave during the 2004 season of
Nip/Tuck.
Vanessa Redgrave, CBE (born 30 January 1937) is an Academy Award winning English actress and member of the Redgrave family, one of the enduring theatrical dynasties. She is also a social activist for human rights (see [1]).
|
Contents
- 1 Ancestry and Family
- 2 Stage career
- 3 Film career
- 3.1 Early film career
- 3.2 Julia
- 3.3 Later film career
- 4 Political activism
- 5 Quotes
- 6 Awards
- 6.1 Theatre
- 6.2 Academy Awards and Nominations
- 7 Filmography
- 8 External links
|
Ancestry and Family
Vanessa Redgrave was born in London, England. Her parents were Sir Michael Redgrave and Rachel Kempson (Lady Redgrave). Her sister, Lynn Redgrave, and her brother, the equally outspoken Corin Redgrave, are also acclaimed actors. Vanessa Redgrave's daughters, Natasha Richardson and Joely Richardson (by her 1962-1967 marriage to film director Tony Richardson) have also built respected acting careers. Redgrave also has a son, Carlo Nero (né Carlo Sparanero), a writer and film director, by a relationship with Italian actor Franco Nero (né Francesco Sparanero), whom she met while filming Camelot in 1967. During the late 1970s and '80s she had a long-term relationship with actor Timothy Dalton.
Stage career
Vanessa Redgrave entered the Central School of Speech and Drama in 1954. She first appeared in the West End, playing opposite her father, in 1958.
Redgrave continues to work regularly in the theatre. In 2003 she won a Tony Award for "Best Actress in a Play" for her performance in the Broadway revival of Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey Into Night. In January 2006, Redgrave was presented the Ibsen Centennial Award for her "outstanding work in interpreting many of Henrik Ibsen's works over the last decades" (see[2]). Previous recipients of the award include Liv Ullmann, Glenda Jackson, and Claire Bloom.
Redgrave will play Joan Didion in Didion's upcoming New York stage adaptation of her recent book, The Year of Magical Thinking (see[3]).
Film career
Early film career
Highlights of Vanessa Redgrave's early film career include her first starring role in Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment (for which she earned an Oscar nomination, a Cannes award, a Golden Globe nomination and a BAFTA Film Award); her portrayal of the cool London swinger, Jane, in 1966’s Blow Up, her spirited portrayal of dancer Isadora Duncan in Isadora (for which she won a National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress, along with a Golden Globe and Oscar nomination in 1969); and various portrayals of historical figures - ranging from Andromache in The Trojan Women, to Mary of Scotland in Mary, Queen of Scots.
Julia
In 1977, Redgrave funded and narrated a documentary film on the plight of the Palestinian people. That same year she starred in the film Julia, about a woman murdered by the Nazi regime in the years prior to World War II for her anti-Fascist activism. Her co-star in the film was Jane Fonda who, in her 2005 autobiography, noted that "there is a quality about Vanessa that makes me feel as if she resides in a netherworld of mystery that eludes the rest of us mortals. Her voice seems to come from some deep place that knows all suffering and all secrets. Watching her work is like seeing through layers of glass, each layer painted in mythic watercolor images, layer after layer, until it becomes dark - but even then you know you haven't come to the bottom of it . . . The only other time I had experienced this with an actor was with Marlon Brando . . . Like Vanessa, he always seemed to be in another reality, working off some secret, magnetic, inner rhythm."
Redgrave's performance in Julia garnered an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. However, members of the Jewish Defense League (JDL), led by Rabbi Meir Kahane, chose to picket the awards ceremony in the spring of 1978 to protest against both Redgrave and her support of the Palestinian cause.
Aware of the JDL's presence outside, Redgrave, in her acceptance speech, denounced all forms of totalitarianism, and noted that she or the Academy (who had received death threats if she won)would not be intimidated by "a small bunch of Zionist hoodlums whose behavior is an insult to the stature to Jews all over the world." Her statement was greeted by both applause and boos from the audience.
Later in the broadcast veteran screenwriter and Oscar presenter Paddy Chayefsky told the audience members that “there's a little matter I'd like to tidy up…at least if I expect to live with myself tomorrow morning. I would like to say that I'm sick and tired of people exploiting the Academy Awards for the propagation of their own personal propaganda. I would like to suggest to Miss Redgrave that her winning an Academy Award is not a pivotal moment in history, does not require a proclamation and a simple ‘Thank you' would have sufficed.” He received thunderous applause.
In 1978 Rabbi Meir Kahane published a book entitled "Listen Vanessa, I am a Zionist", which was later renamed "Listen World, Listen Jew" in direct response to Redgrave's comments at the Academy Awards. To this day many right-wing Jewish groups, such as the JDL, consider Redgrave a supporter of terrorism. The JDL itself, however, has been described by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in Congressional testimony as a “violent” and “extremist” group. In a sidebar in its “Terrorism 2000/2001” report, the Bureau notes, “The Jewish Defense League has been deemed a right-wing terrorist group.” (see [4])
In June 2005 Redgrave was asked on Larry King Live: “Regardless of distinctions about policy, do you support Israel's right to exist?” “Yes, I do,” she replied. (see [5])
Later film career
Later film roles of note include those of suffragette Olive Chancellor in The Bostonians (1984, a fourth Best Actress Academy Award nomination), transsexual Renee Richards in Second Serve (1986); Mrs. Wilcox in Howards End (1992, her sixth Academy Award nomination, this time in a supporting role); crime boss Max in Mission: Impossible (1996, when discussing the role of Max, DePalma and Cruise thought it would be fun to cast an actor like Redgrave, luckily they decided to go with the real thing); Oscar Wilde’s mother in Wilde (1997); Clarissa Dalloway in Mrs. Dalloway (1997); and Dr. Wick in Girl, Interrupted (1999). Many of these roles and others, garnered various accolades for Redgrave.
Her performance as a lesbian grieving the loss of her longtime partner in the HBO series If These Walls Could Talk 2 earned her a Golden Globe for “Best TV Series Supporting Actress” in 2000. This same performance also led to an “Excellence in Media Award” by the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD). The award honors “a member of the entertainment community who has made a significant difference in promoting equal rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people” (see [6]).
Political activism
Since the 1960s Redgrave has supported a range of human rights causes, including opposition to the Vietnam War, nuclear disarmament, independence for northern Ireland, freedom for Soviet Jews (she was awarded the Sakharov medal by Sakharov's widow, Yelena Bonner in 1993 for her efforts), and aid for Bosnian Muslims and other victims of war. She serves as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and was a co-founding member of Artists Against Racism.
Redgrave identifies as a socialist, but her opposition to Soviet oppression led her, early in her career, to join the anti-Stalinist Workers' Revolutionary Party (UK) (WRP), on whose ticket she twice ran for Parliament. Redgrave's Trotskyist political views have been a cause of controversy for some, as has her membership in the WRP. She remained loyal to WRP founder Gerry Healy when he was expelled from the WRP in the mid-1980s. She and other Healy loyalists founded the short-lived Marxist Party in the 1990s. Since 2004 she has been a member of the Peace and Progress Party.
In 1980 Redgrave made her first American TV debut as concentration-camp survivor Fania Fénelon in the Arthur Miller-scripted TV movie Playing for Time – a part for which she won an Emmy as Outstanding Lead Actress in 1981. The decision to cast Redgrave as Fenelon was, however, a source of controversy for some Jewish individuals and organizations. In light of Redgrave's support for the Palestinian cause, even Fenelon objected to her casting. Redgrave was perplexed by such hostility, stating in her 1991 autobiography her long-held belief that "the struggle against anti-Semitism and for the self-determination of the Palestinians form a single whole." (p. 306)
In December 2002 Redgrave paid £50,000 bail for Chechen separatist Deputy Premier and special envoy Akhmed Zakayev, who had sought political asylum in the United Kingdom and was accused by the Russian government of aiding and abetting hostage-takings in the Moscow Hostage Crisis of 2002--in which 128 hostages lost their lives--and guerrilla warfare against Russia.
At a press conference Redgrave said she feared for the life of Zakayev if he were to be extradited to Russia on terrorism charges. He would "die of a heart attack" or some other mysterious explanation which would be offered by Russia, she said (see [7]). On 13 November 2003, a London court rejected the Russian government's request for Zakayev's extradition. Instead, the court accepted a plea by lawyers for Mr Zakayev that he would not get a fair trial - and could even face torture - in Russia. "It would be unjust and oppressive to return Mr Zakayev to Russia," Judge Timothy Workman ruled (see [8]).
In 2004, Vanessa Redgrave and her brother Corin Redgrave announced the launch of the Peace and Progress Party which would campaign against the Iraq War and for human rights.
Redgrave has been an outspoken critic of the "War on Terror" - the US and British governments' response to the terrorist attacks of 9/11 (see [9],[10]). During a June 2005 interview on Larry King Live, Redgrave was challenged on this criticism and on her "far left" political views. In response she questioned if there can be true democracy if the political leadership of the United States and Britain doesn't "uphold the values for which my father's generation fought the Nazis, [and] millions of people gave their lives against the Soviet Union's regime. [Such sacrifice was made] because of democracy and what democracy meant: no torture, no camps, no detention forever or without trial...[Such] techniques are not just alleged [against the governments of the U.S. and Britain], they have actually been written about by the FBI. I don't think it's being 'far left'...to uphold the rule of law" (see [11]).
In March 2006, Redgrave remarked in an interview with US broadcast journalist Amy Goodman, that “I don't know of a single government that actually abides by international human rights law, not one, including my own. In fact, [they] violate these laws in the most despicable and obscene way, I would say.”
Goodman’s interview of Redgrave took place in the actress’s West London home on the evening of 7 March, and covered a range of subjects – though in particular, the cancellation of the Alan Rickman production, My Name is Rachel Corrie, by the New York Theater Workshop. Such a development, said Redgrave, was an "act of catastrophic cowardice" as "the essence of life and the essence of theater is to communicate about lives, either lives that have ended or lives that are still alive, [and about] beliefs, and what is in those beliefs" (see [12]).
In June 2006 she was awarded a 'lifetime achievement' award from the International Transylvanian Film Festival, one of whose sponsors is a mining company named Gabriel Resources. She dedicated the award to a community organisation from Roşia Montană, Romania, which is campaigning against a gold mine that Gabriel Resources are seeking to build near the village. Gabriel Resources placed an 'open letter' in The Guardian on 23 June 2006, attacking Redgrave, arguing the case for the mine, and exhibiting support for it among the inhabitants: the open letter is signed by 77 villagers (see [13]).
Quotes
"I've come to see through the course of my life that people understand what I've tried to do, however inadequately I do it. I've just found people have come to understand me and be glad that I tried to do what I tried to do. And I do feel very inadequate about it, but I feel I must try . . . I think that any citizen can understand that you must raise your voice and do the best you can to speak out" (see [14]).
"I've been to Sarajevo a few times and have gotten to know a lot of people there who put on plays during the siege. I wanted to share in that because I knew it was important to them . . . I began to see something of what was going on there in terms of actually keeping up people's spirit to resist - the resistance that causes change - even in the worst imaginable circumstances. And I realized that it paralleled the same spirit that existed during the Holocaust and in the gulag. Theater and poetry were what helped people stay alive and want to go on living. That experience changed me, because I realized that if, as actors or writers or directors or designers, we can keep the will to resist alive in as many people as possible, then that's what we are about, and that's what we can do. It's more and more important because of the terrible things that are happening in our cities and the political and economic agendas that various governments have" (see [15]).
"As a mother you have got to have a view for now and a view for the future" (see [16]).
Awards
Theatre
- 1985 - Evening Standard Award for best actress, for The Seagull
- 2003 - Tony Award for "Best Actress in a Play" for Long Day's Journey Into Night.
- 2006 - Ibsen Centennial Award for her "outstanding work in interpreting many of Henrik Ibsen's works over the last decades.
Academy Awards and Nominations
- 1966 - Nominated - Best Actress in a Leading Role - Morgan!
- 1968 - Nominated - Best Actress in a Leading Role - Isadora
- 1971 - Nominated - Best Actress in a Leading Role - Mary, Queen of Scots
- 1977 - Won - Best Actress in a Supporting Role - Julia
- 1984 - Nominated - Best Actress in a Leading Role - The Bostonians
- 1992 - Nominated - Best Actress in a Supporting Role - Howards End
Preceded by:
Beatrice Straight
for Network |
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
1977
for Julia |
Succeeded by:
Maggie Smith
for California Suite |
Filmography
- Behind the Mask (1958)
- Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment (1966)
- A Man for All Seasons (1966)
Redgrave in Michelangelo Antonioni's Blowup (1966)
- Blow Up (1966, by Michelangelo Antonioni)
- Red and Blue (1967) (short subject)
- The Sailor from Gibraltar (1967)
- Tonite Let's All Make Love in London (1967) (documentary)
- Camelot (1967)
- The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968)
- The Sea Gull (1968)
- Isadora (1968)
- Oh! What a Lovely War (1969)
- A Quiet Place in the Country (1969)
- The Body (1970) (documentary) (narrator)
- A Mother with Two Children Expecting Her Third (1970) (short subject)
- Drop-out (1970)
- Mary, Queen of Scots (1971)
- The Devils (1971, by Ken Russell)
- Vacation (1971)
- The Trojan Women (1971)
- Murder on the Orient Express (1974)
- Out of Season (1975)
- The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (1976)
- Julia (1977, by Fred Zinnemann)
- Agatha (1979)
- Yanks (1979, by John Schlesinger)
- Bear Island (1979)
- Sing Sing (1983)
- The Bostonians (1984, Merchant Ivory Film)
- Wetherby (1985)
- Steaming (1985, by Joseph Losey)
- Comrades (1987)
- Prick Up Your Ears (1987, by Stephen Frears)
- Consuming Passions (1988)
- Romeo-Juliet (1990) (voice)
- Stalin's Funeral (1990)
- Breath of Life (1990)
- Behind the Mask (1991) (documentary)
- The Ballad of the Sad Cafe (1991, Merchant Ivory Film)
- Howards End (1991, Merchant Ivory Film)
- A Wall of Silence (1993)
- The House of the Spirits (1993)
- Sparrow (1993, by Franco Zeffirelli)
- Mother's Boys (1994)
- Little Odessa (1994)
- A Month by the Lake (1995)
- Mission: Impossible (1996)
- Looking for Richard (1996) (documentary)
- Smilla's Sense of Snow (1997)
- Wilde (1997)
Redgrave in Mrs Dalloway (1997)
- Mrs. Dalloway (1997)
- Deja Vu (1997, by Henry Jaglom)
- Deep Impact (1998)
- Lulu on the Bridge (1998)
- Cradle Will Rock (1999)
- Uninvited (1999)
- Girl, Interrupted (1999)
- The 3 Kings (2000)
- Mirka (2000)
- A Rumor of Angels (2000)
- Escape to Life: The Erika and Klaus Mann Story (2000) (documentary) (narrator)
- The Pledge (2001)
- Searching for Debra Winger (2002) (documentary)
- Crime and Punishment (2002)
- Merci Docteur Rey (2002, Merchant Ivory Film)
- Good Boy! (2003) (voice)
- The Fever (2004)
- Short Order (2005)
- The Keeper: The Legend of Omar Khayyam (2005)
- The White Countess (2005, Merchant Ivory Film)
- Thief Lord (2006)
Upcoming:
- Running with Scissors (2006)
- Venus (2006)
- The Magic Snowman II (2006) (voice)
- Cowboys for Christ (2006)
External links
- Vanessa Redgrave at the Internet Movie Database
- Vanessa Redgrave: Actress and Campaigner
- Mission Impossible: An Interview with Vanessa Redgrave
- "She's Got Issues" - The Observer, 19 March, 2006
- Vanessa Redgrave's Mrs. Dalloway: Revolutionary or Recluse?
- Peace and Progress Party
Categories: English film actors | English stage actors | Best Actress Academy Award nominees | Best Supporting Actress Academy Award winners | Tony Award winners | Mission: Impossible actors | Nip/Tuck actors | British Trotskyists | British Marxists | Commanders of the Order of the British Empire | People who have declined a British honour | Redgrave family | 1937 births | Living people