|
Home
>> Musicians
>> Athletes
>> Supermodel/Misc
>> Actors
- browse gallery by first name. Select a letter below.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BIOGRAPHY Romola Sadie Garai, born on August 6, 1982, in Hong Kong and relocated to Singapore at five before her family returned to Wiltshire in the United Kingdom when she was eight, is an award-winning English actress.
Her father is a high-ranked bank manager of Jewish-Hungarian descent; her great-grandfather is Bert Garai, the founder of the Keystone Press. She attended an independent boarding school, at Stonar and later moved at sixteen to London to attend the City of London School for Girls where she ended up finishing off her A-levels. Garai was fond of drama and appeared in school plays, and also with the National Youth Theatre up until the age of 18, where she was spotted by an agent who whisked her away to play the younger version of Judi Dench's character in a television production called The Last of the Blonde Bombshells. After A-levels, she studied English Literature at Queen Mary, University of London; she originally intended to only study but decided to do acting on the side during the summer holidays.
It was during her first break from University that Garai landed a part in a BBC-produced television series called Attachments. It was this production that prompted her to make the decision to stop her education and concentrate solely on her acting career. Garai's first major film role was in 2002's Nicholas Nickleby. She played Kate Nickleby, a supporting role, in the well-reviewed film. The entire cast was widely recognized for their work and were awarded Best Ensemble by the National Board of Review. In 2003's I Capture the Castle, Garai played 17-year-old Cassandra Mortmain. She received glowing praise for her work and the film scored 80% at Rotten Tomatoes. Her performance earned her a nomination for a Most Promising Newcomer award from the British Independent Film Awards. Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (2004) was Garai's biggest critical flop to date, scoring only 23% at Rotten Tomatoes (though it went on to make $27 million worldwide).
Her performance received mixed reviews – many critics felt let down after her previous impressive turns. Later that same year Vanity Fair was released. Critics were split evenly, attacking the film for misjudging its characters but praising the work of the film's actors- including Garai, one of the few to keep her head above the film's melodrama. In 2005, Garai received another BIFA nomination, this time for their Best Supporting Actress award, for her performance as Siobhan in the independent film Inside I'm Dancing. This also split the critics evenly – it was described as featuring too much melodrama but very good performances. Her layered portrayal of the charismatic, beautiful and conflicted caretaker earned her the British Supporting Actress of the Year award from the London Film Critics Circle. Also in 2005 Garai starred in a lavish Australian miniseries called The Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant. At $15 million it was the most expensive miniseries ever shot in Australia.
While critics hailed it as "pleasingly old-fashioned adventure", it was her performance that won the most admiration and earn her two nominations: Best Lead Actress in Television from the Australian Film Institute and Most Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series from the Logie Awards. As The Observer noted: "As for the tireless Garai, she once again demonstrated an instinctive understanding of the vital difference between overperforming and overacting. Garai was last seen on television in the BBC's Andrew Davies adaptation of Daniel Deronda, which was screened simultaneously with Davies's ITV adaptation of Dr Zhivago, featuring Keira Knightley. Garai's Gwendolen was so superior to Knightley's Lara that it may have been the first time an actor was blown off not just the screen but a whole different channel." There has been much comparison and competition between Garai and Knightley.
When casting for Dr Zhivago, Davies originally had Garai in mind for the role of Lara, but when Knightley auditioned, he decided that she was the better actress for the role. A similar thing happened with Joe Wright's adaption of Pride and Prejudice; Wright had Garai in mind as Elizabeth Bennet, until he met Knightley for the role. Wright had initially thought that Knightley was too beautiful for the role, but her tomboy nature eventually won him over. Conversely, when casting his latest film, Atonement, in which both actresses appear, Wright ended up casting Garai in a role he had originally imagined Knightley would take. She is currently appearing in two Royal Shakespeare Company productions: as Cordelia in King Lear and as Nina in The Seagull. She can also currently be seen in Kenneth Branagh's new film adaptation of Shakespeare's As You Like It, as Celia. The film, which was released in theatres in Europe in 2006, has gone directly to HBO cable television in the U.S. View GALLERY:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Celebrity photos courtesy of FHM Magazine, Stuff Magazine, Sports Illustrated, MAXIM, PAPARAZZO, CAPITAL, AP, Reuters, IMDB, CP, WENN, Universal Pictures, Columbia Pictures, Lion's Gate Films, New Line Cinema, Twentieth Century Fox, Alliance Atlantic, USA Films © 2000-2008 MostBeautifulWoman.com
- All rights reserved. -- About Us
- Email
Us
- Advertise on this site
|