Tara Fitzgerald
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Quốc tịch: | UK |
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Tiểu sử
Tara Fitzgerald was born in Sussex, England. Her
mother, Sarah Fitzgerald, is Irish, and her father, Michael Callaby, was Italian. Shortly after her birth, her family moved to Freeport, in the
Bahamas where her grandfather, David Fitzgerald, was a well-established
lawyer. Her sister, Arabella Fitzgerald, was born there, but the family
returned to London when Tara was three. Her mother and father separated
when she was four-years-old and, along with her mother and sister, Tara
moved in with her uncle and Aunt Caroline. Her mother married the Irish actor
Norman Rodway when Tara was age 6, and the
birth of her half-sister, Bianca Rodway,
followed shortly thereafter. Rodway and Sarah Fitzgerald separated when
Tara was seven.Tara's formative years were spent moving around - a lifestyle that saw
her attending five primary schools while living in a variety of
locations which included Glasgow, Dublin, and Stratford-upon-Avon.
Eventually, Sarah and her three daughters returned to South London, but
she left at the age of 16 after passing her "O" level examinations, now
known as the GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) exams.
Her reason for taking a break from the educational process was that she
was not allowed to pursue her goal of attending drama school. Tara had
auditioned for RADA and the Guildhall, but she was unable to secure a
placement. She now recognizes that, at age 17, she really had not been
ready.Tara spent the next two years working her way around Europe as a
waitress, an experience that provided her with an improved perspective.
When she returned to London and decided to audition for a place at the
Drama Centre, she was accepted immediately. Her training at the Drama
Centre leaned heavily toward method acting which she recalls was like
one long therapy session of breaking down the ego, and then rebuilding
it. (Other well-known actors who trained at the Drama Centre include
Anthony Hopkins,
Colin Firth,
Simon Callow and
Pierce Brosnan).Life at the Drama Centre consisted of long days and hard work, but Tara
recalls the time as being one of the best in her life. She was living
at home with her mother, and working as a waitress at "The Ark"
restaurant in Kensington to repay the bank loan which she had secured
to cover her tuition fees. A theatrical agent noticed her performance
in an amateur production, and arranged for Tara to audition for a
co-starring role in the offbeat comedy
Hear My Song (1991). Tara was the
first actress to audition and, after the director had seen another 300
young hopefuls, the role was hers. Two weeks after graduating from
college in July, 1990, Tara was at work on a major film that turned out
to be a surprise success, and generated rave reviews of her
performance. Tara never looked back.Starring roles in several successful television productions during 1991
and 1992 followed. Tara received critical acclaim for
The Black Candle (1991),
Six Characters in Search of an Author (1992),
The Camomile Lawn (1992)
and
Anglo Saxon Attitudes (1992).
Her next major step was a co-starring role in the West End play, "Our
Song", where she acquitted herself nightly opposite one of the legends
of the London stage,
Peter O'Toole. This success was
followed by a role opposite
Hugh Grant in the Australian hit
film, Sirens (1994), for which the
Australian Film Institute nominated Tara as Best Actress in a Lead
Role.An American mini-series,
Fall from Grace (1994),
was followed by the Irish film,
A Man of No Importance (1994),
which found Tara sharing honors with
Albert Finney. Then came the two widely
different television productions
Mystery!: Cadfael (1994) (The Leper of St.
Giles
(#1.3)) and The Vacillations of Poppy Carew (1995).Tara was back co-starring with
Hugh Grant in
The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain (1995)
before she embarked upon another major change of pace by playing
"Ophelia" opposite Ralph Fiennes in
"Hamlet" on the London and Broadway stages. Ralph received the
notoriety, but Tara received the award for Best Supporting Actress from
the New York Critics Circle.Tara's next success was co-starring with
Ewan McGregor in the highly acclaimed
comedy/drama Brassed Off (1996).
Then, it was back to BBC television for
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1996),
The Woman in White (1997)
and
The Prince of Hearts (1997),
all of which were featured on the U.S. mainstay, "Masterpiece Theatre".
Tara's next theatrical film was
Conquest (1998), which was produced in
Canada. Back on the British side of the Atlantic, Tara starred in the
contemporary
Little White Lies (1998)
and the Daphne Du Maurier swashbuckler
(also featured on Masterpiece Theatre)
Frenchman's Creek (1998),
for which she received the award for Best Actress at the 1999 Reims
International Television Festival.A major part in the film
Childhood (2001) (which,
regrettably, has never been released) was followed by the harrowing
role of a stalked woman in the psychological drama
In the Name of Love (1999).
Radio dramatizations have included "A Handful of Dust", "Look Back in
Anger", "The African Queen" and, most recently, "Laughter in
Leningrad".Tara has been heard as the voice of the narrator in such diverse
television mini-series as Wild Thing (Animal Life), The Final Day
(Celebrity Deaths), Vice - Inside Britain's Sex Business
(Self-explanatory), Reputations (Biographies), Omnibus: A Long Time
Ago, The Story of Star Wars (TV Special) and, most recently, The
Changemakers.You also will hear Tara's great voice doing radio and television
advertisements for products ranging from Johnson's Facial Wipes to
Norwich Union Insurance.Tara's recent cinematic appearances have included co-starring with
Rutger Hauer in
New World Disorder (1999), and
starring opposite Rhys Ifans and
Joseph Fiennes in
Rancid Aluminum (2000).During this period, Tara appeared on stage in the title role of
"Antigone", and as "Blanche du Bois" in "A Streetcar Named Desire".In 2001, Tara appeared as the female lead in the World War II drama,
Dark Blue World (2001) (aka "Dark
Blue World"), a Czech film by Academy Award-winning director
Jan Sverák
(Kolya (1996)). She was also seen on the big screen in
I Capture the Castle (2003),
a romantic comedy based upon the 1948 novel by
Dodie Smith (101 Dalmatians).Tara's recent television work has included a starring role in a segment
of the highly-regarded psychological drama series
Murder in Mind (2001),
Echoes (2003).
She also played the leading female role in
Love Again (2003), a
dramatization of the life of British poet
Philip Larkin, which was telecast on the
BBC in July.Tara has completed work on
Secret Passage (2004) opposite
John Turturro, a period drama which is set
in Venice during the Spanish Inquisition, and
Five Children and It (2004),
a family adventure film based on E. Nesbit's
classic 1902 novel, which was released in the U.K. on October 22, 2004.
During the late winter and early spring of 2004, Tara completed a very
successful tour of the United Kingdom playing the role of "Nora Helmer"
in "A Doll's House", for which she received high critical acclaim. In
the fall of 2004, she began a tour in the role of "Mara Hill" in a new
comedy "Clouds", by Michael Frayn.During her career, Tara has picked her roles cautiously, always seeking
to play the role of a strong woman. She feels that playing characters
who have weak and insipid parts do not provide her with the motivation
that the role of a strong woman can deliver. She has been remarkably
successful in a variety of genre ranging from historical costume dramas
(The Woman in White (1997),
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1996)
and
Frenchman's Creek (1998)),
to contemporary psychological suspense dramas
(Little White Lies (1998)
and
In the Name of Love (1999)),
as well as comedy dramas
(Brassed Off (1996) and
Conquest (1998)), and offbeat comedies
(Sirens (1994) and
The Vacillations of Poppy Carew (1995)).
Her fine performance in the World War II drama
Dark Blue World (2001) (aka "Dark
Blue World") and her recent work on stage give further evidence of her
acting versatility.
mother, Sarah Fitzgerald, is Irish, and her father, Michael Callaby, was Italian. Shortly after her birth, her family moved to Freeport, in the
Bahamas where her grandfather, David Fitzgerald, was a well-established
lawyer. Her sister, Arabella Fitzgerald, was born there, but the family
returned to London when Tara was three. Her mother and father separated
when she was four-years-old and, along with her mother and sister, Tara
moved in with her uncle and Aunt Caroline. Her mother married the Irish actor
Norman Rodway when Tara was age 6, and the
birth of her half-sister, Bianca Rodway,
followed shortly thereafter. Rodway and Sarah Fitzgerald separated when
Tara was seven.Tara's formative years were spent moving around - a lifestyle that saw
her attending five primary schools while living in a variety of
locations which included Glasgow, Dublin, and Stratford-upon-Avon.
Eventually, Sarah and her three daughters returned to South London, but
she left at the age of 16 after passing her "O" level examinations, now
known as the GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) exams.
Her reason for taking a break from the educational process was that she
was not allowed to pursue her goal of attending drama school. Tara had
auditioned for RADA and the Guildhall, but she was unable to secure a
placement. She now recognizes that, at age 17, she really had not been
ready.Tara spent the next two years working her way around Europe as a
waitress, an experience that provided her with an improved perspective.
When she returned to London and decided to audition for a place at the
Drama Centre, she was accepted immediately. Her training at the Drama
Centre leaned heavily toward method acting which she recalls was like
one long therapy session of breaking down the ego, and then rebuilding
it. (Other well-known actors who trained at the Drama Centre include
Anthony Hopkins,
Colin Firth,
Simon Callow and
Pierce Brosnan).Life at the Drama Centre consisted of long days and hard work, but Tara
recalls the time as being one of the best in her life. She was living
at home with her mother, and working as a waitress at "The Ark"
restaurant in Kensington to repay the bank loan which she had secured
to cover her tuition fees. A theatrical agent noticed her performance
in an amateur production, and arranged for Tara to audition for a
co-starring role in the offbeat comedy
Hear My Song (1991). Tara was the
first actress to audition and, after the director had seen another 300
young hopefuls, the role was hers. Two weeks after graduating from
college in July, 1990, Tara was at work on a major film that turned out
to be a surprise success, and generated rave reviews of her
performance. Tara never looked back.Starring roles in several successful television productions during 1991
and 1992 followed. Tara received critical acclaim for
The Black Candle (1991),
Six Characters in Search of an Author (1992),
The Camomile Lawn (1992)
and
Anglo Saxon Attitudes (1992).
Her next major step was a co-starring role in the West End play, "Our
Song", where she acquitted herself nightly opposite one of the legends
of the London stage,
Peter O'Toole. This success was
followed by a role opposite
Hugh Grant in the Australian hit
film, Sirens (1994), for which the
Australian Film Institute nominated Tara as Best Actress in a Lead
Role.An American mini-series,
Fall from Grace (1994),
was followed by the Irish film,
A Man of No Importance (1994),
which found Tara sharing honors with
Albert Finney. Then came the two widely
different television productions
Mystery!: Cadfael (1994) (The Leper of St.
Giles
(#1.3)) and The Vacillations of Poppy Carew (1995).Tara was back co-starring with
Hugh Grant in
The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain (1995)
before she embarked upon another major change of pace by playing
"Ophelia" opposite Ralph Fiennes in
"Hamlet" on the London and Broadway stages. Ralph received the
notoriety, but Tara received the award for Best Supporting Actress from
the New York Critics Circle.Tara's next success was co-starring with
Ewan McGregor in the highly acclaimed
comedy/drama Brassed Off (1996).
Then, it was back to BBC television for
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1996),
The Woman in White (1997)
and
The Prince of Hearts (1997),
all of which were featured on the U.S. mainstay, "Masterpiece Theatre".
Tara's next theatrical film was
Conquest (1998), which was produced in
Canada. Back on the British side of the Atlantic, Tara starred in the
contemporary
Little White Lies (1998)
and the Daphne Du Maurier swashbuckler
(also featured on Masterpiece Theatre)
Frenchman's Creek (1998),
for which she received the award for Best Actress at the 1999 Reims
International Television Festival.A major part in the film
Childhood (2001) (which,
regrettably, has never been released) was followed by the harrowing
role of a stalked woman in the psychological drama
In the Name of Love (1999).
Radio dramatizations have included "A Handful of Dust", "Look Back in
Anger", "The African Queen" and, most recently, "Laughter in
Leningrad".Tara has been heard as the voice of the narrator in such diverse
television mini-series as Wild Thing (Animal Life), The Final Day
(Celebrity Deaths), Vice - Inside Britain's Sex Business
(Self-explanatory), Reputations (Biographies), Omnibus: A Long Time
Ago, The Story of Star Wars (TV Special) and, most recently, The
Changemakers.You also will hear Tara's great voice doing radio and television
advertisements for products ranging from Johnson's Facial Wipes to
Norwich Union Insurance.Tara's recent cinematic appearances have included co-starring with
Rutger Hauer in
New World Disorder (1999), and
starring opposite Rhys Ifans and
Joseph Fiennes in
Rancid Aluminum (2000).During this period, Tara appeared on stage in the title role of
"Antigone", and as "Blanche du Bois" in "A Streetcar Named Desire".In 2001, Tara appeared as the female lead in the World War II drama,
Dark Blue World (2001) (aka "Dark
Blue World"), a Czech film by Academy Award-winning director
Jan Sverák
(Kolya (1996)). She was also seen on the big screen in
I Capture the Castle (2003),
a romantic comedy based upon the 1948 novel by
Dodie Smith (101 Dalmatians).Tara's recent television work has included a starring role in a segment
of the highly-regarded psychological drama series
Murder in Mind (2001),
Echoes (2003).
She also played the leading female role in
Love Again (2003), a
dramatization of the life of British poet
Philip Larkin, which was telecast on the
BBC in July.Tara has completed work on
Secret Passage (2004) opposite
John Turturro, a period drama which is set
in Venice during the Spanish Inquisition, and
Five Children and It (2004),
a family adventure film based on E. Nesbit's
classic 1902 novel, which was released in the U.K. on October 22, 2004.
During the late winter and early spring of 2004, Tara completed a very
successful tour of the United Kingdom playing the role of "Nora Helmer"
in "A Doll's House", for which she received high critical acclaim. In
the fall of 2004, she began a tour in the role of "Mara Hill" in a new
comedy "Clouds", by Michael Frayn.During her career, Tara has picked her roles cautiously, always seeking
to play the role of a strong woman. She feels that playing characters
who have weak and insipid parts do not provide her with the motivation
that the role of a strong woman can deliver. She has been remarkably
successful in a variety of genre ranging from historical costume dramas
(The Woman in White (1997),
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1996)
and
Frenchman's Creek (1998)),
to contemporary psychological suspense dramas
(Little White Lies (1998)
and
In the Name of Love (1999)),
as well as comedy dramas
(Brassed Off (1996) and
Conquest (1998)), and offbeat comedies
(Sirens (1994) and
The Vacillations of Poppy Carew (1995)).
Her fine performance in the World War II drama
Dark Blue World (2001) (aka "Dark
Blue World") and her recent work on stage give further evidence of her
acting versatility.
Gia đình
- SpouseJohn Sharian(July 2001 - May 2003) (divorced)
- Mối quan hệ: Bianca Rodway(Half Anh em ruột)