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Biography:
Injecting both sexy vitality and strong-minded intelligence into
every role she plays, Rachel Griffiths is one of the screen's
most interesting and unpredictable actresses. Since her breakthrough
role as Rhonda in the 1994 Muriel's Wedding, Griffiths
has earned international appreciation for her work, particularly
in the form of the Oscar nomination she received for her performance
in Hilary and Jackie (1998).
Born in Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia, in
1968, Griffiths grew up in Melbourne with her art consultant mother
and two older brothers. A 1990 graduate of Victoria College, where
she earned a Bachelor of Education degree in drama and dance,
she began her career as a member of Woolly Jumpers, Inc., a community
theatre group. She had her first success as the creator and performer
of Barbie Gets Hip, which played at the 1991 Melbourne
International Film Festival.
Griffiths' true breakthrough came courtesy of her
film debut in P.J. Hogan's sleeper hit Muriel's Wedding.
As the fast-living best friend of the film's titular heroine (Toni
Collette), Griffiths gave a scene-stealing performance that earned
her both the Australian Film Critics Award and the Australian
Film Institute Award for best supporting actress. She followed
this triumph in 1996 with a drastically different role, that of
the earthy, ill-mannered pig farmer wife of the titular protagonist
(Christopher Eccleston) in Michael Winterbottom's Jude.
After returning to Australia to star in two back-to-back
comedies, Cosi (which had Griffiths sharing the screen
with Muriel co-star Collette) and Children of the Revolution
(both 1996), Griffiths re-teamed with director Hogan for a supporting
role in My Best Friend's Wedding (1997). Her first major
Hollywood film, it overshadowed her starring role in that same
year's My Son the Fanatic, a romantic comedy that featured
the actress in a tough, dynamic portrayal of a London prostitute
who becomes involved with a Pakistani taxi driver (Om Puri).
Griffiths finally earned overdue recognition with
her portrayal of the real life Hilary Du Pre, sister of famed
cellist Jaqueline Du Pre, in Hilary and Jackie (1998).
Cast opposite Emily Watson as Jackie, she gave a strong, understated
performance and more than managed to hold her own against the
prodigiously talented Watson, whose own performance was tremendously
vibrant and forceful. The two actresses complemented one another
so perfectly that they both earned Oscar nominations, Watson for
Best Actress and Griffiths for Best Supporting Actress.
Griffiths found further success as the first-time
director of Tulip, a short film about a man's readjustment
to life after his wife's death. The film earned awards at a number
of international film festivals and established Griffiths as a
promising filmmaker. However, she quickly returned to working
on the other side of the camera, starring in such little-seen
films as Among Giants (1998), a romantic drama in which
she played an Australian hitchhiker who finds adventure in the
wilds of Sheffield.
Back in Australia, Griffiths won lavish acclaim
for her role in Me Myself I (1999), in which she starred
as a young woman who gets the opportunity to experience her own
life in a parallel universe. Although the film came in for decidedly
mixed reviews, critics were almost unanimous in their agreement
over the strength of Griffiths' performance. The following year
she could be seen in Blow Dry, a British comedy about two
competing hair salons that featured her as a salon owner who becomes
romantically involved with the ex- wife (Natasha Richardson) of
her business rival.
Turning up opposite Johnny Depp in Blow the
same year, Griffiths' rise to international stardom continued
it's ascent as she took home the Best Supporting Actress in a
television series award for her role in HBO's Six Feet Under.
Source: Rebecca Flint, All Movie Guide.
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