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First making an impression
on international audiences with her role as the sweet, virginal
Hero in Kenneth Branagh's 1993 Much Ado About Nothing, pale-skinned,
fine-boned British actress Kate Beckinsale has since stepped beyond
period pieces to prove that she is anything but a fragile English
rose.
The daughter of a BBC casting
director and famed television actor Richard Beckinsale (known for
roles on Porridge and Rising Damp,) Beckinsale was
born July 26, 1973. After her father's death from a heart attack
in 1979, the actress was raised by her mother. By her own account,
Beckinsale's childhood and adolescence were fairly troubled, marked
by struggles with anorexia. Beckinsale decided to follow in her
father's acting footsteps while still a teenager, and in 1991 had
her major television debut in Once Against the Wind, a World
War II drama in which she played Judy Davis' daughter. The same
year, Beckinsale enrolled at Oxford to study French and Russian
Literature, and pursued her education until committing herself full-time
to acting.
In 1993, while still a student
at Oxford, Beckinsale was cast in Branagh's Much Ado About Nothing.
Her supporting role was a memorable one, winning the actress a limited
amount of recognition amongst American audiences, but it was not
until 1995, when she starred in John Schlesinger's adaptation of
Stella Gibbons' Cold Comfort Farm, that her wattage began
to increase, at least in arthouses everywhere. The film, which was
initially made for BBC television, proved to be a modest hit, bringing
in respectable box office and glowing reviews. Beckinsale followed
the film's success with another two years later, starring as an
altruistic con artist in the quirky romantic comedy Shooting
Fish. The film was an unqualified hit in its native country,
becoming the third-highest grossing film in England for 1997. The
same year, Beckinsale further increased her visibility with the
title role in A&E's Emma.
Beckinsale next graced American
movie screens in Whit Stillman's The Last Days of Disco (1998).
She received good reviews for her portrayal of a cool and catty
WASP college graduate (for which she assumed an American accent),
although the movie itself met with a deeply mixed reaction. The
following year, Beckinsale, in addition to giving birth to a daughter
(fathered by long-time boyfriend Michael Sheen), starred in her
first big-budget Hollywood feature. Playing opposite Claire Danes
in Brokedown Palace, the actress portrayed an American girl
who, while on vacation with best friend Danes in Thailand, gets
caught with heroin and is sentenced to 33 years in a Thai prison.
-- Rebecca Flint, All Movie Guide
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