Helen Mirren

Helen Mirren

Dame Helen Lydia Mirren, DBE (née Mironoff; 26 July 1945) is an English actor. Mirren has won an Academy Award, four BAFTAs, three Golden Globes, four Emmy Awards, and two Cannes Film Festival Best Actress Awards. In 2003, she was made a Dame for services to the performing arts at a ceremony at Buckingham Palace.

Mirren began her acting career with the Royal Shakespeare Company in the latter half of the 1960s. From her very first film appearance (playing the young muse to a middle-aged artist in 1969’s Age of Consent), Mirren displayed the overtly sensual screen persona that would become her trademark. Other early movies included O Lucky Man! (1973), Excalibur (1981) and The Long Good Friday (1982).

During her career, she has portrayed three British queens in different films and television series: Elizabeth I in the television series Elizabeth I (2005), for which she received Emmy and Golden Globe Awards for Best Actress, Elizabeth II in The Queen (2006), which won her the Academy and BAFTA Award for Best Actress, and Queen Charlotte in The Madness of King George (1994), for which she earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. She is the only actress ever to have portrayed both Queen Elizabeths on the screen.

Mirren has played the no-nonsense police detective Jane Tennison on the ITV series Prime Suspect for a total of seven seasons from 1991 to 2006, and won numerous awards for the role, including BAFTA and Emmy awards.

Making her West End stage debut in the 1970s, Mirren is set to return to the London stage in 2013, taking up the role of Queen Elizabeth II for the second time. Mirren is to be awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2013.

Read more about Helen Mirren:  Early Life and Family, Education, Film, Television, Personal Life, References in Pop Culture, Filmography, Further Reading

Famous quotes containing the word helen:

    I do wish you’d stop reading my mind.... It’s so frightfully disconcerting—like being followed up one’s trousers.
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