Keira Knightley
Introduction: Keira Knightley
Introduction
Biography of Keira Knightley
Keira KnightleyBorn: 22 March 1985
Few actresses enjoy the kind of success Keira Knightley saw in 2003. First, her major picture starring debut, Pirates Of The Caribbean, entered the all-time Top 20 of box-office hits. Then, due to this success, Keira Knightley earlier low-budget effort, Bend It Like Beckham, already a cult smash, found its release widened dramatically, taking it into undreamed of profit. Following these with Love, Actually, the latest cute rom-com from Richard "Notting Hill" Curtis, her rise in a few short months would be nothing short of phenomenal. And still Keira Knightley was only 18.
Yet, despite Keira Knightley tender years, Keira Knightley already had a fair amount of working experience. Like such American actresses as Kirsten Dunst and Julia Stiles, Keira Knightley had begun her career at an absurdly young age. Unlike them, though, Keira Knightley had not done so through the actions of "pushy" parents. Keira Knightley focus was all her own, and had first become apparent at the absurdly young age of 3.
Keira Knightley was born Kiera Knightley on the 22nd of March, 1985, in Teddington, south-west London. Her name would become Keira as her Hollywood career took off, the change shamelessly breaking the golden rule of "I before E except after C" but making the name more easily pronounceable on a worldwide basis. Her father was stage actor Will Knightley, who'd make the occasional foray into television, such as starring as Mr Glegg in the BBC's 1997 production of The Mill On The Floss. Her Ayrshire-born mother, Sharman MacDonald, had also been a stage and TV actress (she once appeared in Shoestring). Having joined the Drama Society at Edinburgh University in 1972, then worked as a go-go dancer to pay her Drama School fees, she'd battled against stage fright for 12 years. Eventually, pregnant with Keira and having borne son Caleb five years earlier (he'd go on to teach music to underprivileged kids), in 1984 she gave up acting and concentrated on her family.
She also took up a career in playwriting and, after debuting with When I Was A Girl I Used To Scream And Shout, she proceeded to deliver such notable efforts as After Juliet, All Things Nice, The Brave, Sea Urchins, Shades and The Winter Guest, the last being taken to the big screen by Alan Rickman. On top of this, she'd write Wild Flowers and The Music Practice for TV, and a BBC documentary would be made about her, called Mindscape and featuring the young Keira Knightley.
Most kids like to join in with whatever their parents are up to, and Keira Knightley was no exception. At the age of 3, noticing that both Will and Sharman were getting regular calls from their respective agents, the young girl demanded one of her own. Keira Knightley was, of course, politely refused, but was insistent in her requests for the next several years. By the time she was 6, her mother struck a bargain with her. As the child had recently been diagnosed as dyslexic, she said that if Keira Knightley came to her every day of the summer holidays and spent an hour working on her reading and maths, she would provide her with professional representation. This challenge was important. Up until this point Keira had been ridiculed by her schoolmates for her supposed stupidity. In fact, her dyslexia meant she couldn't read words and wrote numbers backwards. It got so bad that she'd get hold of book-tapes and memorise them so that no one would recognise her failings.
To Sharman's surprise, the child complied and then forced her mother to keep to the bargain. And, to mum's horror, the new agent did his work well. At age 7, Keira Knightley filmed her TV debut, Royal Celebration, concerning the complicated lives and loves in a London square at the time of Prince Charles' marriage to Diana Spencer and featuring the likes of Kenneth Cranham, Minnie Driver and Rupert Graves.
Fearing their daughter would begin to neglect her schoolwork - a potential disaster for a dyslexic - Keira Knightley's parents told her she could only pursue her new career during the summer holidays. So, throughout the mid-Nineties, she did just that. 1994 brought a minor role in Joanna Trollope's controversial drama A Village Affair, featuring a lesbian relationship between Sophie Ward and Kerry Fox. Yet again Keira Knightley found herself amidst a heavy-duty cast, including Claire Bloom and Jeremy Northam.
1995 brought Innocent Lies, set in 1938, where an aristocratic family in a small seaside town are suspected of complicity in a murder. Joanna Lumley played the Nazi-supporting matriarch, while daughter Gabrielle Anwar and son Stephen Dorff hid some terrible secret - Keira Knightley playing the young Anwar in flashback. The next year saw another period drama in E. Nesbit's Treasure Seekers where a poor widowered inventor worked on a breakthrough in refrigeration while his five kids tried to help - Keira Knightley playing The Princess, a neat presaging of what was soon to come. This time her lofty co-stars included James Wilby, Gina McKee and Ian Richardson.
Meanwhile, Keira Knightley education continued at Teddington School, a classy and well-funded establishment thats grounds extended to the banks of the Thames, where it had its own slipway for launching boats. With 10 science laboratories, a TV studio and a Music and Drama block it offered great opportunities. Through her early teens Keira Knightley would make the most of her spare time, too, attending drama workshops at the nearby Heatham House youth club. This was an extremely forward-looking club, established some 50 years before, where artists, musicians, dramatists and youth workers would teach kids such fun subjects as photography, football, DJing, breakdancing, skateboarding and acting. This was where Keira would gain most of her early acting experience. And, remember, for her this was a normal situation. Unlike the millions who seek instant celebrity by banging out soul-less karaoke on Pop Idol or scoring a part on some wretched soap-opera, Knightley did not equate acting with fame or big bucks. Due to her parents' efforts and lifestyle, she saw it simply as a job that needed to be learned.
Come 1998, it was back to period drama with Rosamund Pilcher's TV epic Coming Home. This saw Keira Knightley (who was "Introduced" in the credits) as Judith Dunbar, a quiet girl sent to an English boarding school by her parents in the colonies in the 1930s. Here she's befriended by a rich girl and eventually, due to tragedy in the family, taken in by the girl's folks, the movie following the lives of the two girls as they suffer class divisions and WW2. The older Judith would be played by Emily Mortimer, who'd fall for her friend's brother Paul Bettany, the cast also featuring Peter O'Toole and, once again, Joanna Lumley.
While still at Teddington School, Keira Knightley received a most extraordinary offer - to play a handmaiden of Natalie Portman's Queen Amidala in the forthcoming The Phantom Menace, part one of the Star Wars saga and perhaps the most hotly anticipated movie in history. In fact, as the plot required her to dress as Portman and thus act as a decoy, Keira Knightley would, to all intents and purposes, be appearing AS Queen Amidala. Trouble was, with George Lucas keeping his cards so close to his chest, this plot-twist, and thus Keira Knightley presence in the movie, was kept absolutely secret. Keira Knightley was, therefore, perhaps the only actress ever to not have her career boosted by a prime role in one of the biggest hits ever. ole was a satisfying one. It came at a good time, too. Upset at school due to a constant breaking up with friends mostly caused by her work, things had got so bad that a week before her 13th birthday her mother had allowed her to have her belly-button pierced - just to cheer her up. What cheered her more, though, was a part in Alan Bleasdale's adaptation of Oliver Twist, a work that courageously stretched beyond Dickens' work to enrich the characters and story. Here Keira played the young aunt of Oliver who, along with kindly executor Mr Brownlow, tries to protect the boy from his homicidal half-brother and, of course, the manipulative Fagin.
Now the offers of work were coming in thick and fast. 2001 saw her star in the Disney-backed TV production Princess Of Thieves where Keira Knightley played Gwynn, daughter of Robin Hood and Maid Marian, who, despite her father's promise to her dying mother, has secretly become an adept at archery and horse-riding. This proves helpful when Robin is imprisoned by the Sheriff of Nottingham (Malcolm McDowell) and attempts are made to assassinate Philip, the rightful heir to the throne. Only Gwynn and her dopey sidekick Froderick (who loves her on the quiet) stand between England and disaster.
It was an endearing romp and her first starring role (though she had headlined Star Wars I in an odd kind of way, as the Queen Amidala doll sold as merchandise had resembled Keira Knightley rather than Natalie Portman). It also introduced Keira Knightley to actor Del Synnott who played Froderick and would go on to star in the TV series Lock, Stock And Two Smoking Barrels and play D.S Carter in Murphy's Law. The couple would still be seeing each other when Knightley struck gold in 2003.
Immediately after Princess Of Thieves came another venture onto the big screen with the Brit horror flick The Hole. Here, alongside Thora Birch, Keira Knightley played one of four public schoolkids who are trapped for 2 weeks in a deep cavity originally intended as a bomb shelter. Keira Knightley character, Frankie, is blonde, charismatic and bitchy, going topless in her more lusty moments (a tad dodgy this as Keira Knightley was only just 16 when the movie was released). And all ends bloodily as The Hole reveals itself to be a cross between The Breakfast Club and Lord Of The Flies, the excellent Embeth Davidtz playing the psychologist who must unravel the truth behind the unholy mess. Though not a hit itself, the movie would bring Keira to the attention of the makers of both Bend It Like Beckham and Dr Zhivago.
Naturally, Keira Knightley education had to continue and, after filming the short Deflation (directed by Roger Ashton-Griffiths, Friar Tuck in Princess Of Thieves, who was assisted by her mother Sharman), Keira Knightley sat for her GCSEs while in the middle of shooting Bend It Like Beckham (is it a sign of falling standards that she still got 6 A-grades?). Soon the schedule would be too much to bear. Having started her A-levels at her local Esher College, where she studied Art, English Literature, History and Classical Civilisations, she dropped out during the first year, in order to take on Gillies MacKinnon's Pure and the major miniseries Dr Zhivago.
First though came Bend It Like Beckham. Here a young Asian girl dreams of playing football for England but is dissuaded by her disapproving parents. That is, until she's spotted playing in the park by Keira, a star of semi-pro girls' team the Hounslow Harriers. So she joins up and begins to live her dream, though there's trouble when both she and Keira fall for coach Jonathan Rhys-Meyers.
The movie was a real charmer and a major British success. Keira Knightley stood out as the tomboy Juliette Paxton, both in the scenes with her mother Juliet Stevenson, who attempts to make her wear a Wonderbra, and in the action sequences. For these she'd trained hard, at points with Simon Clifford, a coach of some renown who'd worked with Manchester United and with a young Michael Owen. Indeed, Clifford claimed that Knightley had picked up some aspects of the game quicker than Owen had (though of course she lacked his searing pace and unscrupulous penalty-winning techniques). The performance would win her the Best Newcomer Award from the London Critics Circle in 2003.
But 2002 wasn't finished yet. After joining Synnott (who'd also appeared with her in Deflation) with a brief role in the silly comedy Thunderpants, where a grossly flatulent schoolboy is hired by NASA, Keira Knightley moved on to Pure. This saw Molly Parker as a young mother trying to bring up a 10-year-old boy while struggling with heroin addiction on an east London council estate. He's befriended by Keira, the worldly-wise waitress at the local café who understands his situation but cannot prevent her own slide into addiction and prostitution. Depressing stuff, but well played.
It was time for yet another period drama, this time a "sexed-up" remake of David Lean's Dr Zhivago. Here Keira Knightley took on the role of Lara Antipova, a brave move considering she had to follow the character from the age of 16 to 32, as well as match the original enigmatic performance of Julie Christie. Not easy, given that, amidst the turbulence of the Russian revolution, she must represent Russia itself as she's abused and pursued by a series of men, including Hans Matheson's Zhivago and Sam Neill's Komarovsky. For the second time Keira Knightley engaged in on-screen steaminess (the part had actually been turned down by singer Andrea Corr due to the excessive nudity), stating categorically that it was all part of the job
Heavily advertised, Dr Zhivago was Keira Knightley breakthrough in the UK. And she enjoyed the experience throughout. Filming for three months in Slovakia and Prague, she'd had her own flat for the first time and, being as the flat was in the red light area, was pleasantly intrigued by the sleazy freedom of the dirty video shop on the corner, the prostitute who worked the turf outside her window, and the constant sex in the nearby bushes. You don't get that in Richmond.
Keira Knightley followed Dr Zhivago with three shorts. The first, The Seasons Alter, was an interpretation of Titania's famous "weather" speech in A Midsummer Night's Dream, with Keira delivering an extract alongside Cherie Lunghi's Titania and Lloyd Owen's Oberon. Then there'd be New Year's Eve, about a posh party where a fellow chats up Keira, thinking she's a respectable seventeen, only for trouble to brew when it's revealed that she's dangerously younger. Then there was the animated Gaijin, where she performed several roles, one being a British student who, unable to make friends in Tokyo, tries to program her robot to play Japanese music, only for the robot to cause more problems.
Now came Keira's big year. In 2003's Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl she played Elizabeth Swann, daughter of British governor Jonathan Pryce, who's kidnapped by Geoffrey Rush, an undead buccaneer needing her blood to find redemption. Pursued by her wannabe lover Orlando Bloom and Johnny Depp's camp and hilarious Jack Sparrow, she remained feisty to the last, even when walking the plank.
Despite fears that the movie would follow Cutthroat Island down to Davy Jones' Locker, it performed exceptionally well, quickly rising over the $200 million mark in the US. At the same time, Bend It Like Beckham, taking advantage of Keira Knightley 's newfound kudos, had its release widened from 119 veues to 990, its take instantly rising to $28.3 million (not bad on a budget of $4.5 million) with plenty more to come. Keira Knightley , who'd turned 18 just after the Pirates shoot ended, was now A-list and a bona fide cover girl. After all, as critic AA Gill had put it, "the camera just licks Knightley's face like an enraptured dog". Plans would immediately be put in place for Pirates 2.
After Pirates would come Love, Actually, which intertwined ten tales of love, featuring such luminaries as Hugh Grant, Liam Neeson, Laura Linney, and Alan Rickman. Keira Knightley claimed to have been continuously star-struck on-set and, for once acting her age, said she was less impressed by the major league thespians Rickman and Leeson than by former EastEnders actress Martine McCutcheon. There'd be further exposure when she became the new face of both luxury goods firm Asprey and the British Dyslexia Association.
After this, it was off to Ireland to play Guinevere opposite Clive Owen's titular regent in King Arthur, like Pirates a Jerry Bruckheimer production. This would claim to be more of a historical document than another stab at the Arthurian myth, with Arthur as a Roman general at the time of the Empire's downfall. Well, Hollywood knows best. Keira's Guinevere would be a member of British royalty, a woad-smeared warrior princess who joins forces with Arthur against the invading Saxon hordes.
Keira Knightley next project was to have been Tulip Fever, with Tom Stoppard adapting Deborah Moggach's novel of the crazy "tulip bubble" of 17th Century Amsterdam, Keira starring alongside Jude Law and Jim Broadbent. However, Chancellor Gordon Brown saw fit to cancel tax breaks available to British film-makers, throwing many projects into disarray, including Tulip Fever. Instead, Keira moved on to a Steven Soderbergh production, The Jacket, where Oscar-winner Adrien Brody played a Gulf War veteran charged with murder and locked in a mental institution awaiting execution. In here, like the hero in Slaughterhouse 5, he comes adrift in time, his jacket serving as a transporter. Now he travels through the past and tries to change events leading to the murder while at the same time seeking the woman of his dreams, someone he's met only once, when she was just a child, and who bears a striking resemblance to Keira, the only hospital worker who will help him. Originally planned as a mainstream thriller, The Jacket would have its budget reduced and be made as an art-house movie - and was all the darker and better for that.
Having missed out on Tulip Fever, Keira Knightley now found herself speaking the words of Deborah Moggach anyway, when the writer co-wrote the screenplay of her next project, a re-adaptation of Jane Austen's Pride And Prejudice. This saw Keira Knightley in the key role of Elizabeth Bennet, one of five sisters hoping to marry above their station and enduring all manner of misunderstanding and social intrigue. Matthew MacFadyen would play her D'Arcy. In real life, her D'Arcy had changed at the end of 2003 when, her relationship with Del Synott over, she took up with Irish model Jamie Dornan.
It was an extraordinary success story. This dyslexic kid with no formal training had suddenly conquered Hollywood. And, with the films she has in production, it seems she'll be at the top for some considerable time to come.
Filmography of Keira Knightley
- Keira Knightly Filmography
- Domino (2005) Keira Knightley plays Domino
- Pride and Prejudice (2005) Keira Knightley plays Elizabeth Bennet
- Jacket, The (2005) Keira Knightley plays Jackie
- King Arthur (2004) Keira Knightley plays Guinevere
- Love Actually (2003) Keira Knightley plays Juliet
- Pirates of the Caribbean (2003) (VG) (voice) .... Narrator
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) Keira Knightley plays Elizabeth Swann - Gaijin (2003) (V) Keira Knightley plays Kate
- Seasons Alter, The (2002) Keira Knightley plays Helena
- "Doctor Zhivago" (2002) (mini) TV Series Keira Knightley plays Lara Antipova (neé Guishar)
- Pure (2002) Keira Knightley plays Louise
- Thunderpants (2002) Keira Knightley plays Music School Student
... aka Donderbroek (2002) (Netherlands)
... aka Incroyable histoire de Patrick Smash, L' (2002) (France)
Bend It Like Beckham (2002) Keira Knightley plays Juliette 'Jules' Paxton
... aka Kick It Like Beckham (2002) (Germany)- New Year's Eve (2002)
- Deflation (2001) Keira Knightley plays Jogger
- Hole, The (2001) Keira Knightley plays Frances 'Frankie' Almond Smith
... aka After the Hole (2001) (USA) - Princess of Thieves (2001) (TV) Keira Knightley plays Gwyn
- "Oliver Twist" (1999) (mini) TV Series (as Kiera Knightley) Keira Knightley plays Rose Fleming
- Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999) Keira Knightley plays Sabé, Queen's Decoy
... aka Phantom Menace, The (1999) (USA: short title)
... aka Star Wars I: The Phantom Menace (1999) (USA: video box title) - Coming Home (1998) (TV) Keira Knightley plays Young Judith
... aka Heimkehr (1998) (TV) (Germany)
... aka Rosamunde Pilcher - Heimkehr (1998) (TV) (Germany) - Treasure Seekers (1996) (TV) Keira Knightley plays The Princess
- Innocent Lies (1995) Keira Knightley plays Young Celia
... aka Péchés mortels, Les (1995) (France) - Village Affair, A (1994) Keira Knightley plays Natasha Jordan
- Royal Celebration (1993) (TV) Keira Knightley plays Little Girl
... aka Screen One: Royal Celebration (1993) (TV) (UK: series title)
Photo gallery of Keira Knightley
TextNews, Gossip and Trivia Keira Knightley
Keira Knightley voted all-time sexiest woman
British newcomer Keira Knightley has been voted the sexiest movie star of all time.
The 19-year-old Keira Knightley beat Hollywood beauties Angelina Jolie, in second place, Halle Berry in fourth, Charlize Theron in 26th, Jennifer Lopez in 42nd and Julia Roberts in 56th.
Keira Knightley also pipped screen legends like Marilyn Monroe, Grace Kelly, Brigitte Bardot and Audrey Hepburn to the title.
Fellow Briton Orlando Bloom is the highest ranking male in the 100 Sexiest Movie Stars of All Time - the Lord Of The Rings actor takes third place.
When the Empire magazine poll was last carried out six years ago, Titanic star Kate Winslet took the top spot.
Now the British actress has plummeted to 35th place, and has been beaten by new entries Scarlett Johansson, Monica Bellucci, Troy star Eric Bana, Catherine Zeta-Jones and Kate Beckinsale.
Pirates Of The Caribbean actor Johnny Depp comes fifth and is the second sexiest male.
Other men on the list are actor Hugh Jackman (8), Alexander star Colin Farrell (11), screen legend Paul Newman (12), Marlon Brando (13) and George Clooney (21).
Troy star Brad Pitt is number 15, faring better than his wife Jennifer Aniston (44).
American actresses Gwyneth Paltrow and Sharon Stone are surprise omissions from the list.
Spider-Man star Kirsten Dunst makes it to 38th place, one spot above her ex-boyfriend, The Day After Tomorrow actor Jake Gyllenhaal.
Those who have dropped in ranking include Cameron Diaz (27), Ewan McGregor (30), Keanu Reeves (34), Leonardo DiCaprio (73) and Drew Barrymore (95).
The geeky look is as much in favour as the statuesque, according to Empire magazine's editor Colin Kennedy.
"Empire's first sexy list of the new millennium has said goodbye to such '90s darlings as Sandra Bullock (number one in 1997), Ralph Fiennes, Sharon Stone, Mel Gibson, Kim Basinger and Matthew McConaughey," he said.
"This list says hello to a new a breed of heart-throb, Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley hitting the top spots for the guys and the girls.
Hollywood beauty Keira Knightley, who recently completed the filming of the historic epic, King Arthur in Ireland, has made up her mind to buy a house in Dublin, so that she can stay away from the media glare.
" Keira Knightley rented a flat in Dublin for the film and totally fell in love with the place and the people," a friend of the star, was quoted by CNS news service as saying.
" Keira Knightley was amazed how easy it was to get about without being bothered or hassled. She's looking into buying a place there as a little refuge to get away from it all," he added.
Keira Knightley in Domino News
London, Oct 7 : Christopher Walken, Lucy Liu and Mickey Rourke have joined Hollywood beauty and lead star Keira Knightley in her latest film 'Domino', which is the real-life story of Domino Harvey, the daughter of the acclaimed actor Laurence Harvey.
According to the Hollywood Reporter, other likely additions to the project are Mena Suvari, Macy Gray, Jacqueline Bisset, Edgar Ramirez, Mo'Nique and Shondrella Avery
Keira Knightley Sexiest Movie Star of All Time
British actress Keira Knightley has been voted the sexiest movie star of all time in a poll carried out by Empire Magazine.
The 19-year-old Keira Knightley beat the likes of Angelina Jolie, Orlando Bloom and Marlyn Monroe to bag the top spot.
The world's top 20 sexiest movie stars:
1. Keira Knightley 2. Angelina Jolie 3. Orlando Bloom 4. Halle Berry 5. Johnny Depp 6. Marilyn Monroe 7. Jennifer Connelly 8. Hugh Jackman 9. Scarlett Johansson 10. Uma Thurman 11. Colin Farrell 12. Paul Newman 13. Marlon Brando 14. Natalie Portman 15. Brad Pitt 16. Rita Hayworth 17. Grace Kelly 18. Monica Bellucci 19. Eric Bana 20. Brigitte Bardot (ANI)