|

HARRY POTTER AND THE HALF-BLOOD PRINCE
HELENA BONHAM CARTER returns as Death Eater and Lord Voldemort
worshiper Bellatrix Lestrange, having originated the role in the 2007 hit "Harry Potter
and the Order of the Phoenix.” She will also star as Bellatrix in the two-part film that
completes the mega-hit franchise, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” based on the
final book in the series.
Her upcoming projects also include "Alice in Wonderland,” in which she stars as
the Red Queen under the direction of Tim Burton, and the BBC television biopic "Enid
Blyton,” in which she will star as the famous children's author.
Bonham Carter has starred in a wide range of film, television and stage projects
both in the United States and in her native England. She most recently appeared in the
blockbuster actioner "Terminator Salvation,” directed by McG. Last year, Bonham
Carter earned a Golden Globe nomination and won an Evening Standard British Film
Award for Best Actress for her performance as Mrs. Lovett in Tim Burton's screen
adaptation of the Stephen Sondheim musical "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of
Fleet Street,” starring Johnny Depp in the title role.
Bonham Carter was previously honored with Oscar®, Golden Globe, BAFTA and
Screen Actors Guild Award® nominations for her work in the 1997 romantic period
drama "The Wings of the Dove,” based on the novel by Henry James. Her performance
in that film also brought her Best Actress Awards from a number of critics organizations,
including the Los Angeles Film Critics, Broadcast Film Critics, National Board of
Review and London Film Critics Circle.
She had made her feature film debut in 1986 in the title role of Trevor Nunn's
historical biopic "Lady Jane.” She had barely wrapped production on that film when
director James Ivory offered her the lead in "A Room with a View,” based on the book by
E.M. Forster. She went on to receive acclaim in two more screen adaptations of Forster
novels: Charles Sturridge's "Where Angels Fear to Tread” and James Ivory's "Howard's
End,” for which she earned her first BAFTA Award nomination.
Bonham Carter's early film work also includes Franco Zeffirelli's "Hamlet,”
opposite Mel Gibson; "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein,” directed by and starring Kenneth
Branagh; Woody Allen's "Mighty Aphrodite”; and "Twelfth Night,” which reunited her
with Trevor Nunn. She went on to star in David Fincher's "Fight Club,” with Brad Pitt
and Edward Norton, as well as the Tim Burton-directed films "Big Fish,” "Planet of the
Apes” and "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.” In addition, she has starred in such
independent features as "Carnivale,” "Novocaine,” "The Heart of Me,” "Till Human
Voices Wake Us” and "Conversations with Other Women.”
In 2005, Bonham Carter lent her voice to two animated features: Tim Burton's
"Corpse Bride,” in which she played the title role; and the Oscar®-winning "Wallace &
Gromit in The Curse of the Were-Rabbit.”
On the small screen, Bonham Carter earned Emmy and Golden Globe Award
nominations for her performances in the telefilm "Live from Baghdad” and the miniseries
"Merlin,” and a Golden Globe nomination for her portrayal of Marina Oswald in the
miniseries "Fatal Deception: Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald.” She also starred as Anne Boleyn
in the British miniseries "Henry VIII,” and as the mother of seven children, including
four autistic sons, in the BBC telefilm "Magnificent 7.”
Bonham Carter's stage credits include productions of "The Woman in White,”
"The Chalk Garden,” "The House of Bernarda Alba” and "Trelawny of the Wells,” to
name a few.
TOP
Home | Theaters | Video | TV
Your Comments and Suggestions are Always Welcome.
Contact
CinemaReview.com
2013 Warner Bros. Pictures Inc., All Rights Reserved.
|