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ANNA KARENINA
KEIRA KNIGHTLEY earned Academy Award and Golden Globe Award
nominations for her portrayal of
Elizabeth Bennet in Joe Wright's version of Pride & Prejudice, based on Jane
Austen's novel, also for
Focus Features and Working Title Films. Two years later, she was a Golden Globe
and BAFTA Award
nominee for her performance as Cecilia Tallis in Atonement, again directed by
Joe Wright and for
Focus and Working Title, based on the novel by Ian McEwan.
The U.K. native made her television debut at the age of 6 in the telefilm
Royal Celebration, directed by
Ferdinand Fairfax. Her subsequent television credits included such telefilms and
miniseries as The
Treasure Seekers, directed by Juliet May; Coming Home, directed by Giles Foster;
Oliver Twist; Doctor
Zhivago, directed by Giacomo Campiotti; and Princess of Thieves, directed by
Peter Hewitt, starring as
Robin Hood's daughter.
Ms. Knightley landed her first feature film role at the age of 10, in Patrick
Dewolf's Innocent Lies. She
then starred in Nick Hamm's The Hole, with Thora Birch, and Gillies MacKinnon's
Pure; and appeared
alongside Natalie Portman in George Lucas' Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom
Menace.
Her breakout movie role was in Gurinder Chadha's Bend It Like Beckham, for
which she won the
London Critics' Circle Film Awards' British Newcomer of the Year prize.
Audiences worldwide then
took notice of her as the heroine Elizabeth Swann in Pirates of the Caribbean:
The Curse of the Black Pearl,
directed by Gore Verbinski, in which she starred with Johnny Depp, Orlando
Bloom, and Geoffrey
Rush. She then reteamed with the film's producer Jerry Bruckheimer on Antoine
Fuqua's King Arthur;
and was part of the ensemble cast of Richard Curtis' Love Actually.
Ms. Knightley next starred opposite Adrien Brody in The Jacket, directed by
John Maybury, and as
real-life bounty hunter Domino Harvey in Tony Scott's Domino, before reuniting
with the Pirates of the
Caribbean team on two sequels; the respective movies, Dead Man's Chest and At
World's End, were
again directed by Gore Verbinski.
Her subsequent movies have included The Edge of Love, which reteamed her with
director John
Maybury and which was scripted by Ms. Knightley's mother Sharman Macdonald;
François Girard's
Silk; Saul Dibb's The Duchess, for which she earned a British Independent Film
Award (BIFA)
nomination for Best Actress; Mark Romanek's Never Let Me Go, for which she was
again a BIFA
Award nominee; Massy Tadjedin's Last Night; William Monahan's London Boulevard;
David
Cronenberg's A Dangerous Method, in which she starred as real-life psychoanalyst
Sabina Spielrein;
and, also for Focus, Lorene Scafaria's Seeking a Friend for the End of the
World, in which she starred
opposite Steve Carell.
She made her West End theatrical debut in Martin Crimp's translation of
Molière's comedy The
Misanthrope, staged by Thea Sharrock at the Comedy Theatre in London, in
December 2009. She
received an Olivier Award nomination as well as an Evening Standard Award
nomination for the
Natasha Richardson Award. In January 2011, Ms. Knightley returned to the Comedy
Theatre and
starred in Lillian Hellman's The Children's Hour, staged by Ian Rickson.
She supports - among other charitable and humanitarian causes - Amnesty
International, Comic
Relief, and Women's Aid; and is a patron of the SMA Trust, which funds medical
research into the
children's disease Spinal Muscular Atrophy.
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