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Marion Cotillard

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Marion Cotillard
Cotillard at the Paris premiere of Public Enemies in July 2009
Born (1975-09-30) 30 September 1975 (age 49)[1]
Occupation(s)Actress, singer
Years active1993–present
PartnerGuillaume Canet (2007–present)
Children1
Template:Infobox comedian awards

Marion Cotillard (French pronunciation: [ma.ʁjɔ̃ kɔ.ti.jaʁ]; born 30 September 1975)[1] is a French actress, singer and songwriter. She is also an environmentalist and spokesperson for Greenpeace. She garnered worldwide acclaim for her roles in films such as La Vie en Rose (2007), Inception (2010), Rust and Bone (2012), The Immigrant (2013), Two Days, One Night (2014), A Very Long Engagement (2004) and Love Me If You Dare (2003). Her other notable films are Chloé (1996), Taxi (1998), Furia (1999), War in the Highlands (1999), Lisa (2001), Les Jolies Choses (2001), Big Fish (2003), Toi et Moi (2006), Dikkenek (2006), A Good Year (2006), Public Enemies (2009), Nine (2009), Little White Lies (2010), Midnight in Paris (2011), Contagion (2011) and The Dark Knight Rises (2012).

In 2007, Cotillard starred as the French singer Édith Piaf in La Vie en Rose, for which she received critical acclaim and won several awards, including the Academy Award, BAFTA Award, César Award, and the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress. She is the first and only person so far to win an Academy Award for Best Actress in a French language performance. In 2010, she received a Golden Globe nomination for her performance in the musical Nine.

In 2012, she received widespread acclaim for her performance as the legless orca trainer Stéphanie in Rust and Bone and was awarded the Globe de Cristal Award, Étoile d'Or Award, Sant Jordi Award, Irish Film & Television Award and the Hawaii International Film Festival Award for Best Actress and received nominations for the Golden Globe Award, BAFTA Award, Screen Actors Guild Award, Critics' Choice Award, AACTA Award, Lumiere Award and for the César Award.

She has been the face of Lady Dior handbags since 2008 and has appeared on more than 200 magazine covers around the world.[2] Among them are Vogue, Elle, Marie Claire, Variety, Harper's Bazaar, Vanity Fair, Madame Figaro, Glamour, W, The Hollywood Reporter and Wall Street Journal Magazine. She was also on the cover of the first issue of Dior Magazine in September 2012.[3][4]

Her films have grossed more than 3 billion dollars at the worldwide box-office.[5][6][7] In 2014, Cotillard was named "The Most Bankable French Actress of the 21st Century". Her films have sold more than 37 million tickets in France from 2001 to 2014.[8]

Early life

Cotillard was born in Paris, and grew up around Orléans, Loiret,[1] in an artistically inclined, "bustling, creative household". Her father, Jean-Claude Cotillard, is an actor, teacher, former mime, and 2006 Molière Award-winning director. Cotillard's mother, Niseema Theillaud, is also an actress and drama teacher.[9] Her two younger brothers are twins: Quentin and Guillaume. Guillaume is a screenwriter and director. Cotillard began acting during her childhood, appearing on stage in one of her father's plays.[10]

Career

Early work in French cinema (1993–2002)

Cotillard photographed by Studio Harcourt Paris in 1999.

After small appearances and performances in theater, Cotillard had occasional and minor roles in television series such as Highlander, but her career as a film actress began in the mid-1990s with small but noticeable roles in such films as Chloe in 1996 when she played a teenage girl who runs away from home and is forced into prositution, Arnaud Desplechin's My Sex Life... or How I Got Into an Argument. Cotillard appeared in the comedy La Belle Verte, directed by Coline Serreau. In 1998, she starred in Gérard Pirès' action comedy Taxi. In the film, she plays Lili Bertineau, who becomes Daniel's girlfriend. Cotillard reprised the role in two sequels.[1] She then ventured into anticipation science fiction with Alexandre Aja's Furia (1999).[1]

In 1999, Cotillard starred in the Swiss war drama War in the Highlands (La Guerre dans le Haut Pays), for which she won the Best Actress Award at Autrans Film Festival in 1999.[1] In 2001, she appeared in Pierre Grimblat's film Lisa playing the title role and younger version of Jeanne Moreau's character, alongside Benoît Magimel and Sagamore Stévenin. She starred in Gilles Paquet-Brenner's film Pretty Things (Les Jolies Choses), adapted from the work of feminist writer Virginie Despentes. In the drama, Cotillard portrayed the characters of two twins of completely opposite characters, Lucie and Marie. She was nominated for a César Award for her performance. In Guillaume Nicloux's thriller A Private Affair (Une Affaire Privée) she portrayed the mysterious Clarisse.[1]

Move to Hollywood (2003–2006)

In 2003, Cotillard had a notable supporting role in Tim Burton's film Big Fish, where she appeared alongside Albert Finney, Ewan McGregor, Billy Crudup, Jessica Lange and Allison Lohman.[1] In the film she plays Joséphine, the French wife of William Bloom.[1] In the same year, she starred with Guillaume Canet in the romantic comedy film Love Me If You Dare as Sophie Kowalsky, the daughter of Polish immigrants. The film was directed by Yann Samuel. She appeared in two critically acclaimed films, Jean-Pierre Jeunet's A Very Long Engagement (Un Long Dimanche de Fiançailles) as Tina Lombardi, for which she won a César Award for Best Supporting Actress,[11] and appeared in the mystery thriller Innocence as Mademoiselle Éva.[1]

In 2005, Cotillard starred in 6 films: in Steve Suissa's romantic drama Cavalcade as Alizée, in Abel Ferrara's religious drama Mary alongside Forest Whitaker and Juliette Binoche.[1] Marion played Isabelle Kruger and Alice in the thriller film La Boîte noire, directed by Richard Berry. She appeared in the film Fair Play as Nicole, she also starred in the romantic comedy Love Is in the Air, in Burnt Out (Sauf le respect que je vous dois) and Edy directed by Stéphan Guérin-Tillié. In 2006, Cotillard starred in 4 films: in Ridley Scott's romantic comedy A Good Year, in which she portrayed Fanny Chenal, a French café owner in a small Provençal town, opposite Russell Crowe as a Londoner who inherits a local property.[1] She appeared in the Belgian comedy Dikkenek, and learned to play the cello for her role as a soloist in the satirical coming-of-age film You and Me (Toi et Moi).[9]

La Vie en Rose and breakthrough (2007–2008)

Cotillard at a press conference for La vie en rose in February 2007

Cotillard was chosen by director Olivier Dahan to portray the French singer Édith Piaf in the biopic La Vie en Rose before he had even met her, saying that he noticed a similarity between Piaf's and Cotillard's eyes.[12] Producer Alain Goldman accepted and defended the choice even though distributors TFM reduced the money they gave to finance the film thinking Cotillard wasn't "bankable" enough an actress.[13] Her portrayal was widely praised, including by the eminent theatre director Sir Trevor Nunn, who described it as "one of the greatest performances on film ever."[14] At the Berlin International Film Festival, where the film premiered, Cotillard was given a 15-minute standing ovation. It was dubbed "the most awaited film of 2007" in France, where some critics said that she had reincarnated Édith Piaf to sing one last time on stage.[15]

On 10 February 2008, Cotillard became the first French actress to be awarded the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role since Stéphane Audran in 1973.[16] She is the first actress to win a Golden Globe for a foreign language performance since 1972, when Liv Ullmann won for The Emigrants. She is also the first person to win a (Comedy or Musical) Golden Globe for a foreign language performance.[17]

On 22 February 2008, she was awarded the César Award for Best Actress for her role in La Vie en Rose, Alain Delon presented the award and announced the winner as "La Môme Marion" (The Kid Marion), he also praised her at the stage saying: "Marion, I give you this César. I think this César is for a great great actress, and I know what I'm talking about".[18] Two days later, on 24 February 2008 at the Academy Awards (commonly referred to as The Oscars) she won Best Actress, becoming the first woman and second person (after Adrien Brody, The Pianist) to win both a César and an Oscar for the same performance. Cotillard is the second French cinema actress to win this award and the third overall to receive an Academy Award. She is the first Best Actress winner in a non-English language performance since Sophia Loren's win in 1961.[19] She is also the first and so far only winner of an Academy Award for a performance in the French language. In her Oscar acceptance speech, Cotillard proclaimed "thank you life, thank you love" and, speaking of Los Angeles, said "it is true, there is some angels (sic) in this city!"[20] The day following the ceremony, Cotillard was congratulated and praised by the President of France Nicolas Sarkozy in a statement saying,

I would like to extend my warmest congratulations to Marion Cotillard, who has just received the Oscar for Best Actress for her masterful interpretation of Édith Piaf in La Vie en Rose, directed by Olivier Dahan. Half a century after Simone Signoret, a French artist has received the Best Actress award at the Oscars. It was a good omen that Catherine Allegret, Simone Signoret's daughter, herself had a role in La Vie en Rose. Marion Cotillard embodies an Édith Piaf who is unsettling in her realism, emotion and passion. Her interpretation brings to life the story of a woman who gave French chanson its acclaim and authenticity; a singer, too, who closely united France and America.[21]

La Vie En Rose was in part a Czech production, as Cotillard mentioned in her César acceptance speech.[22] On 1 March 2008, Cotillard won a Czech Lion Award for Best Actress. She could not attend the ceremony in Prague due to the filming of Public Enemies. Her friend Pavlína Němcová – who played the journalist in La vie en Rose – was there to accept the award on her behalf. On 24 June 2008, Cotillard was one of 105 individuals invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[23]

Widespread recognition (2009–2012)

Cotillard starred alongside Johnny Depp and Christian Bale in Public Enemies, which was released in the United States on 1 July 2009. Later that year, Cotillard appeared in the film adaptation of the musical Nine,[24] directed by Rob Marshall, and co-starring Daniel Day-Lewis, Penélope Cruz, Judi Dench, Nicole Kidman, Sophia Loren and Kate Hudson. On 15 December 2009, Cotillard was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy for her performance in the film. The film was released on 18 December 2009. Cotillard appeared on the cover of the November 2009 issue of Vogue with her Nine co-stars, and on the July 2010 cover by herself.[25][26] For her role in the musical Nine as Luisa Contini, Time magazine ranked her as the fifth best performance by a female in 2009.[27] She was ranked just behind Mo'Nique, Carey Mulligan, Saoirse Ronan and Meryl Streep. Cotillard was awarded the Desert Palm Achievement Actress Award at the 2010 Palm Springs International Film Festival for the role - her second prize from the festival.[28]

Cotillard at the Haute Couture Autumn-Winter collection in Paris in July 2009

On 15 March 2010, Cotillard was made a Chevalier (Knight) of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (Order of the Arts and Letters) by the French government for her "contribution to the enrichment of French culture".[29] She appeared as "Mal Cobb" in Christopher Nolan's film Inception, alongside Leonardo DiCaprio and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, which released on 16 July 2010. Cotillard and Leonardo DiCaprio ranked #8 on the list "Hollywood's Top Earning On-Screen Couples" by Forbes. They are the only couple from a non-franchise film: Inception, the film made $825 million at the global box-office.[30] In the same year, she also starred in Guillaume Canet's drama Little White Lies (Les petits mouchoirs), playing the enviromentalist Marie, alongside Jean Dujardin and François Cluzet.

In 2011, she appeared in Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris alongside Rachel McAdams and Owen Wilson, cast as Adriana, a fictionalized mistress of Pablo Picasso. She co-starred alongside Kate Winslet, Jude Law, Gwyneth Paltrow and Matt Damon in Steven Soderbergh's thriller film Contagion.[31] Also that year, Cotillard appeared on the top of Le Figaro's list of the highest paid actors in France in 2010. It was the first time in nine years that a female has topped the list.[32] She has also tied with Kate Winslet as the highest paid foreign actress in Hollywood.[33] In 2012, she has ranked #9 on the list of the highest paid actresses in France in 2011.[34]

In 2012, Cotillard appeared in Christopher Nolan's film The Dark Knight Rises, playing Miranda Tate, a board member at Wayne Enterprises. The film reunited her with her Inception co-stars Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Michael Caine, Cillian Murphy and Tom Hardy. It also reunited her with Public Enemies co-star Christian Bale.

Jacques Audiard, Marion Cotillard, Matthias Schoenaerts and Armand Verdure at the premiere of Rust and Bone at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival.

She next starred in Jacques Audiard's Rust and Bone (De rouille et d'os) alongside Matthias Schoenaerts,[35] for which she received rave reviews for her performance as the orcar trainer Stéphanie and won the following awards: the Globe de Cristal Award, Étoile d'Or Award, Sant Jordi Award, Irish Film & Television Award and the Hawaii International Film Festival Award for Best Actress and received a fifth César Award nomination, a fourth Screen Actors Guild Award nomination, a third Golden Globe nomination (her first nomination for Best Actress - Drama), a second Critics' Choice Award nomination and a second Lumiere Award nomination.[36] The film premiered at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival and received a ten-minute standing ovation at the end of its screening.[37] Cate Blanchett wrote a review for Variety praising Cotillard's performance in Rust and Bone, describing it as "simply astonishing" and said that "Marion has created a character of nobility and candour, seamlessly melding herself into a world we could not have known without her. Her performance is as unexpected and as unsentimental and raw as the film itself".[38] She also received several honors and career tributes at Hollywood Film Festival, AFI Fest, Telluride Film Festival, Gotham Awards and Harper's Bazaar Awards.

Critical acclaim (2013–present)

In 2013, Cotillard was named Hasty Pudding Theatricals' Woman of the Year by Harvard's students.[39] She was also ranked the 2nd highest paid actress in France in 2012.[40] On May 2013, She appeared in the controversial music video “The Next Day” by David Bowie, alongside Gary Oldman, her co-star in The Dark Knight Rises.[41]

She had her first leading role in an American movie in James Gray's The Immigrant, starring as the Polish immigrant Ewa Cybulska. For her performance in the film, Cotillard was widely acclaimed at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival in May, 2013. The Immigrant was released in U.S. in May 2014, exactly one year after its Cannes premiere, it was highly praised by American critics, especially Cotillard's performance.[42] She then co-starred in Guillaume Canet's Blood Ties alongside Clive Owen, Billy Crudup and Matthias Schoenaerts, the film premiered at Cannes in the same week that The Immigrant premiered.[43] Cotillard also had a cameo in Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues, acting opposite Jim Carrey as a Canadian anchor.In November and December 2013, Cotillard was a member of the jury of the 13th Marrakech Film Festival that was presided by Martin Scorsese.[44] Cotillard was named "The Most Beautiful Face of 2013" by The Independent Critics List.[45] and was ranked #13 on Empire Online's list of the "100 Sexiest Movie Stars" in 2013.[46]

In 2014, she played the lead character in Dardenne brothers's Two Days, One Night. In the film, Cotillard plays Sandra, a Belgian factory worker who has just one weekend to convince her workmates to give up their bonuses so that she can keep her job.[47] The film premiered at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival and Cotillard's performance was unanimously praised by critics, earned a 15 minute standing ovation[48] and was named "the best performance of the festival".[49]

Her next projects are the 3D animated adaptation of The Little Prince directed by Mark Osborne, where she will voice The Rose, the film also stars James Franco, Rachel McAdams, Benicio Del Toro and Jeff Bridges.[50] She will also voice the lead role in the Belgian 3D animated film A Rigged World (Un Monde Truqué), directed by Franck Ekinci and Christian Demares,[51][52] and will star in a new film adaptation of Shakespeare's play Macbeth directed by Justin Kurzel, with Cotillard playing Lady Macbeth opposite Michael Fassbender as the title role.[53] Cotillard will also play the lead role in Nicole Garcia's Mal de Pierres, an adaptation of the bestselling novel Mal di Pietre ("From the Land of the Moon" in US and "The House in Via Manno" in Australia) by Milena Agus, set to start shooting in 2015.[54]

On 22 January 2014, was announced that Cotillard will star in the New York Philharmonic’s upcoming production of Arthur Honegger’s oratorio “Joan of Arc at the Stake”. Cotillard isn’t new to the 1938 dramatic oratorio: she starred in a production by the Orléans Orchestra in 2005 and the Barcelona Symphony Orchestra in 2012. The new production, staged by the director Côme de Bellescize, was first created for Japan’s Saito Kinen Festival Matsumoto in 2012, and will reportedly feature members of the Comédie-Française. The new production will hit the stage of the Avery Fisher Hall in June 2015. Cotillard will also perform the oratorio in Paris in March 2015.[55][56]

Musical career

Cotillard sings, plays guitar, bass guitar, keyboard and tambourine.[57]

She co-wrote and performed the song "La Fille De Joie" for her film Les Jolies Choses,[58] in which she played a singer and also performed the song "La Conne" for this film.

In 2008, she co-wrote and performed the song "The Strong Ones" alongside Hawksley Workman for Olivier Dahan's short film for Cartier's Love range.[59]

In 2010, she sang few songs on the album "Cardioid" by Yodelice. She also went on tour with the band in different cities in France and Belgium under the pseudonym "Simone", which is her grandmother's name.[60] She also recorded the song "The Eyes of Mars" alongside Franz Ferdinand especially for Dior.

Canadian singer Hawksley Workman said in interviews about his album Between the Beautifuls that he worked and wrote songs with Cotillard while they both were in Los Angeles during the movie awards season. She recorded a song called "Happy Crowd" with the French band Yodelice, and she participate with them in some of their concerts. She appears in the video "More Than Meets the Eyes" from Yodelice (2010).[61]

In 2012, she wrote and performed the song "Lily's Body" for the fourth episode of the Lady Dior Web Documentary with the same title.[62]

"Lady Dior" advertising campaign

In 2008, Cotillard was chosen as the face of Dior's "Lady Dior" advertising campaign and was featured in an online mini-movie directed by John Cameron Mitchell about the fictional character created by John Galliano. She also starred in a series of short films that were situated in different cities to promote the "Lady Dior" handbags: Lady Noire Affair (in Paris) directed by Olivier Dahan, Lady Blue Shanghai directed by David Lynch, Lady Rouge (in New York) directed by Jonas Akerlund and Lady Grey London directed by John Cameron Mitchell and starring Ian McKellen and Russell Tovey. This campaign has also resulted in a musical collaboration with Scottish rock band Franz Ferdinand, where Cotillard has provided the vocals for a composition performed by the group, entitled "The Eyes of Mars".[63]

In 2012, she starred in the web-series Lady Dior Web Documentary and wrote and performed the song "Lily's body" for one episode, she also designed her own handbag for Dior, the "360º bag".

Cotillard also appeared on the cover of the first issue of Dior Magazine in September 2012.[64]

Greenpeace and other projects

In addition to her film work, Cotillard is interested in environmental activism, and has participated in campaigns for environmental protection, in particular Greenpeace, for whom she has acted as a spokesperson. In 2005, she contributed to Dessins pour le climat ("Drawings for the Climate"), a book of drawings published by Greenpeace to raise funds for the group,[65] and in 2010, she travelled to Congo with Greenpeace to visit tropical rainforests threatened by logging companies, it was shown in the documentary The Congolese Rainforests: Living on Borrowed Time.[66] In 2013, she caged herself near Paris's Louvre museum to demand the freeing of 30 Greenpeace activists jailed in Russia over an Arctic protest. She entered the cage and held a banner proclaiming "I am a climate defender".[67]

In 2009, Cotillard was one of many celebrities to record a cover version of the song Beds are Burning by Midnight Oil, in support of TckTckTck and climate justice.[68] She designed her own doll for UNICEF France campaign "Les Frimousses Font Leur Cinéma", that was sold to help vaccinate thousands of children in Darfur.[69]

She is the patron of Maud Fontenoy Foundation, a non-governmental organization which is dedicated to teaching children about preserving the oceans.[70] She is also the ambassador of Association Wayanga, a French association that supports indigenous peoples for their rights and the preservation of their cultures and the Amazon Forest they inhabit.[71]

In 2011, she publicly supported Chief Raoni in his fight against the Belo Monte Dam in Brazil and signed his petition.[72]

In 2012, she was featured on Kate Winslet’s book "The Golden Hat: Talking Back To Autism",[73] with celebrity self-portraits[74] to raise awareness and support for autism launched by Winslet's Golden Hat Foundation.[75]

In February 2014, she signed "The Tiger Manifesto", a campaign calling for an end to everyday products being manufactured through forest destruction. Launched by Greenpeace, the campaign is encouraging consumers to demand products are forest and tiger-friendly, particularly in Indonesia, where the Sumatran tiger is on brink of extinction.[76][77]

Personal life

In the late 90's, Cotillard was in a relationship with French actor Julien Rassam.[78] She had a long relationship with French actor Stéphan Guérin-Tillié from 2000 until 2005. She dated French singer Sinclair from 2005 to 2007.

Since October 2007, Cotillard is in a relationship with French actor and director Guillaume Canet. In 2010, she started wearing a ring on her left hand but they haven't tied the knot yet, as Cotillard said in an interview in 2014. They're not engaged neither[79] The couple prefer to live a simple lifestyle, and they are often spotted in cafes and shopping together in Paris. Neither star discusses their relationship with the media, although photos of the couple being affectionate regularly surface in the European tabloids.[80] The birth of the couple's son Marcel, was announced on 20 May 2011.[81]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1993 Intériorité Fairy Short film
1994 L' Histoire du garçon qui voulait qu'on l'embrasse Mathilde
1995 Snuff Movie Short film
1996 Insalata Mista Juliette Short film
1996 My Sex Life... or How I Got Into an Argument Student aka Comment je me suis disputé... (ma vie sexuelle)
1996 Chloé Chloé
1996 La Belle Verte Nurse
1996 La Mouette Laurence Short film
1997 Affaire classée Nathalie Short film
1997 La sentence Short film
1998 Taxi Lilly Bertineau
1998 Interdit de vieillir Abigail Dougnac
1998 La surface de réparation Stella Short film
1999 War in the Highlands Julie Bonzon aka La Guerre dans le Haut Pays
1999 Furia Élia
1999 L'appel de la cave Rachel Short film
1999 Blue Away to America Solange aka Du bleu jusqu'en Amérique
2000 Taxi 2 Lilly Bertineau
2000 Quelques jours de trop Short film
2000 Le marquis Short film
2001 Lisa Young Lisa
2001 Une femme piégée Florence Lacaze
2001 Pretty Things Marie/Lucie aka Les Jolies choses
2001 Heureuse La virtuelle de 35 kg Short film
2001 Boomer Mme Boomer Short film
2002 A Private Affair Clarisse Entoven aka Une affaire privée
2003 Taxi 3 Lilly Bertineau
2003 Love Me If You Dare Sophie Kowalsky aka Jeux d'enfants
2003 Big Fish Joséphine Bloom
2004 Innocence Mademoiselle Éva
2004 A Very Long Engagement Tina Lombardi le rat aka Un long dimanche de fiançailles
2005 Cavalcade Alizée
2005 Love Is in the Air Alice aka Ma vie en l'air
2005 Mary Gretchen Mol
2005 Burnt Out Lisa aka Sauf le respect que je vous dois
2005 The Black Box Isabelle Kruger/Alice aka La Boîte Noire
2005 Edy Céline/La chanteuse du rêve
2006 You and Me Léna aka Toi et Moi
2006 Dikkenek Nadine
2006 Fair Play Nicole
2006 A Good Year Fanny Chenal
2006 Happy Feet Gloria (voice) French version
2007 La Vie en rose Édith Piaf aka La Môme
2008 Lady Noire Affair Lady Noire Short film
2009 Public Enemies Billie Frechette
2009 The Last Flight Marie Vallières de Beaumont aka Le dernier vol
2009 Nine Luisa Contini
2009 OceanWorld 3D Narrator Documentary
2010 Lady Rouge Lady Rouge Short film
2010 Forehead Tittaes Marion Cotillard Short film
2010 Lady Blue Shanghai Lady Blue Short film
2010 Inception Mallorie "Mal" Cobb
2010 Little White Lies Marie Les petits mouchoirs
2011 Lady Grey London Lady Grey Short film
2011 Midnight in Paris Adriana
2011 Contagion Dr. Leonora Orantes
2011 L.A.dy Dior Margaux Short film
2012 Rust and Bone Stéphanie aka De Rouille et D'os
2012 The Dark Knight Rises Miranda Tate/Talia al Ghul
2013 The Immigrant Ewa Cybulski
2013 Blood Ties Monica
2013 Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues CBC News Co-host Cameo[82]
2014 Terre des Ours Narrator Documentary
2014 Two Days, One Night Sandra aka Deux jours, une nuit
2014 Unity Narrator Documentary
2015 A Rigged World Avril (voice) aka Un Monde Truqué
2015 The Little Prince The Rose (voice) Post-production
2015 Macbeth Lady Macbeth Post-production
2016 Mal de Pierres Announced

Theatre

Clips

  • 1990: Clip "Petite fille" - Les Wampas[84]
  • 2004: Clip "Givin'Up" - Richard Archer and Tommy Hools
  • 2004: Clip "No Reason To Cry Out Your Eyes" - Hawksley Workman
  • 2009: Clip "Beds Are Burning" - TckTckTck - Time for Climate Justice[85]
  • 2010: Clip "More Than Meets The Eyes" - Yodelice[86]
  • 2010: Clip "Breathe In" - Yodelice
  • 2010: Clip "Take It All" - Nine[87]
  • 2010: Clip "The Eyes of Mars" - Franz Ferdinand
  • 2012: Clip "Lily's Body" - Lady Dior Web Documentary[88]
  • 2013: Clip "The Next Day" - David Bowie[89]

Dubbing

She has dubbed several films in France, like Happy Feet.[90] She also dubbed in French all of her roles in English-speaking films:

Awards and nominations

References

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  10. ^ Bunbury, Stephanie (15 July 2007). "Birds of a feather". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 14 July 2007.
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  13. ^ Secher, Benjamin (12 February 2008). "Everything's coming up roses". London: Benjamin Sesher, Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 12 May 2010.
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  16. ^ Stéphane Audran wins the BAFTA Best Actress in 1973 for The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and Just Before Nightfall [1] IMDb.
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  29. ^ Marion Cotillard was made a Chevalier of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres Template:Fr icon, Artistik Rezo. 17 March 2010.
  30. ^ Leonardo DiCaprio and Marion Cotillard: Hollywood's Top Earning On-Screen Couples.
  31. ^ Steven Soderberg Preps Big Cast for Contagion.
  32. ^ "Les acteurs les mieux payés du cinéma français". Le Figaro. 21 January 2011. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
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