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A British actress whose name
and dark looks effortlessly conjure up associations with Eastern European
exoticism, Rachel Weisz first earned the attention of an international audience
with her role as the spoiled daughter of a sculptor in Bernardo Bertolucci's
Stealing Beauty (1996).
The daughter of a Jewish Hungarian inventor and an Austrian psychoanalyst (both
sides of the family fled Fascist Europe during the 1930s,) Weisz was born in
London on March 7, 1971.
Much of her adolescence was
spent modeling, and after attending Cambridge to study English, she broke into
acting with a role in Sean Matthias' West End revival of Noel Coward's Design
for Living. Weisz's performance in the play won her the Critics' Circle Best
Newcomer award, and she subsequently took advantage of this recognition with a
starring role in the BBC's TV adaptation of Scarlet and Black (1993), and then,
in 1996, with her aforementioned part in Bertolucci's Stealing Beauty. Although
most attention was paid to Liv Tyler in her role as the film's protagonist,
Weisz managed to garner notice of her own, and this recognition was furthered by
her top billing opposite Keanu Reeves in Chain Reaction that same year.
Unfortunately, the big-budget thriller was an unmitigated turkey; Weisz followed
it with leads in smaller films such as The Land Girls (1997), a WWII drama that
cast her as a young socialite sent to work on a farm; and Going All the Way
(1997), a post-war coming-of-age drama starring Ben Affleck and Jeremy Davies
that saw Weisz play Wasp Affleck's Jewish girlfriend. After returning to Britain
to star as a hairdresser in the noirish drama I Want You (1998), Weisz
reappeared on the Hollywood radar as Brendan Fraser's damsel in distress in the
1999 summer blockbuster The Mummy. That same year, she played yet another love
interest, that of a womanizing Ralph Fiennes in Sunshine, István Szabó's epic
drama about three generations of a family of Hungarian Jews.
Weisz' subsequent turn in the
period drama Enemy at the Gates (2000) saw her play the inamorata of yet another
Fiennes brother, Joseph. As a Russian American sniper caught between the
affections of a Russian party official (Fiennes) and a legendary sniper (Jude
Law), the actress again returned to the early part of the 20th century (this
time the Battle of Stalingrad) and to the deep end of the Fiennes family gene
pool. --Rebecca Flint, All Movie Guide
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