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Meryl Streep

 

Meryl Streep
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(born June 22, 1949, Summit, N.J., U.S.) U.S. film actress. She studied at Vassar College and the Yale School of Drama before appearing on Broadway and in the television films The Deadliest Season (1977) and The Holocaust (1978, Emmy Award). An unusually versatile and expressive actress, she won stardom in The Deer Hunter (1978), Manhattan (1979), and Kramer vs. Kramer (1979, Academy Award). Her later films include Sophie's Choice (1982, Academy Award), Silkwood (1983), Out of Africa (1985), A Cry in the Dark (1988), The Bridges of Madison County (1995), and The Hours (2002). In 2003 she received an unprecedented 13th Academy Award nomination (for best supporting actress in Adaptation [2002]); Katharine Hepburn originally held the record with 12 nominations. Streep later earned Oscar nominations (for best actress) for The Devil Wears Prada (2006) and Doubt (2008).

For more information on Meryl Streep, visit Britannica.com.

Gale Encyclopedia of Biography:

Meryl Louise Streep

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A versatile screen actress known for immersing herself in her characters, Meryl Streep (born 1949) distinguished herself with two Academy Awards and has been nominated 13 times, more than any other actor in history. Intelligent, commanding, and unafraid to play unglamorous and difficult women,Streep embodied an increasing realism for female characters in major studio films.

Standout Thespian

Streep was born in Summit, New Jersey, on June 22, 1949, to wealthy parents. Her mother was a commercial artist and her father a pharmaceutical executive. She has two younger brothers. Raised in Bernardsville, New Jersey, she took operatic voice lessons as a child and started acting at Bernards High School. She was also a varsity cheerleader, Homecoming Queen, and an academic stalwart.

Though her ambition was to be an interpreter for the United Nations, Streep continued her theater work at Vassar, where she was the star of the drama department. She spent one semester at Dartmouth and then enrolled in the prestigious Yale Drama School. There she appeared in more than three dozen productions with the Yale Repertory Theater and became well-known for her astounding range and the intensity of her performances.

Streep went directly from Yale to the New York theater scene. She appeared at the Public Theater - its impresario Joseph Papp was her mentor - in the musical Alice in Concert. Soon Streep arrived on Broadway, and she was nominated for a Tony Award in 1977 for Tennessee Williams's 27 Wagons Full of Cotton.

While playing a lead role in a Shakespeare in the Park production of Measure for Measure, she met and fell in love with actor John Cazale, with whom she would work in The Deer Hunter. They never married, but she cared for him until he died of cancer in 1978. A few months later, she married sculptor Don Gummer.

A Woman of Substance

In 1977, Streep made her debut on the small screen in the made-for-TV movie The Deadliest Season and on the big screen in Julia. In 1978, she won an Emmy Award for playing a Jewish woman persecuted by the Nazis in the TV miniseries Holocaust. Also that year, Streep was nominated for the first time for an Academy Award for a small but stirring role in The Deer Hunter as a woman in love with two men during the Vietnam conflict.

The Deer Hunter made many Hollywood directors eager to work with Streep. The first to grab her was Woody Allen, who cast her as his hostile ex-wife in Manhattan. In that role and in others to come, Streep demonstrated she was comfortable portraying an unlikable character.

In fact, Streep was perfectly suited to play the new roles that were opening up because of the feminist movement. Though Streep was a blonde with elegant features, she was rarely glamorous, and she could easily suppress her beauty and look ordinary. Playing a woman conflicted about divorcing her husband in Kramer vs. Kramer in 1979, Streep embodied the difficult choices facing millions of women. "In 1979, nobody was talking about depression," Streep later told Entertainment Weekly 's Mark Harris, "but this woman probably thought about killing herself once or twice a day." One of the first movies to treat divorce from an egalitarian standpoint, Kramer vs. Kramer was a cultural landmark in American film. Streep's portrayal merited an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress and made her a household name.

Also in 1979, Streep showed her versatility by portraying a sexy attorney who snares a politician in The Seduction of Joe Tynan. Two years later, she was nominated again for an Academy Award for a supporting role, playing two characters (the mistress of a Victorian gentleman and a modern actress playing her) in The French Lieutenant's Woman. Critics and the public, especially female moviegoers, embraced her. Already hailed as the greatest actress of her time, she won the Academy Award as Best Actress for Sophie's Choice in 1982. In that film, she adopted a convincing Polish accent after enrolling in a Berlitz course.

Oscar's Favorite

What was unusual about Streep was not just her willingness to take on difficult roles, but her ability to utterly disappear into her characters. A thorough researcher, she could adopt a different era, nationality, accent, or personality. Some critics, however, most notably Pauline Kael of the New Yorker, criticized her work as too stylized. To such detractors, Streep came off as a masterful technician who lacked warmth and genuine emotion. Reacting to this common criticism, Streep, in an interview in the Washington Times in 2002, said that she approached her roles instinctually rather than analytically: "I like to think I am the opposite of technical. I only worked once with a voice coach, and it was a disaster."

However she had accomplished it, in five years Streep had gone from a virtual unknown to the pinnacle of Hollywood stardom. In the noir thriller Still of the Night, Streep again attempted a seductive character, but did not fare well. "I didn't know what I was doing in that!" she told Entertainment Weekly 's Harris. "I didn't know who my character was. I hate noir. It's not about playing a person, but a representation."

Able to pick and choose her roles, she next took on an openly political character, playing a nuclear power industry whistleblower in the biographical picture Silkwood. To this role she brought a convincing recklessness and courage, and once again she was among the Best Actress nominees on Oscar night.

Again switching gears, Streep followed up with a romantic role opposite Robert DeNiro in the film Falling in Love, which flopped despite featuring the biggest male and female stars of the day - possibly because audiences could not picture either of them in a romantic pairing. Streep returned to serious drama in 1985 with Plenty, playing a woman in the French Resistance who has trouble piecing her life back together after World War II. The next year, in Out of Africa, Streep gave another Oscar-nominated performance as a Danish woman having an affair in Kenya. Her next picture was the comic romance Heartburn, which was filmed while she was pregnant.

Streep got her by-now-customary Best Actress nominations in 1987 and 1988 for Ironweed, in which she played a Depression-era alcoholic, and for A Cry in the Dark, in which she took on the thankless role of a much-reviled Australian woman accused of murdering her own child. She later told Liz Smith in an interview in Good Housekeeping that this was her favorite role, explaining: "I'm drawn to disagreeable women… . I loved trying to put somebody out there that you wouldn't normally look at or care about." Ty Burr, in a 1996 Entertainment Weekly article that named Streep number 37 among the 100 greatest movie stars, opined: "She's the movie star as medicine: good for you, but not much fun… . She inhabits her roles with a craft that can occasionally seem academic. "

Ranged Far and Wide

With her career direction in question, Streep decided to try comedy. She gave her voice to a character in the animated television sitcom The Simpsons. Streep shocked almost everyone by appearing opposite comic Roseanne Barr in She-Devil, a notable flop. Next, she played Carrie Fisher's alter ego in Fisher's semi-autobiographical Postcards from the Edge - the first movie she made in Hollywood. It netted her another Oscar nomination. She followed that with a starring role in Richard Brooks' comedy Defending Your Life. None of these comic roles attracted much attention, but Streep was funny in the over-the-top satire Death Becomes Her, playing a zombie-like character opposite Goldie Hawn.

Having proven she could act in comedies, Streep returned to drama in the harrowing The House of the Spirits, in which her ten-year-old daughter Mamie appeared. She decided to show her children she could be adventurous by doing her own whitewater rafting in her next film, The River Wild, a harrowing tale about a family expedition that goes wrong.

Streep had to cry for entire days during the filming of the tear-jerking romantic drama The Bridges of Madison County, a guaranteed box-office success because it adapted one of the decade's most popular novels. For this part, playing an Iowa farm wife wooed by a photographer, she put on weight and shed makeup. After a five-year absence from Oscar night, the role earned her a tenth Academy Award nomination.

In 1996, Streep played the mother of a teenage boy accused of murder in Before and After. The same year, she appeared in Marvin's Room, playing the mother of Leonardo DiCaprio. During her career, Streep also played the real-life role of mother on a secluded 89-acre estate in rural Connecticut with Gummer and their four children: Henry, Mary Wills (Mamie), Grace, and Louisa. She turned down theater roles because they would take her away at night, and she tried to maintain a normal family life as much as possible, guarding her children's privacy. In 1998, she told Smith in the Good Housekeeping interview: "I always feel like my life is straining at the seams… . Basically I've now decided I can do one movie a year."

Discussing her daughters and how they influenced her acting choices, Streep told Dana Kennedy of Entertainment Weekly: "I want them to see not just examples of beautiful young women, I want them to see that women are beautiful throughout their lives and important and formidable and exciting, because I think those fantasies are what you build your dreams on. I know I did when I was a kid." Kennedy observed that "by sheer strength of personality," Streep "could probably command the U.S. armed forces in addition to tending to her acting career, her husband, and her four children."

Second Wind

By the mid-1990s, Streep's flirtation with comedy was over, and she had returned to playing the kind of drama that had made her so famous, and with an assured maturity. She played a terminally ill wife and mother in One True Thing, garnering another Oscar nomination, and added an Irish brogue to her linguistic repertoire in Dancing at Lughnasa. She played an innercity violin teacher in Music of the Heart, netting her a 12th Academy Award nomination.

After lending her voice talents to a role in A.I.: Artificial Intelligence in 2001, Streep returned to the stage to star in a Broadway adaptation of The Seagull, directed by Mike Nichols. Newsweek 's Cathleen McGuigan said "Streep commands the stage - but never steals scenes - in a wonderfully funny, wrenching performance."

Having turned 50, Streep was determined not to fade away as too many great actresses do in middle age. In 2002, she returned to the forefront with two critically acclaimed performances. In the offbeat comedy Adaptation, she played New Yorker columnist Susan Orlean, who falls for the subject of her article and book, a scraggly gap-toothed orchid thief in Florida. She won a Golden Globe as a supporting actress and also landed a Golden Globe nomination for her standout performance in The Hours, in which she played a New York book editor throwing a party for a longtime friend dying of AIDS. About that portrayal, David Ansen of Newsweek raved: "Few actresses can express their inner lives without a line of dialogue as eloquently as Streep: her warm, flustered performance allows us to become mind readers." Her Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress for Adaptation allowed her to pass Katherine Hepburn as the most Oscar-nominated actor in movie history. Director Alan Pakula said: "If there's a heaven for directors, it would be to direct Meryl Streep your whole life."

For her part, Streep told Daily Variety that she was proud of the integrity of her career, of "this eccentric, quirky collection of movies I've done, all with their idiosyncratic pleasures. They've never said about my movies, 'What's the sequel?' and 'Can we merchandise this?' "

Utterly rejecting the idea that she approached acting mechanically, Streep said in the Washington Times interview: "We need art like food. I'm not religious but I think of my work - this is so pretentious - a bit like going to the altar. Like going to God… . You can't get ready for it, I believe. Acting is surrender. All you really have to do is listen."

Books

Thomson, David, A Biographical Dictionary of Film, Alfred A. Knopf, 1994.

Periodicals

Daily Variety, November 18, 2002; January 8, 2003.

Entertainment Weekly, February 11, 1994; Fall 1996; March 24, 2000.

Good Housekeeping, September 1998.

Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service (Orlando Sentinel), January 16, 2003.

Newsweek, August 20, 2001.

People Weekly, June 26, 1995; January 27, 1997.

Washington Times, February 20, 2002;

Online

"Meryl Streep," All Movie Guide,http://www.allmovie.com(February 7, 2003).

Answer of the Day:

Meryl Streep

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Meryl Streep </br><i>The Devil Wears Prada</i>  
Meryl Streep
The Devil Wears Prada
Happy 57th birthday to Meryl Streep. The woman who holds the record for Oscar nominations (13), Streep won two of the coveted awards — for Kramer vs. Kramer (1979) and Sophie's Choice (1982) — as well as Emmys for her roles in Holocaust (1979) and Angels in America (2003). Streep is currently on the big screen in A Prairie Home Companion, based on Garrison Keillor's radio show of the same name. Later this month, her newest film, The Devil Wears Prada, will be released. Streep plays "boss from hell" Miranda Priestly, editor of a top NY glamour magazine.

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Columbia Encyclopedia:

Meryl Streep

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Streep, Meryl, 1949-, American actress, b. Summit, N.J., as Mary Louise Streep. She attended Yale Drama School and appeared in many Broadway and off-Broadway productions during the early 1970s. Moving to Hollywood, she made her film debut in Julia (1977), and has become one of the most acclaimed film actresses of her generation. The coolly elegant Streep is famous for her pitch-perfect mastery of a myriad of accents, just one aspect of the superb technique she employs in her varied and often uncannily telling portrayals. These include the edgily ironic wife of Kramer vs. Kramer (1979; Academy Award) the anguished Polish émigré of Sophie's Choice (1982; Academy Award), the rebellious factory worker of Silkwood (1983), and the accused Australian mother of A Cry in the Dark (1988). Among her other motion pictures are The Deer Hunter (1978), The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981), Out of Africa (1985), Postcards from the Edge (1990), Death Becomes Her (1992), The Bridges of Madison County (1995), The Hours (2002), The Devil Wears Prada (2006), and Doubt (2008). She has also appeared in several television dramas, e.g., Angels in America (2003). Streep returned to the New York theater in 2006 to star in Bertolt Brecht's Mother Courage and Her Children.
Quotes By:

Meryl Streep

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Quotes:

"You can't get spoiled if you do your own ironing."

"The work will stand, no matter what."

AMG AllMovie Guide:

Meryl Streep

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Biography

Sydney Pollack -- one of Meryl Streep's collaborators time and again -- once proclaimed her the most gifted film actress of the late 20th century. Most insiders would concur with this assessment. To avid moviegoers, she represents the essence of onscreen dramatic art. Like Hoffman (and De Niro), she demonstrates a transcendent ability to plunge into her characters and lose herself inside of them, transforming herself physically to meet the demands of her roles. A luminous blonde with nearly translucent pale skin, intelligent blue eyes, and an elegant facial bone structure, Streep sustains a fragile, fleeting beauty that allows her to travel the spectrum between earthily plain (Ironweed), and ethereally glamorous and radiant (Manhattan, Heartburn).

Born June 22, 1949, in Summit, NJ, Streep took operatic voice lessons, and subsequently cultivated a fascination with acting while she attended Bernards High School. Upon graduation, Streep studied drama at Vassar, Dartmouth, and Yale, where she appeared in 30 to 40 productions with the Yale Repertory Theater. With a five-star education and years of collegiate stage work under her belt, Streep headed for the New York footlights and launched her off-Broadway career. Streep's performance in Tennessee Williams' 27 Wagons Full of Cotton, for which she received a Tony nomination, constitutes a particularly strong theatrical highlight from this period. She made her television debut in Robert Markowitz's The Deadliest Season (1977). That year she also appeared onscreen for the first time in Fred Zinnmann's Julia (1977) as Anna Marie, opposite heavyweights Jane Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave, and Hal Holbrook. The following year, Streep picked up an Emmy for her performance in Marvin J. Chomsky's miniseries Holocaust. She first teamed with De Niro in Michael Cimino's The Deer Hunter (1978).

Around this time, Streep became involved with the diminutive performer John Cazale, whom she met on the set of the Cimino film. Tragically, this marriage was ill-fated from day one, Cazale's frail body ridden with bone cancer. Forty-two at the time, he passed away in March 1978, nine months prior to the premiere of The Deer Hunter. Streep later wed Don Gummer, who was not associated with Hollywood in any capacity.

Streep next appeared as Woody Allen's ruthless lesbian ex-wife in his elegiac comedy drama Manhattan (1979) and Alan Alda's Southern mistress in the scathing political satire The Seduction of Joe Tynan. Her shattering interpretation of the scarred and torn Joanna Kramer opposite Dustin Hoffman in Robert Benton's heartbreaking divorce saga Kramer vs. Kramer (1979), earned her a Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 1980 -- which she famously left on top of a toilet at the festivities -- alongside a plethora of L.A. Film Critics Association, New York Film Critics Circle, and Golden Globe Awards for the Allen, Benton, and Alda films.

Streep continued her ascent over the next decade by establishing herself as Hollywood's top box-office draw and a critical darling. Her double performance in the innovative Karel Reisz/Harold Pinter triumph The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981), her gut-wrenching interpretation of the titular Holocaust survivor in Alan J. Pakula's haunting adaptation Sophie's Choice (1982), and her thoughtful evocation of Karen Silkwood in Mike Nichols' drama Silkwood were highlights of the period. In the latter, she portrays a real-life victimized nuclear-plant worker who mysteriously disappears just prior to turning in crucial evidence against her employers.

Streep's decision to headline Sydney Pollack's lush epic Out of Africa (1985), as Karen Blixen, sustained her reputation. She would go on over the next decade to appear in projects like but Ironweed, Heartburn, She-Devil, Postcards from the Edge, and Death Becomes Her. In 1994, she again surprised her fans when she appeared as a muscular expert whitewater rafter who must fight a raging river and two dangerous fugitives to save her family in the action thriller River Wild (1994). In interviews, she said she did the film because she wanted to have an adventure like Harrison Ford and to overcome a few of her own fears.

Streep returned to the depth and multifacetedness of her early roles -- with much concomitant success -- when she took a more low-key role as a dowdy, Earthbound farm wife who finds Illicit love with an itinerant photographer (Clint Eastwood) in The Bridges of Madison County. Following the critical and commercial heights of Bridges, Streep picked up yet another Oscar nomination for her performance as a terminally ill wife and mother in Carl Franklin's One True Thing (1998).

Streep then signed on to replace Madonna as the lead in 1999's Music of the Heart, tackling what outwardly appeared to be a cookbook Hollywood plot (a teacher on a mission to teach violin to a class of inner-city youth in Harlem) with absolute commitment, teaching herself to play the violin by practicing six hours a day for eight weeks. In the new millennium, Streep hit audiences with the back-to-back with lauded performances in Adaptation and The Hours, earning an Oscar nomination for the former and a Golden Globe nomination for the latter.

On the heels of this success, Streep won an Emmy in 2004 for her participation in longtime friend and collaborator Mike Nichols' Angels in America mini-series. She soon afterward won even greater audience and critic approval for her biting role as a corporate and political conspirator in Jonathan Demme's remake of the 1962 thriller The Manchurian Candidate. Streepfollowed this up with a part in the lighthearted comedies Prime, A Prairie Home Companion, and The Devil Wears Prada.

In 2007 Streep starred in a pair of timely dramas about the Iraq War, Lions for Lambs and Rendition, before returning to the musical comedy milieu with 2008's Mamma Mia!. The adaptation of the smash stage musical shattered box-office records, becoming the highest grossing film in the history of the United Kingdom, and the biggest American hit of her illustrious career. She followed that up with the lead role in John Patrick Shanley's adaptation of his award-winning play Doubt, a performance that earned her fifteenth acting nomination from the Academy, as well as nods from the Screen Actors Guild, and the Hollywood Foreign Press.

The renowned actress was nominated yet again for the Academy Award and the Screen Actors Guild the following year for her turn as Julia Child in the comedy Julie & Julia, a role that also garnered her a win for Best Actress from the New York Film Critics as well as the Golden Globes. That same year she played the lead for Nancy Myers in the box office hit It's Complicated, only to dive directly back into the Oscar spotlight again the next year with her acclaimed performance as English Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 2012's The Iron Lady. The role garnered Streep her 17th Academy Award nomination -- resulting in her third win, this time for Best Actress, in addition to Best Actress wins from the New York Film Critics Circle and the Golden Globes. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
Filmography:

Meryl Streep

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Hurricane on the Bayou

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Adaptation

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The Hours

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Fighting for Freedom: Revolution & Civil War

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A.I.: Artificial Intelligence

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The Directors: Clint Eastwood

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The Directors: Wes Craven

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Isaac Stern: Life's Virtuoso

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Clint Eastwood: Out of the Shadows

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Music of the Heart

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Ginevra's Story

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Dancing At Lughnasa

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One True Thing

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Voices & Visions: William Styron

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The Directors: Sydney Pollack

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First Do No Harm

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Before and After

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Marvin's Room

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The Universal Story

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The Bridges of Madison County

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The Living Sea

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The River Wild

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The House of the Spirits

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Death Becomes Her

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The Night Before Christmas

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Defending Your Life

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Arctic Refuge: A Vanishing Wilderness

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The Earth Day Special

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Postcards From the Edge

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She-Devil

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Harold Clurman: A Life of Theatre

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The Tailor of Gloucester

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Ironweed

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The Tale of Mr. Jeremy Fisher and the Tale of Peter Rabbit

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Heartburn

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Out of Africa

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Plenty

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Falling in Love

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The Velveteen Rabbit

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Silkwood

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Sophie's Choice

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Still of the Night

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Alice at the Palace

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The French Lieutenant's Woman

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Kramer vs. Kramer

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Manhattan

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The Seduction of Joe Tynan

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The Deer Hunter

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Holocaust

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Uncommon Women... and Others

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Julia

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Secret Service

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Meryl Streep

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Meryl Streep

Meryl Streep in Spain, 2008
Born Mary Louise Streep
(1949-06-22) June 22, 1949 (age 62)
Summit, New Jersey, U.S.
Alma mater Vassar College;
Yale School of Drama
Occupation Actress
Years active 1971–present
Spouse Don Gummer (m. 1978–present; 4 children)
Partner John Cazale (1975–1978, his death)
Children 4 (including Mamie Gummer and Grace Gummer)

Mary Louise "Meryl" Streep (born June 22, 1949[1]) is an American actress who has worked in theatre, television, and film. She is widely regarded as one of the most talented actors of all time.[2][3][4]

Streep made her professional stage debut in The Playboy of Seville (1971), before her screen debut in the television movie Deadliest Season (1977). In that same year, she made her film debut with Julia (1977). Both critical and commercial success came quickly with roles in The Deer Hunter (1978) and Kramer vs. Kramer (1979), the former giving Streep her first Academy Award nomination and the latter her first win. She later won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performances in Sophie's Choice (1982) and The Iron Lady (2011).

Streep has received 17 Academy Award nominations, winning three, and 26 Golden Globe nominations, winning eight, more nominations than any other actor in the history of either award. Her work has also earned her two Emmy Awards, two Screen Actors Guild Awards, a Cannes Film Festival award, five New York Film Critics Circle Awards, two BAFTA awards, an Australian Film Institute Award, five Grammy Award nominations, and a Tony Award nomination, amongst others. She was awarded the AFI Life Achievement Award in 2004 and the Kennedy Center Honor in 2009 for her contribution to American culture through performing arts, the youngest actress in each award's history.

Contents

Early life and background

Streep was born Mary Louise Streep in Summit, New Jersey.[5] Her mother, Mary Wolf (née Wilkinson; 1915-2001), was a commercial artist and former art editor, and her father, Harry William Streep, Jr. (1910-2003), was a pharmaceutical executive.[6][7][8] She has two brothers, Dana David and Harry William III.[9] Her patrilineal ancestry originates in Loffenau, Germany, from where her second great-grandfather, Gottfried Streeb, emigrated to the United States, and where one of her ancestors served as mayor. Another line of her father's family was from Giswil in the canton of Obwalden, a small town in Switzerland. Her maternal ancestry originates in Pennsylvania and Rhode Island, and partly traces back to 17th century immigrants from England.[8] Her eighth great-grandfather, Lawrence Wilkinson, was one of the first Europeans to settle Rhode Island. Streep is also a distant relative of William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania, and records show that her family were among the first purchasers of land in the state.[10][11][12]

She was raised a Presbyterian,[13][14] and grew up in Bernardsville, New Jersey, where she attended Bernards High School.[15] She had many school friends who were Catholic, and regularly attended Mass because she loved its rituals.[16] She received her B.A., in Drama at Vassar College in 1971 (where she briefly received instruction from actress Jean Arthur), but also enrolled as an exchange student at Dartmouth College for a quarter before it became coeducational. She subsequently earned an M.F.A. from Yale School of Drama. While at Yale, she played a variety of roles onstage,[17] from the glamorous Helena in A Midsummer Night's Dream to an eighty-year-old woman in a wheelchair in a comedy written by then-unknown playwrights Christopher Durang and Albert Innaurato.[18][19][20]

Career

Early career

Streep performed in several theater productions in New York and New Jersey after graduating from Yale School of Drama,[21] including the New York Shakespeare Festival productions of Henry V, The Taming of the Shrew with Raúl Juliá, and Measure for Measure opposite Sam Waterston and John Cazale. She started a relationship with Cazale, and was to live with him until his death three years later. She starred on Broadway in the Brecht/Weill musical Happy End, and won an Obie for her performance in the all-sung off-Broadway production of Alice at the Palace.

Streep by Jack Mitchell

Streep began auditioning for film roles, and later recalled an unsuccessful audition for Dino De Laurentiis for the leading female role in King Kong. De Laurentiis commented to his son in Italian, "She's ugly. Why did you bring me this thing?" and was shocked when Streep replied in fluent Italian.[22] In New York City, she appeared in the 1976 Broadway double bill of Tennessee Williams' 27 Wagons Full of Cotton and Arthur Miller's A Memory of Two Mondays. For the former, she received a Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actress in a Play. Her other early Broadway credits include Anton Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard and the Bertolt Brecht-Kurt Weill musical Happy End in which she originally appeared off-Broadway at the Chelsea Theater Center. She received Drama Desk Award nominations for both productions.

Streep's first feature film was Julia (1977), in which she played a small but pivotal role during a flashback scene. Streep was living in New York City with Cazale, who had been diagnosed with bone cancer.[23] He was cast in The Deer Hunter (1978), and Streep was delighted to secure a small role because it allowed her to remain with Cazale for the duration of filming. She was not specifically interested in the part, commenting, "They needed a girl between the two guys and I was it."[24]

She played a leading role in the television miniseries Holocaust (1978) as a German woman married to a Jewish artist in Nazi era Germany. She later explained that she had considered the material to be "unrelentingly noble",[24] and had taken the role only because she had needed money.[25] Streep travelled to Germany and Austria for filming while Cazale remained in New York. Upon her return, Streep found that Cazale's illness had progressed, and she nursed him until his death on March 12, 1978. She spoke of her grief and her hope that work would provide a diversion; she accepted a role in The Seduction of Joe Tynan (1979) with Alan Alda, later commenting that she played it on "automatic pilot",[24] and performed the role of Katherine in The Taming of the Shrew for Shakespeare in the Park.[26] With an estimated audience of 109 million, Holocaust brought a degree of public recognition to Streep, who was described in August 1978 as "on the verge of national visibility".[25] She won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress – Miniseries or a Movie[27] for her performance.

The Deer Hunter (1978) was released a month later, and Streep was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance.

Streep played a supporting role in Manhattan (1979) for Woody Allen, later stating that she had not seen a complete script and was given only the six pages of her own scenes,[28] and that she had not been permitted to improvise a word of her dialogue.[29] Asked to comment on the script for Kramer vs. Kramer (1979), in a meeting with the producer Stan Jaffee, director Robert Benton and star Dustin Hoffman, Streep insisted that the female character was not representative of many real women who faced marriage breakdown and child custody battles, and was written as "too evil".[24] Jaffee, Benton and Hoffman agreed with Streep, and the script was revised.[24] In preparing for the part, Streep spoke to her own mother about her life as a mother and housewife with a career,[30] and frequented the Upper East Side neighborhood in which the film was set.[24] Benton allowed Streep to write her dialogue in two of her key scenes, despite some objection from Hoffman.[31] Jaffee and Hoffman later spoke of Streep's tirelessness, with Hoffman commenting, "She's extraordinarily hardworking, to the extent that she's obsessive. I think that she thinks about nothing else but what she's doing."[32]

Streep drew critical acclaim for her performance in each of her three films released in 1979: the romantic comedy Manhattan, the political drama The Seduction of Joe Tynan and the family drama, Kramer vs. Kramer.[21] She was awarded the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actress, National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actress and National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress for her collective work in the three films. Among the awards won for Kramer vs. Kramer were the Academy Award and Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress.[21]

1980s

Streep at the 61st Academy Awards, 1989

After prominent supporting roles in two of the 1970s' most successful films, the consecutive winners of the Academy Award for Best Picture, The Deer Hunter and Kramer vs. Kramer, and praise for her versatility in several supporting roles, Streep progressed to leading roles. Her first was The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981). A story within a story drama, the film paired Streep with Jeremy Irons as contemporary actors, telling their modern story as well as the Victorian era drama they were performing. A New York Magazine article commented that, while many female stars of the past had cultivated a singular identity in their films, Streep was a "chameleon", willing to play any type of role.[33] Streep was awarded a BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her work.

Her next film, the psychological thriller, Still of the Night (1982) reunited her with Robert Benton, the director of Kramer vs. Kramer, and co-starred Roy Scheider and Jessica Tandy. Vincent Canby, writing for The New York Times, noted that the film was an homage to the works of Alfred Hitchcock, but that one of its main weaknesses was a lack of chemistry between Streep and Scheider, concluding that Streep "is stunning, but she's not on screen anywhere near long enough".[34]

As the Polish holocaust survivor in Sophie's Choice (1982), Streep's emotional dramatic performance and her apparent mastery of a Polish accent drew praise.[21] William Styron wrote the novel with Ursula Andress in mind for the part of Sophie, but Streep was very determined to get the role. After she obtained a pirated copy of the script, she went to Alan J. Pakula and threw herself on the ground begging him to give her the part. Streep filmed the "choice" scene in one take and refused to do it again, as she found shooting the scene extremely painful and emotionally exhausting.[35] Among several notable acting awards, Streep won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance. Roger Ebert said of her performance, "Streep plays the Brooklyn scenes with an enchanting Polish-American accent (she has the first accent I've ever wanted to hug), and she plays the flashbacks in subtitled German and Polish. There is hardly an emotion that Streep doesn't touch in this movie, and yet we're never aware of her straining. This is one of the most astonishing and yet one of the most unaffected and natural performances I can imagine."

She followed this success with a biographical film, Silkwood (1983), in which she played her first real-life character, the union activist Karen Silkwood. She discussed her preparation for the role in an interview with Roger Ebert and said that she had met with people close to Silkwood to learn more about her, and in doing so realized that each person saw a different aspect of Silkwood.[36] Streep concentrated on the events of Silkwood's life and concluded, "I didn't try to turn myself into Karen. I just tried to look at what she did. I put together every piece of information I could find about her... What I finally did was look at the events in her life, and try to understand her from the inside."[36]

Her next films were a romantic drama, Falling in Love (1984) opposite Robert De Niro, and a British drama, Plenty (1985). Roger Ebert said of Streep's performance in Plenty that she conveyed "great subtlety; it is hard to play an unbalanced, neurotic, self-destructive woman, and do it with such gentleness and charm... Streep creates a whole character around a woman who could have simply been a catalogue of symptoms."[37]

Out of Africa (1985) starred Streep as the Danish writer Karen Blixen and co-starred Robert Redford. A significant critical success, the film received a 63% "fresh" rating from Rotten Tomatoes.[38] Streep co-starred with Jack Nicholson in her next two films, the dramas Heartburn (1986) and Ironweed (1987), in which she sang onscreen for the first time since the television movie, Secret Service, in 1977. In A Cry in the Dark (1988), she played the biographical role of Lindy Chamberlain, an Australian woman who had been convicted of the murder of her infant daughter in which Chamberlain claimed her baby had been taken by a dingo. Filmed in Australia, Streep won the Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role, a Best Actress at the Cannes Film Festival, the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress and was nominated for several other awards for her portrayal of Chamberlain.

In She-Devil (1989), Streep played her first comedic film role, opposite Roseanne Barr. Richard Corliss, writing for Time, commented that Streep was the "one reason" to see the film and observed that it marked a departure from the type of role for which she had been known, saying, "Surprise! Inside the Greer Garson roles Streep usually plays, a vixenish Carole Lombard is screaming to be cut loose."[39]

1990s

From 1984 to 1990, Streep won six People's Choice Awards for Favorite Motion Picture Actress and, in 1990, was named World Favorite.

In the 1990s, Streep continued to choose a great variety of roles, including a drug-addicted movie actress in a screen adaptation of Carrie Fisher's novel Postcards from the Edge, with Dennis Quaid and Shirley MacLaine. Streep and Goldie Hawn had established a friendship and were interested in making a film together. After considering various projects, they decided upon Thelma and Louise, until Streep's pregnancy coincided with the filming schedule, and the producers decided to proceed with Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis.[22] They subsequently filmed the farcical black comedy, Death Becomes Her, with Bruce Willis as their co-star. Time's Richard Corliss wrote approvingly of Streep's "wicked-witch routine" but dismissed the film as "She-Devil with a make-over".[40]

Biographer Karen Hollinger describes this period as a downturn in the popularity of Streep's films, which reached its nadir with the failure of Death Becomes Her, attributing this partly to a critical perception that her comedies had been an attempt to convey a lighter image following several serious but commercially unsuccessful dramas, and more significantly to the lack of options available to an actress in her forties.[41][clarification needed] Streep commented that she had limited her options by her preference to work in Los Angeles, close to her family,[41] a situation that she had anticipated in a 1981 interview when she commented, "By the time an actress hits her mid-forties, no one's interested in her anymore. And if you want to fit a couple of babies into that schedule as well, you've got to pick your parts with great care."[33]

In 1995, Streep played opposte Clint Eastwood in the love story The Bridges of Madison County (1995). Based on a best-selling novel by Robert James Waller,[42] it relates the story of Robert Kincaid (Eastwood), a photographer working for National Geographic, who has a love affair with a middle-aged Italian farm wife in Iowa named Francesca (Streep). Streep and Eastwood got along famously during production and such was their on-screen chemistry that a number of people believed that the two were having an affair off-camera, although this was denied by both.[43] The film was a hit at the box office and grossed $70 million in the United States.[44] The film, unlike the novel, surprised film critics and was warmly received. Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote that Clint had managed to create "a moving, elegiac love story at the heart of Mr. Waller's self-congratulatory overkill", while Joe Morgenstern of the The Wall Street Journal described The Bridges of Madison County as "one of the most pleasurable films in recent memory".[44]

In 1999, Streep portrayed Roberta Guaspari, a real-life New Yorker who found passion and enlightenment teaching violin to inner-city kids in East Harlem, in the music drama Music of the Heart. A departure from director Wes Craven’s previous work on films like A Nightmare on Elm Street and the Scream series, Streep replaced singer Madonna who left the project before filming began due to creative differences with Craven. Required to perform on the violin, Streep went through two months of intense training, four to six hours a day.[45]

In addition, Streep appeared with Glenn Close in the movie version of Isabel Allende's The House of the Spirits; The River Wild; Marvin's Room (with Diane Keaton and Leonardo DiCaprio); and One True Thing.

2000s

Streep entered the 2000s with Steven Spielberg's A.I. Artificial Intelligence, a science fiction film about a child-like android, played by Haley Joel Osment, uniquely programmed with the ability to love, voicing the Blue Fairy.[46] The same year, Streep co-hosted the annual Nobel Peace Prize Concert concert with Liam Neeson which was held in Oslo, Norway on December 11, 2001 in honour of the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, the United Nations and Kofi Annan.[47]

In 2002, Streep returned to the stage for the first time in more than twenty years, playing Arkadina in The Public Theater's revival of Anton Chekhov's The Seagull, directed by Mike Nichols and co-starring Kevin Kline, Natalie Portman, and Philip Seymour Hoffman.[48] The same year, she began work on Spike Jonze's comedy-drama Adaptation (2002), in which she portrayed real-life journalist Susan Orlean. Lauded by critics and viewers alike,[49] the film won Streep her fourth Golden Globe in the Best Supporting Actress category.[50] Also in 2002, Streep appeared alongside Nicole Kidman and Julianne Moore in Stephen Daldry's The Hours, based on the 1999 novel by Michael Cunningham. Focusing on three women of different generations whose lives are interconnected by the novel Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf, the film was generally well received and won all three leading actresses a Silver Bear for Best Actress the following year.[50]

Streep in St. Petersburg, Russia in 2004.

The following year, Streep had a cameo as herself in the Farrelly brothers comedy Stuck on You (2003) and reunited with Mike Nichols to star with Al Pacino and Emma Thompson in the HBO adaptation of Tony Kushner's six-hour play Angels in America, the story of two couples whose relationships dissolve amidst the backdrop of Reagan Era politics. Streep, who was cast in four roles in the mini-series, received her second Emmy Award and fifth Golden Globe for her performance.[50] In 2004, Streep was awarded the AFI Life Achievement Award by the Board of Directors of the American Film Institute,[50]. She appeared in Jonathan Demme's moderately successful remake of The Manchurian Candidate,[51] co-starring Denzel Washington, playing the role of a woman who is both a U.S. senator and the manipulative, ruthless mother of a vice-presidential candidate.[52] The same year, she played the supporting role of Aunt Josephine in Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events alongside Jim Carrey, based on the first three novels in Snicket's book series. The black comedy received generally favorable reviews from critics,[53] and won the Academy Award for Best Makeup.[54]

Streep was next cast in the 2005 comedy Prime, directed by Ben Younger. In the film, she played Lisa Metzger, the Jewish psychoanalyst of a divorced and lonesome business-woman, played by Uma Thurman, who enters a relationship with Metzger's 23-year-old son (Bryan Greenberg). A modest mainstream success, it eventually grossed US$67.9 million internationally.[55] In August and September 2006, she starred onstage at The Public Theater's production of Mother Courage and Her Children at the Delacorte Theatre in Central Park.[56] The Public Theater production was a new translation by playwright Tony Kushner (Angels in America), with songs in the Weill/Brecht style written by composer Jeanine Tesori (Caroline, or Change); veteran director George C. Wolfe was at the helm. Streep starred alongside Kevin Kline and Austin Pendleton in this three-and-a-half-hour play in which she sang and appeared in almost every scene.

Also in 2006, Streep, along with Lily Tomlin, portrayed the last two members of what was once a popular family country music act in Robert Altman's final film A Prairie Home Companion. A comedic ensemble piece featuring Tommy Lee Jones, Kevin Kline and Woody Harrelson, the film revolves around the behind-the-scenes activities at the long-running public radio show of the same name. The film grossed over US$26 million, the majority of which came from domestic markets.[57] Commercially, Streep fared better with a role in The Devil Wears Prada (2006), a loose screen adaptation of Lauren Weisberger's 2003 novel of the same name. Streep portrayed the powerful and demanding Miranda Priestly, fashion magazine editor (and boss of a recent college graduate played by Anne Hathaway), and her performance drew rave reviews from critics and earned her many award nominations, including her record-setting 14th Oscar bid, as well as another Golden Globe. Upon its commercial release, the film became Streep's biggest commercial success yet, grossing more than US$326.5 million worldwide.[58]

In 2007, Streep was cast in four films. She portrayed a wealthy university patron in Chen Shi-zheng's much-delayed feature drama Dark Matter (2007), a film about a Chinese science graduate student who becomes violent after dealing with academic politics at a U.S. university. Inspired by the events of the 1991 University of Iowa shooting,[59] and initially scheduled for a 2007 release, producers and investors decided to shelve Dark Matter out of respect for the Virginia Tech massacre in April 2007.[60] The drama received negative to mixed reviews upon its limited 2008 release.[61] Streep played a U.S. government official who investigates an Egyptian foreign national suspected of terrorism in the political thriller Rendition (2007), directed by Gavin Hood.[62] Keen to get involved in a thriller film, Streep welcomed the opportunity to star in a film genre for which she was not usually offered scripts and immediately signed on to the project.[63] Upon its release, Rendition was less commercially successful,[64] and received mixed reviews.[65]

Also in 2007, Streep had a short role alongside Vanessa Redgrave, Glenn Close and her eldest daughter Mamie Gummer in Lajos Koltai's drama film Evening, based on the 1998 novel of the same name by Susan Minot. Switching between the present and the past, it tells the story of a bedridden woman, who remembers her tumultuous life in the mid-1950s.[66] The film was released to lukewarm reactions by critics, who called it "beautifully filmed, but decidedly dull [and] a colossal waste of a talented cast."[67][68] Streep's last film of 2007 was Robert Redfords Lions for Lambs, a film about the connection between a platoon of United States soldiers in Afghanistan, a U.S. senator, a reporter, and a California college professor.

Streep with her fellow cast and all four members of ABBA at the Swedish premiere of Mamma Mia! in July 2008.

In 2008, Streep found major commercial success when she starred in Phyllida Lloyd's Mamma Mia!, a film adaptation of the musical of the same name, based on the songs of Swedish pop group ABBA. Co-starring Amanda Seyfried, Pierce Brosnan, Stellan Skarsgård and Colin Firth, Streep played a single mother and a former backing singer, whose daughter (Seyfried), a bride-to-be who never met her father, invites three likely paternal candidates to her wedding on an idyllic Greek island.[69] An instant box office success, Mamma Mia! became Streep's highest-grossing film to date, with box office receipts of US$602.6 million,[70] also ranking it first among the highest-grossing musical films of all-time.[71] Nominated for another Golden Globe, Streep's performance was generally well received by critics, with Wesley Morris of the Boston Globe commenting "the greatest actor in American movies has finally become a movie star."[72] Streep's other film of 2008 was Doubt featuring Philip Seymour Hoffman, Amy Adams, and Viola Davis. A drama revolving around the stern principal nun (Streep) of a Bronx Catholic school in 1964 who brings charges of pedophilia against a popular priest (Hoffman), the film became a moderate box office success,[73] but was hailed by many critics as one of the best of 2008.[74] The film received five Academy Awards nominations, for its four lead actors and for Shanley's script.[50]

In 2009, Streep played chef Julia Child in Nora Ephron's Julie & Julia, co-starring Amy Adams and Stanley Tucci. The first major motion picture based on a blog, it contrasts the life of Child in the early years of her culinary career with the life of young New Yorker Julie Powell (Adams), who aspires to cook all 524 recipes in Child's cookbook Mastering the Art of French Cooking in 365 days, a challenge she described on her popular blog, The Julie/Julia Project, that would make her a published author. The same year, Streep also starred in Nancy Meyers' romantic comedy It's Complicated, with Alec Baldwin and Steve Martin. She also received nominations for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for both of these films and won the award for the former.[75] Streep later received her 16th Oscar nomination for Julie & Julia.[76] She also lent her voice to Mrs. Felicity Fox in the stop-motion film Fantastic Mr. Fox.

2010s

Streep's first film of the 2010s was Phyllida Lloyd's The Iron Lady (2011), a British biographical film about Margaret Thatcher, which takes a look at the Prime Minister during the Falklands War and her years in retirement.[77] Streep, who sat through a session at the House of Commons to observe British MPs in action in preparation for her role,[78] called her cast "a daunting and exciting challenge," and further added: "I am trying to approach the role with as much zeal, fervour and attention to detail as the real Lady Thatcher possesses – I can only hope my stamina will begin to approach her own."[79] While the film met with mixed critics, Streep's performance got rave reviews, earning her Best Actress awards at the Golden Globes and the BAFTAs as well as a third statuette at the Academy Awards.[80][81][82]

In July 2010, it was announced that Streep will star in an upcoming comedy entitled Mommy & Me alongside Tina Fey who will play her daughter. The film is being directed by Stanley Tucci.[83]

Accents and dialects

Streep is well known for her ability to imitate foreign and domestic accents,[21] from Danish in Out of Africa (1985); to British RP in Plenty (also 1985), The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981) and The Iron Lady (2011); and from Italian in The Bridges of Madison County (1995); to a Minnesota accent in A Prairie Home Companion (2006). In A Cry in the Dark (1988), critics were impressed with Streep's ability to master an Australian accent with shades of New Zealand English.[84] For her role in the film Sophie's Choice (1982), she took language courses to speak both English and German with a Polish accent. In The Iron Lady, she reproduced the vocal style of Margaret Thatcher, from the time before she became Britain's Prime Minister, and after she had taken elocution lessons to change her pitch, pronunciation and delivery. Despite the accolades accorded to her, Streep has emphasised that adopting accents is an element she simply considers an obvious part of creating a character. When asked whether accents helped her get into character, she responded, "I'm always baffled by this question... How could I play that part and talk like me?" When questioned as to how she reproduces different accents, Streep replied, "I listen."[85]

Music

After Streep appeared in Mamma Mia!, her rendition of the song "Mamma Mia" rose to popularity in the Portuguese music charts, where it peaked at #8 in October 2008.[86]

At the 35th People's Choice Awards, her version of Mamma Mia won an award for "Favorite Song From A Soundtrack".[87] In 2008, Streep was nominated for a Grammy Award (her fifth nomination) for her work on the Mamma Mia! soundtrack.

Philanthropy

Streep is the spokesperson for the National Women's History Museum, to which she has donated a significant amount of money (including her fee for The Iron Lady) and hosted numerous events. [88]

Personal life

Streep lived with actor John Cazale for three years until his death in March 1978.[89][90] Streep married sculptor Don Gummer on September 15, 1978.[91] They have four children: Henry "Hank" Wolfe Gummer (born November 13, 1979), Mary Willa "Mamie" Gummer (born August 3, 1983), Grace Jane Gummer (born May 9, 1986), and Louisa Jacobson Gummer (born June 12, 1991). Both Mamie and Grace are actresses.[6] Hank is a musician who performs under the name Henry Wolfe.[92]

When asked if religion plays a part in her life, in an interview in 2009, Streep replied, "I follow no doctrine. I don't belong to a church or a temple or a synagogue or an ashram."[93] Streep does not rule out the possibility that God exists, “I do have a sense of trying to make things better. Where does that come from?”[94]

Awards and nominations

Streep receiving her honorary degree from Harvard University on May 27, 2010

In 1999, Streep was awarded The George Eastman Award, given by George Eastman House for distinguished contribution to the art of film.[95] Streep holds the record for the most Academy Award nominations of any actor, having been nominated 17 times since her first nomination in 1979 for her performance in The Deer Hunter (fourteen for Best Actress and three for Best Supporting Actress) – five more than both Katharine Hepburn and Jack Nicholson, who are tied in second place.[96] With her third Oscar win for her performance as Margaret Thatcher in The Iron Lady (2011) in 2012, Streep became the fifth performer to receive three Academy Awards: Nicholson, Ingrid Bergman and Walter Brennan all earned three, while Hepburn won four.[97]

In 2009, Streep became the most-nominated performer in Golden Globe Awards history when her double lead actress nods for Doubt (2008) and Mamma Mia! (2008) gave her 23 in total, breaking the tie with Jack Lemmon, who had received 22 lead nominations before his death in 2001.[98] The following year, Streep surpassed Jack Nicholson and Angela Lansbury, with six Golden Globe awards wins each, after receiving her seventh Globe for her performance as Julia Child in Julie & Julia (2009).[98] In 2012, she broke her own record when she garnered her 26th nomination and overall eighth win for The Iron Lady at the 69th Golden Globe Awards.

As with both the Oscars and the Golden Globe Awards, Streep holds the BAFTA record for most nominations at 14 in total.[99] She received her second Best Actress award for The Iron Lady at the 65th ceremony in February 2012, following her first win in 1981 for her performance in The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981).[99]

In 1983, Yale University, from which Streep graduated in 1975,[100] was the first university to award her an honorary degree, a Doctorate of Fine Arts.[101] In 1998, Women in Film awarded Streep with the Crystal Award, an honor for outstanding women who, through their endurance and the excellence of their work, have helped to expand the role of women within the entertainment industry.[102] The same year, Streep received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

In 2003, Streep was awarded an honorary César Award by the French Académie des Arts et Techniques du Cinéma. In 2004, at the Moscow International Film Festival, Streep was honored with the Stanislavsky Award for the outstanding achievement in the career of acting and devotion to the principles of Stanislavsky's school. Also in 2004, Streep received the AFI Life Achievement Award. In 2008, Streep was inducted into the New Jersey Hall of Fame.[103] In 2009, she was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts by Princeton University.[104] In 2010, she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters and was awarded an honorary Doctor of Arts degree by Harvard University.[105][106]

On December 4, 2011 (program aired on CBS-TV on December 27, 2011), Streep received the 2011 Kennedy Center Honor (along with Neil Diamond, Yo-Yo Ma, Sonny Rollins, and Barbara Cook). On February 14, 2012, Streep received the Honorary Golden Bear at the 62nd Berlin International Film Festival.[107] She previously won the Berlinale Camera at the 49th Berlin International Film Festival in 1999.[108]

Selected filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1978 The Deer Hunter Linda American Movie Award for Best Supporting Actress
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
1979 Manhattan Jill Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actress (also for The Seduction of Joe Tynan and Kramer vs. Kramer)
National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actress (also for The Seduction of Joe Tynan and Kramer vs. Kramer)
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress (also for The Seduction of Joe Tynan and Kramer vs. Kramer)
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role
1979 Kramer vs. Kramer Joanna Kramer Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actress (also for The Seduction of Joe Tynan and Manhattan)
National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actress (also for Manhattan and The Seduction of Joe Tynan)
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress (also for The Seduction of Joe Tynan and Manhattan)
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress (and also The Seduction of Joe Tynan)
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
1981 The French Lieutenant's Woman Sarah/Anna BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
1982 Sophie's Choice Sophie Zawistowski Academy Award for Best Actress
Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
National Board of Review Award for Best Actress
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
1983 Silkwood Karen Silkwood Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
1985 Out of Africa Karen Blixen David di Donatello Award for Best Foreign Actress (Migliore Attrice Straniero)
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
1987 Ironweed Helen Archer Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
1988 A Cry in the Dark Lindy Chamberlain Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
Best Actress Award (Cannes Film Festival)
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
1990 Postcards from the Edge Suzanne Vale American Comedy Award for Funniest Actress in a Motion Picture (Leading Role)
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
1992 Death Becomes Her Madeline Ashton Nominated - Saturn Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
1995 The Bridges of Madison County Francesca Johnson Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated - Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
1998 One True Thing Kate Gulden Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated - Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
Nominated - Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
1999 Music of the Heart Roberta Guaspari Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated - Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
2002 Adaptation. Susan Orlean Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actress
Florida Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actress
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
Silver Bear for Best Actress
Southeastern Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role
Nominated - Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated - London Film Critics Circle Award for Actress of the Year
Nominated - Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated - Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated - Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Cast
Nominated - Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
2002 The Hours Clarissa Vaughan Silver Bear for Best Actress in Berlin International Film Festival (with Julianne Moore and Nicole Kidman)
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated - Las Vegas Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated - Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Cast
Nominated - Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
Nominated - Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
2004 The Manchurian Candidate Eleanor Shaw Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
Nominated - Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress
2006 The Devil Wears Prada Miranda Priestly Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
London Film Critics Circle Award for Actress of the Year
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress
Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress
Satellite Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Nominated - Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - MTV Movie Award for Best Villain
Nominated - Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
2008 Mamma Mia! Donna Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
Nominated - London Film Critics Circle Award for Actress of the Year
2008 Doubt Sister Aloysius Beauvier Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
National Board of Review Award for Best Cast
Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Nominated - Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Cast
Nominated - Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
Nominated - London Film Critics Circle Award for Actress of the Year
Nominated - Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
2009 Julie & Julia Julia Child Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress
Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
Phoenix Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress
Satellite Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
Southeastern Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Actress
Nominated - BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Nominated - Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - London Film Critics Circle Award for Actress of the Year
Nominated - Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
2009 It's Complicated Jane Adler Nominated - Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy
2011 The Iron Lady Margaret Thatcher Academy Award for Best Actress
AACTA International Award for Best Actress
BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Denver Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
New York Film Critics Online Award for Best Actress
London Film Critics Circle Award for Actress of the Year
Southeastern Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
UK's Annual Regional Film Awards for Best Actress
Nominated - Alliance of Women Film Journalists Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Alliance of Women Film Journalists Award for Actress Defying Age and Ageism
Nominated - Alliance of Women Film Journalists Award for Female Icon Award
Nominated - Boston Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress (runner-up)
Nominated - Broadcast Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Detroit Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Houston Film Critics Society Award for Best Actres
Nominated - Iowa Film Critics Awards for Best Actress
Nominated - Irish Film & Television Award for Best International Actress
Nominated - National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Online Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Toronto Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Satellite Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture
Nominated - St. Louis Gateway Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
2012 Hope Springs Maeve Soames

See also

References

  1. ^ "Happy Birthday, Meryl!". rte.ie. 2011-06-21. http://www.rte.ie/ten/2011/0621/merylstreep.html. Retrieved 14 August 2011. 
  2. ^ Santas, Constantine (2002). Responding to Film. Rowman & Littlefield‏. p. 187. ISBN 0-8304-1580-7. 
  3. ^ Hollinger, Karen (2006). The Actress: Hollywood Acting and the Female Star. CRS Press. pp. 94–95. ISBN 0-415-97792-4. 
  4. ^ The Middle East. Library Information and Research Service. 2005. p. 204. 
  5. ^ Robert Battle. "Meryl Streep". Ancestry.com. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~battle/celeb/streep.htm. Retrieved 2009-01-16. 
  6. ^ a b "Meryl Streep Biography (1949–)". Film Reference.com. http://www.filmreference.com/film/65/Meryl-Streep.html. Retrieved 2009-01-16. 
  7. ^ ASSOCIATED PRESS (2001-10-03). "Artist Mary W. Streep, mother of actress Meryl, dies at 86". The Star-Ledger. http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/newsday/access/82788043.html?dids=82788043:82788043&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Oct+03%2C+2001&author=THE+ASSOCIATED+PRESS&pub=Newsday+(Combined+editions)&desc=OBITUARIES+%2F+Mary+Wilkinson+Streep%2C+Mother+of+the+Actress&pqatl=google. Retrieved 2009-12-16. 
  8. ^ a b Britten, Nick (2012-02-14). "Baftas: Meryl Streep's British ancestor 'helped start war with Native Americans'". The Daily Telegraph (London). http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/baftas/9080244/Baftas-Meryl-Streeps-British-ancestor-helped-start-war-with-Native-Americans.html. 
  9. ^ "Meryl Streep Biography". Yahoo! Movies. http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/contributor/1800018835/bio. 
  10. ^ "Meryl Streep". Faces of America. 2010. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/facesofamerica/profiles/meryl-streep/70/. Retrieved 2010-02-05. 
  11. ^ McKenzie, Joi-Marie (2010-02-04). "Henry Louis Gates Says He Broke Meryl Streep's Heart". Niteside. http://www.nbcwashington.com/blogs/niteside/Henry-Louis-Gates-Explores-Immigrant-Origins-of-Famous-Americans-83509992.html. Retrieved 2010-02-04. 
  12. ^ "Faces of America: Meryl Streep", PBS, Faces of America series, with Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., 2010.
  13. ^ Horowitz, Joy (1991-03-17). "That Madcap Meryl. Really!". The New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CE7DA133BF934A25750C0A967958260. Retrieved 2009-01-13. 
  14. ^ "Press Archive". Simply Streep.com. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. http://web.archive.org/web/20070929141718/http://simplystreep.com/press/press1992movieline.htm. 
  15. ^ "N.J. Teachers Honor 6 Graduates". The Philadelphia Inquirer. 1983-11-12. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=PI&s_site=philly&p_multi=PI&p_theme=realcities&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EB29697FA2C7F62&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM. Retrieved 2007-07-20. "Streep is a graduate of Bernards High School in Bernardsville..." 
  16. ^ Meryl Streep: Movies, marriage, and turning sixty – Profiles – People. The Independent (2009-01-24). Retrieved on 2011-11-24.
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  18. ^ "1974 New York Times review", reprinted in Mel Gussow's Theatre on the Edge. p. 365.
  19. ^ Gussow, Mel (1991-01-07). "Critic's Notebook; Luring Actors Back to the Stage They Left Behind". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/1991/01/07/movies/critic-s-notebook-luring-actors-back-to-the-stage-they-left-behind.html?pagewanted=1. Retrieved 2010-03-07. 
  20. ^ Robert S. Brustein, Letters to a Young Actor, p.61 This book also contains details of her performances at Yale.
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  22. ^ a b "Information, Considered & Delayed Projects". SimplyStreep.com. http://www.simplystreep.com/site/career/considered/. Retrieved 2009-06-07. 
  23. ^ Gray, Paul (December 3, 1979). "Cinema: A Mother Finds Herself". Time: p. 3. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,948649-3,00.html. Retrieved February 16, 2011. 
  24. ^ a b c d e f "Magazines Archive". SimplyStreep.com. http://www.simplystreep.com/site/magazines/197902msmagazine/. Retrieved 2009-08-14.  citing "Meryl Streep to the Rescue". Ms. Magazine. February 1979. 
  25. ^ a b "Magazines Archive". SimplyStreep.com. http://www.www.simplystreep.com/magazines/197808horizon.htm. Retrieved 2009-06-07.  citing "Star Treks". Horizon Magazine. August 1978. 
  26. ^ "Magazines Archive". SimplyStreep.com. http://www.simplystreep.com/site/career/stage/. Retrieved 2009-06-07.  citing "From Homecoming Queen to Holocaust". TV Guide. June 1978. 
  27. ^ Meryl Streep Emmy Award Winner
  28. ^ "Magazines Archive". SimplyStreep.com. http://www.www.simplystreep.com/magazines/197903lookmagazine.htm. Retrieved 2009-06-07.  citing "Streep Year". Look Magazine. March 1979. 
  29. ^ Hollinger, Karen (2006). The Actress: Hollywood Acting and the Female Star. Routledge. p. 76. ISBN 0-415-97792-4. http://books.google.com/?id=89W0QMDjA7gC&pg=PA71&dq=Meryl+Streep#PPA76,M1. 
  30. ^ Hollinger, p. 75
  31. ^ Hollinger, p. 77
  32. ^ "Magazines Archive". SimplyStreep.com. http://www.www.simplystreep.com/magazines/197911playgirl.htm. Retrieved 2009-06-07.  citing "The Freshest Face in Hollywood". Playgirl Magazine. November 1979. 
  33. ^ a b Denby, David (1981-09-21). "Meryl Streep is Madonna and siren in The French Lieutenant's Woman". New York Magazine: p. 27. http://books.google.com/books?id=-OUCAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA26&dq=Meryl+Streep&lr=#PPA26,M1. Retrieved 2009-06-15. 
  34. ^ Canby, Vincent (1985-09-20). "'Still of the Night,' in Hitchcock Manner". The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9C02E2D8123BF93AA25752C1A964948260. Retrieved 2009-06-06. 
  35. ^ Skow, John (1981-09-07). "What Makes Meryl Magic". Time. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,924815-8,00.html. Retrieved 2009-06-15. 
  36. ^ a b Ebert, Roger; David Bordwell (2006). Awake in the dark: the best of Roger Ebert: forty years of reviews, essays, and interviews. University of Chicago Press. p. 64. ISBN 0-226-18200-2. http://books.google.com/?id=YIU1jlgPjr8C&pg=PA64&dq=Meryl+Streep#PPA64,M1. 
  37. ^ Ebert, Roger (1982-11-19). "'Plenty' review". Chicago Sun Times. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19850920/REVIEWS/509200303/1023. Retrieved 2009-06-06. 
  38. ^ "Out of Africa (1985)". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/out_of_africa/. Retrieved 2009-06-06. 
  39. ^ Corliss, Richard (1989-12-11). "Warty Worm, "She-Devil" review". Time magazine. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,959340,00.html. Retrieved 2009-06-07. 
  40. ^ Corliss, Richard (1992-08-03). "Beverly Hills Corpse, "Death Becomes Her" review". Time magazine. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,976129,00.html. Retrieved 2009-06-07. 
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  42. ^ McGilligan, p.492
  43. ^ McGilligan, p.499
  44. ^ a b McGilligan, p.503
  45. ^ http://www.lifewhile.com/news/136587/detail.html
  46. ^ "A.I. Artificial Intelligence (2001)". Box Office Mojo. http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=ai.htm. Retrieved 2009-02-07. 
  47. ^ "Previous Concerts (2001)". Nobelpeaceprize.org. http://nobelpeaceprize.org/concert/history/2001.php. Retrieved 2012-02-07. 
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  49. ^ "Adaptation (2002)". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/adaptation/. Retrieved 8 April 2008. 
  50. ^ a b c d e "Awards for Meryl Streep". IMDb.com. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000658/awards. Retrieved 2010-02-07. 
  51. ^ "The Manchurian Candidate (2003)". Box Office Mojo. http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=manchuriancandidate.htm. Retrieved 2010-02-07. 
  52. ^ LaSalle, Mick (July 30, 2004). "Terrorist attacks, corporate control, election controversy: Sound familiar? 'The Manchurian Candidate' has it all.". San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on May 30, 2010. http://www.webcitation.org/5q7FcZ2d6. Retrieved May 30, 2010. 
  53. ^ "Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/lemony_snicket/. Retrieved April 8, 2009. 
  54. ^ "Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events (2004)". Box Office Mojo. http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=lemonysnicket.htm. Retrieved 2010-02-10. 
  55. ^ "Prime (2004)". Box Office Mojo. http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=prime.htm. Retrieved 2010-02-10. 
  56. ^ Brantley, Ben (2006-08-22). "Mother Courage and Her Children". The New York Times. http://theater2.nytimes.com/2006/08/22/theater/reviews/22moth.html. Retrieved 2009-01-15. 
  57. ^ "A Prairie Home Companion (2006)". Box Office Mojo. http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=prairiehomecompanion.htm. Retrieved 2010-02-10. 
  58. ^ "The Devil Wears Prada (2006)". Box Office Mojo. http://www.the-numbers.com/people/MSTRE.php. Retrieved 2010-02-10. 
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  60. ^ Alberge, Dalya (2007-04-26). "Campus Massacre Films Face A Ban". The Times (London). http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/film/article1706612.ece/. Retrieved 2011-02-17. 
  61. ^ "Dark Matter (2007)". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/dark_matter/. Retrieved 2008-04-11. 
  62. ^ Markon, Jerry (2006-05-19). "Lawsuit Against CIA Is Dismissed". The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/18/AR2006051802107.html. Retrieved 2008-10-11. 
  63. ^ "Meryl Streep Plays With Politics". Artisan News Service. YouTube. 2007-11-12. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nerer1qI-zQ. Retrieved 2011-02-19. 
  64. ^ "Rendition (2007)". Box Office Mojo. http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=rendition.htm. Retrieved 2010-02-10. 
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  69. ^ Mansfield, Paul (2008-07-15). "Mamma Mia! Unfazed By The Fuss In Skopelos". The Telegraph (London). http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/artsandculture/2229868/Mamma-Mia---Unfazed-by-the-fuss-in-Skopelos.html. Retrieved 2010-05-12. 
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  82. ^ Oscars winners list: 'The Artist,' Jean Dujardin, and Meryl Streep take home top awards
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Bibliography

External links


 
 
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