Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Sinéad Cusack

 
Actor: Sinéad Cusack
  • Born: Feb 18, 1948 in Ireland
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '70s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy Drama
  • Career Highlights: The Cement Garden, Passion of Mind, Stealing Beauty
  • First Major Screen Credit: Hoffman (1970)

Biography

Well respected in the stage world for her frequent work with the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal Court Theater, Irish actress Sinéad Cusack has also made quite an impression in the world of cinema. If her Shakespearian past has followed her from stage to screen with such efforts as Twelfth Night, the classically trained actress has also branched out with roles in such diverse features as Hoffman (1970), Waterland (1992), and Stealing Beauty (1996). Though Cusack spent her early years aspiring to sainthood in convent school, her carefree, attention-getting nature instead led her to the spotlight. When Cusack was 11, her father, Cyril, cast his young daughter in an Olympia Theater production of The Trial; although she wasn't thrilled with the prospect of acting early on, she kept gravitating back toward the stage. It was during her college years that Cusack became a fixture of Dublin's Abbey Theater, and a move to London found her covering for a pregnant Judi Dench in a 1975 production of London Assurance. Cusack credits her subsequent stint at the Royal Shakespeare Company with teaching her everything she knows as an actress.

In 1960, Cusack made her feature debut in director Clive Donner's Alfred the Great, and though numerous roles were offered to her in the years that followed, the actress chose her film roles carefully, opting to concentrate on her stage work. Shakespearian roles in such Royal Court productions as Macbeth and The Merchant of Venice balanced numerous small-screen efforts including Notorious Woman (1974) and Quiller (1975). In 1984, Cusack cemented her reputation when she made her Broadway debut in Much Ado About Nothing, and she also made quite an impression with her concurrent performance as Roxanne in the Broadway production of Cyrano de Bergerac (the two productions played in repertory at the George Gershwin Theatre); in 1985, a performance of the latter play was taped for television broadcast. A return to London found Cusack taking the stage with her father and sisters Sorcha and Niamh for a production of, appropriately enough, The Three Sisters.

In the late 1980s and early '90s, Cusack became a more familiar face to movie lovers thanks to roles in Waterland (opposite real-life husband Jeremy Irons), Sparrow (1993), and Uncovered (1994). After once again joining husband Irons onscreen with Stealing Beauty, Cusack was directed by him in the 1997 U.K. television drama Mirad. In 2000, Cusack got laughs with her role as a meddlesome mother who enrolls in college to keep an eye on her son in My Mother Frank, and after a role in the quirky drama I Capture the Castle in 2003, she made a trip back to the small screen with the television drama Winter Solstice. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Sinéad Cusack
Top
Sinéad Cusack
Born Jane Moira Cusack
February 18, 1948 (1948-02-18) (age 61)
Dalkey, County Dublin, Ireland
Occupation Actress
Years active 1967–present
Spouse(s) Jeremy Irons (1978-present)

Sinéad (pronounced /ʃɨˈneɪd/ in English) Moira Cusack (born 18 February 1948) is an Irish actress.

Contents

Background

Cusack was born Jane Moira Cusack, the daughter of Maureen (née Kiely) and Cyril Cusack, both actors.[1] She is the sister of actresses Sorcha Cusack, Niamh Cusack and half sister to Catherine Cusack. In her youth, Cusack dated footballer George Best.[2][3]

Career

Her first acting roles were at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin. In 1970, she starred with Peter Sellers in the film Hoffman. In 1975, she moved to London and joined the Royal Shakespeare Company. She made her Broadway debut in 1984 performing in repertory with the Royal Shakespeare Company. Starring opposite Derek Jacobi, she played Roxane in Anthony Burgess' translation of Edmond Rostand's Cyrano de Bergerac (having taken the role over from Alice Krige, who played Roxane through the play's London run) and Beatrice in William Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, directed by Terry Hands. The production of Cyrano de Bergerac was later filmed and released by RKO Home Video (Catalog No. 4001, currently out of print). Much Ado was originally produced at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1982-83, then moved to London's Barbican Theatre for the 1983-1984 season where it was joined by Cyrano, before both plays came to New York's Gershwin Theatre from October 1984 to January 1985, for which Cusack received a Tony Award nomination for her performance as Beatrice, and costar Jacobi won the award for his Benedick. During this period, Cusack and Irons appeared in a "Shakespeare Winter's Eve", a major fundraiser for the Riverside Shakespeare Company in New York, along with other members of the Royal Shakespeare Company. Following the Broadway run, the plays toured the US, making stops in Washington DC and Los Angeles. She appeared in the 1992 film adaptation of Graham Swift's novel Waterland, alongside her husband Irons.

One of her best known stage roles was Our Lady of Sligo in 1998, in which she played the principal role of Mai O'Hara in performances in Ireland, on Broadway and at the National Theatre. She also starred in the 2004 BBC miniseries North and South in a scene-stealing role as Mrs. Thornton, and in the 2006 film V for Vendetta.

She was awarded the 1998 Evening Standard Award for Best Actress and the 1998 Critics' Circle Theatre Award for Best Actress. In 2006, she starred in the BBC sitcom Home Again.

Along with other actresses, including Paola Dionisotti, Fiona Shaw, Juliet Stevenson and Harriet Walter, Cusack contributed to a book by Carol Rutter called Clamorous Voices: Shakespeare's Women Today (1994).[4] The book analyzed modern acting interpretations of female Shakespearean roles.

Personal life

She married British actor Jeremy Irons in 1978, and they have two sons, Samuel James (Sam), born 16 September 1978, and Maximilian Paul (Max), born 17 October 1985. Prior to marrying Irons, Cusack gave birth to a son in 1968 and placed the child for adoption. Cusack and her son, revealed to be the Irish Trotskyist politician Richard Boyd Barrett, have since been reunited.[5] Cusack campaigned for Boyd Barrett when he stood in Ireland's 2007 general election as the People Before Profit Alliance's candidate for Dún Laoghaire constituency.[6][7]

Sinead Cusack is a patron of the Burma Campaign UK, the London based group campaigning for human rights and democracy in Burma.

In 1998 Cusack was named, along with her husband Jeremy Irons, in a list of the biggest private financial donors to the Labour Party. [8]

Quotes

  • "Acting is the shy person's revenge on the world."

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
The Tiger's Tail (2006 Comedy Drama Film)
Joseph Fiennes (Actor, Drama/Romance)
Jeremy Irons (Actor, Drama/History)

Is Sinead O'Connor a lesbian? Read answer...
Is the name Sinead in the Bible? Read answer...
Are John Cusack and Joan Cusack related? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Is sinead o'connor dead?
Is sinead o'conner irish?
Are john cusack and Ann cusack related?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sinéad Cusack" Read more