Celebrities
Photos
Fan Sites
Apply
Directory
Support
Forums
Browse Forums
Request New Forum
Become Moderator
Hot List


Bullet Arrow Photos
Bullet Arrow News
Bullet Arrow Interviews
Bullet Arrow Premieres
Bullet Arrow Forums
Bullet Arrow Fan Sites
Bullet Arrow Get a Poster at AllPosters.com
Advertisement

It was unclear which fact was more extraordinary about Anna Paquin – that she won an Academy Award at age 11 for her performance in “The Piano” (1993), or that after the win, she had no plans to continue acting. Moviegoers were thankful for her change of heart, as the Canadian actress continued to give thoughtful, complex, and occasionally seductive turns in a wide variety of projects ranging from big-budget blockbusters like the “X-Men” franchise to independent fare like Noah Bambauch’s “The Squid and the Whale” (2005) to television miniseries like the Emmy-winning “Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee....

|
Comments (0)

Filmography

Whistle Down the Wind - ( / / Announced / )
Trick 'r Treat - ( Laurie / 2007 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Margaret - ( - Cast / 2006 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
X-Men: The Last Stand - ( Marie/Rogue / 2006 / Released / )
Steamboy - ( Voice of Ray Steam / 2005 / Released / )
The Squid and the Whale - ( Lili / 2005 / Released / Sony Pictures Releasing International (SPRI) )
Darkness - ( Regina / 2004 / Released / Buena Vista Worldwide Home Entertainment )
X2: X-Men United - ( Rogue / 2003 / Released / )
25th Hour - ( Mary D'Annunzio / 2002 / Released / )
Buffalo Soldiers - ( Robyn Lee / 2002 / Released / Paradiso Filmed Entertainment )
Tart - ( / 2002 / Released / )
Almost Famous - ( Polexia Aphrodisia / 2000 / Released / )
Finding Forrester - ( Claire Spence / 2000 / Released / )
X-Men - ( Rogue / 2000 / Released / Gemini Kinomir )
A Walk on the Moon - ( Alison Kantrowitz / 1999 / Released / )
She's All That - ( MacKenzie Siler / 1999 / Released / )
Hurlyburly - ( Donna / 1998 / Released / )
Amistad - ( Queen Isabella / 1997 / Released / )
Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre - ( Young Jane / 1996 / Released / )
Fly Away Home - ( Amy Alden / 1996 / Released / )
The Piano - ( Flora McGrath / 1993 / Released / Belga Films )
Blue State - ( Chloe Hamon / / Released / )
Blue State - ( Executive Producer / / Released / )

TV Credits
True Blood ( 2008 / Released ): Actor
TV Episode Sookie Stackhouse

Mine ( 2008 )
TV Episode Sookie Stackhouse

The First Taste ( 2008 )
TV Episode Sookie Stackhouse

Strange Love ( 2008 )
TV Episode Sookie Stackhouse

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
The 2007 Teen Choice Awards ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
Joan of Arc ( 2005 / Released ): Voice
The 58th Annual Tony Awards ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
X-Pose: X2 Mutants Uncovered ( 2003 / Released ): Actor
It's The Rage ( 2000 / Released ): Actor
X-Men: The Mutant Watch ( 2000 / Released ): Actor
The 5th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
The 70th Annual Academy Awards ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
The Member of the Wedding ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
The 67th Annual Academy Awards ( 1995 / Released ): Actor

Full Biography (Back to top)


It was unclear which fact was more extraordinary about Anna Paquin – that she won an Academy Award at age 11 for her performance in “The Piano” (1993), or that after the win, she had no plans to continue acting. Moviegoers were thankful for her change of heart, as the Canadian actress continued to give thoughtful, complex, and occasionally seductive turns in a wide variety of projects ranging from big-budget blockbusters like the “X-Men” franchise to independent fare like Noah Bambauch’s “The Squid and the Whale” (2005) to television miniseries like the Emmy-winning “Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee.” For the latter project, she received Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for her performance as a 19th-century schoolteacher who campaigns for Native American rights.

Born Anna Helene Paquin in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada on July 24, 1982, Paquin’s parents were natives of New Zealand, and the family – which included her older siblings Andrew and Kate – relocated to that country when she was four. Acting was, for all intents and purposes, started out as a bit of a lark for Paquin. She attended the audition for “The Piano” simply because her sister was going, and her earliest interests focused more on music (she played cello and piano) and sports than performing. But casting directors for the Jane Campion period drama saw something in then nine-year-old’s audition, and thus, cast her as Holly Hunter’s daughter over 5,000 other hopefuls.

The choice was an inspired one. Paquin delivered a mature and moving performance as Flora, who speaks for her silent and headstrong mother’s sign language and later provides the undoing for her affair with wild New Zealander Harvey Keitel. Audiences and critics certainly agreed. The picture, which was envisioned as a modest art picture, was a box office success, and the 11-year-old Paquin was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 1994. To the surprise of many, she won the award, which made her the second youngest actress to win an Academy Award, after Tatum O’Neal in “Paper Moon” (1973). Her acceptance speech, marked by a near 30-second moment of breathless silence, charmed many viewers.

Paquin’s career might have stopped after this momentous occasion. She had relocated to Los Angeles, CA with her mother following her parents’ divorce, and was devoting more attention to her studies than to future film roles. Offers flooded in after the Oscar win, but Paquin steadfastly refused all until Franco Zefferelli offered her the chance to play a young Jane Eyre in his 1996 film version of the Charlotte Bronte novel. Paquin’s performance proved that her Oscar win was no fluke. She began to slowly build a film career based on interesting characters rather than high-profile projects. She played a young girl who helps raise a flock of Canadian geese in the endearing children’s’ drama “Fly Away Home” (1996) for director Carroll Ballard, and earned an impressive cameo in Stephen Spielberg’s “Amistad” (1997) as Isabella II, Queen of Spain. While shooting the latter project in Canada, she traveled to Montreal to shoot five television commercials for a telephone company in her former hometown of Winnipeg.

As Paquin grew into her teens, her roles matured with her; she was a seductive runaway “gifted” to a drug-addled Sean Penn and Kevin Spacey by Garry Shandling in the film version of David Rabe’s “Hurlybury” (1998), and played the daughter of Diane Lane’s mom on the verge in “A Walk on the Moon” (1999). Not one to be typecast, Paquin also ventured into the teen movie subgenre with the likable “She’s All That” (1999), starring as the younger sister of BMOC Freddie Prinze, Jr., who provides advice on how to woo offbeat high schooler Rachel Leigh Cook.

In 2000, Paquin graduated high school and stepped into the Hollywood blockbuster machine by taking the role of Rogue, a teenage mutant who can absorb the powers and even the life out of her fellow advanced humans, in the film version of the influential comic book, “X-Men” (2000). The film was a colossal success, earning Paquin nominations from the Saturn Awards, MTV Movie Awards, and Blockbuster Entertainment Awards. Not surprisingly, she revisited the character in its two sequels, “X2: X-Men United” (2003), which saw Rogue joining the X-Men as a full-time member, and the underwhelming “X-Men: The Last Stand” (2006), which showed Rogue accepting a controversial cure for her mutant abilities.

The year 2000 proved to be one of Paquin’s busiest years, both on and off-screen. Not only did she begin studies at Columbia University – taking leave after one year to pursue her acting career – but she appeared in two other major films – Cameron Crowe’s much-loved “Almost Famous” (as one of the “Band-Aid” groupies), and “Finding Forrester” (as a college board member’s daughter who aids an inner city student’s transition into Ivy League life). Theater offered new opportunities, with the actress making her stage debut in a 2001 production of “The Glory of Living,” which brought her a Theatre World Award and a Drama Desk nomination.

Quality film projects outside the “X-Men franchise” proved somewhat elusive for the next few years. “Buffalo Soldiers” (2001), an Army comedy with Joaquin Phoenix and Ed Harris, was pulled from release due to the events of September 11 of that year, vanishing without a trace after theater dates later in the year. A second picture made that year, the Spanish horror film “Darkness,” did not see the light of day until 2004 and sank at the box office, due to poor promotion and reviews. Undaunted, she returned to the stage – this time in London for the West End production of “This Is Our Youth” in 2002.

Paquin next co-starred with Edward Norton in Spike Lee’s “25th Hour” (2002) as a college student who provides a tempting distraction for professor Philip Seymour Hoffman. She kept away from the big screen – save for providing a voice for the English-language dub of the acclaimed Japanese anime feature “Steamboy” in 2005 – until 2005, when she played a role similar to her “25th Hour” character in the critically lauded and Oscar-nominated “The Squid and the Whale.” In this film, the professorial object of her affections is dissolute author Jeff Daniels, who allows her to share his home with his two sons after his divorce from Laura Linney.

Paquin returned for the third “X-Men” installment in 2006, prior to making her debut as executive producer on “Blue State” (2006), a comedy filmed in her former home town of Winnipeg and starring Breckin Meyer as a Democrat who makes good on his promise to abandon the United States for Canada if George W. Bush is re-elected. Paquin, who co-produced the film with her brother Andrew, played Meyer’s companion for the road trip north. The independent feature was released in 2007, the same year Paquin took on the role of Elaine Goodale in “Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee” for HBO. The role, based on the real-life poet and Indian rights advocate who married a Sioux doctor and bore witness to many of the tragedies that befell Native Americans at the end of the 19th century, made excellent use of Paquin’s soulful nature and earned her nods from both the Emmy and Golden Globe awards.

Paquin remained busy after her success with “Wounded Knee” with a string of edgy projects, including Kenneth Lonergan’s drama “Margaret” (2007), for which she was top-billed; the horror film “Trick ‘r Treat” (2008), and the HBO series “True Blood” (2008- ), in which she starred as author Charlaine Harris’ Gothic heroine Sookie Stackhouse, whose supernatural pedigree made her a target by all manner of night creatures.


Profession(s):
Actor
Sometimes Credited As:
Anna Helene Paquin
Horizontal Line
Family
brother:Andrew Paquin (Born c. 1977; attended Harvard)
father:Brian Paquin (Canadian; separated from Paquin's mother in 1995)
mother:Mary Paquin (New Zealander; separated from Paquin's father in 1995)
sister:Katya Paquin (Born c. 1980)
Companion(s)
Kieran Culkin , Companion , ```..Rumored to have dated in 2006


Horizontal Line
Education
Windward School Los Angeles, CA
Hutt Intermediate School Lower Hutt, New Zealand 1994
Columbia University New York, NY psychology 2000
Awards (Back to top)

Online Film Critics Society Award Best Ensemble "Almost Famous" 2000
Academy Award Best Supporting Actress "The Piano" 1993
Film Critics Circle of Australia Award Best Supporting Actress "The Piano" 1993
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award Best Supporting Actress "The Piano" 1993

Milestones (Back to top)

2007 Played an Army deserter in "Blue State," a romantic comedy, she co-produced with her brother, Andrew Paquin
2007 Portrayed schoolteacher Elaine Goodale in the HBO Films original movie, "Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee"; earned Emmy, Golden Globe and SAG nominations for Best Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or Mo
2006 Reprised the role of Rogue in the third installment of the "X-Men" series, "X-Men: The Last Stand"
2005 Cast as a flirtatious female student in Noah Baumbach's "The Squid and the Whale" opposite Jeff Daniels and Laura Linney
2003 Cast as the sergeant's daughter in "Buffalo Soldiers"
2003 Reprised role of Rogue in "X-Men 2"
2002 London stage debut in "This Is Our Youth"
2002 Cast in Spike Lee's drama feature "The 25th Hour"
2001 Made NYC stage debut in "The Glory of Living," directed by Philip Seymour Hoffman
2000 Portrayed Rogue, a genetic mutant who can suck the life from any being, in the big screen version of the Marvel Comic adventure "X-Men"
2000 Played Polexia Aphrodesia, a soulful groupie in Cameron Crowe's "Almost Famous"
2000 Appeared in "Finding Forrester" opposite F Murray Abraham and Sean Connery
1999 Appeared as a rebellious hippie chick in the 1960s drama "A Walk on the Moon"
1999 Played Freddie Prinze Jr's younger sister in the frothy teen comedy "She's All That"
1998 Co-starred with Kevin Spacey and Sean Penn as a teen vamp in "Hurlyburly"
1997 US TV acting debut, played Frankie in the USA Network remake of "The Member of the Wedding"
1997 Made cameo appearance as the Queen of Spain in the Steven Spielberg directed "Amistad"
1996 Played foster mother to a flock of geese in the family film "Fly Away Home"
1994 Starred in a series of commercials for MCI
1993 Became the second youngest Oscar winner of all time (to date) when she won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her big-screen debut in "The Piano"
1992 Beat out 5,000 girls for the part of Holly Hunter's daughter in Jane Campion's period love story "The Piano"
First acting experience as a skunk in a school ballet



Advertisement