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Emily Blunt

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Emily Blunt
Blunt in 2019
Born
Emily Olivia Laura Blunt

(1983-02-23)23 February 1983(age 41)
London,England
Citizenship
  • United Kingdom
  • United States
OccupationActress
Years active2001–present
WorksFull list
Spouse
(m.2010)
Children2
AwardsFull list

Emily Olivia Laura Blunt(born 23 February 1983) is a British actress. She is the recipient ofseveral accolades,including aGolden Globe Awardand twoScreen Actors Guild Awards,in addition to nominations for anAcademy Awardand fourBritish Academy Film Awards.Forbesranked her as one of the highest-paid actresses in the world in 2020.

Blunt made her acting debut in a 2001 stage production ofThe Royal Familyand portrayedCatherine Howardin the television miniseriesHenry VIII(2003). She made her feature film debut in the dramaMy Summer of Love(2004). Blunt's breakthrough came in 2006 with her starring roles in the television filmGideon's Daughterand the comedy-drama filmThe Devil Wears Prada.The former won her aGolden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress.Her profile continued to grow with leading roles in the period filmThe Young Victoria(2009), the romantic comedySalmon Fishing in the Yemen(2011), the science fiction filmsThe Adjustment Bureau(2011),Looper(2012) andEdge of Tomorrow(2014), and the musicalInto the Woods(2014).

Blunt received critical acclaim for playing an idealistic FBI agent in the crime filmSicario(2015), an alcoholic in the psychological thrillerThe Girl on the Train(2016), and a survivalist mother in her husbandJohn Krasinski's horror filmA Quiet Place(2018), for which she won aSAG Award for Best Supporting Actress.She has since starred in the sequelsMary Poppins Returns(2018) andA Quiet Place Part II(2021), the fantasy adventureJungle Cruise(2021), and therevisionist Westerntelevision miniseriesThe English(2022). Her portrayal ofKatherine OppenheimerinChristopher Nolan's biographical thriller filmOppenheimer(2023) earned her a nomination for theAcademy Award for Best Supporting Actress.

Blunt has been working with theAmerican Institute for Stutteringsince 2006 to help children overcome stuttering through educational resources and raise awareness of the realities of the condition. She is on the board of directors of the institute, and hosts a gala for it to raise funds forspeech therapyscholarships for children and adults.

Early life

Emily Olivia Laura Blunt was born in London on 23 February 1983.[1][2]She is the second of four children, born to a former actress and English teacher, Joanna Mackie,[3][4]and abarrister,Oliver BluntQC.[5][6]Her mother gave up acting to be a full-time mother before Blunt started school.[5][4]Blunt described herself as a "shy and awkward" child.[7]In childhood, she began having difficulties withstuttering,which she described as debilitating and "like an imposter living in your body".[8][9]She experienced its worst state from the ages of seven to fourteen.[10]Intimidated by speaking, Blunt spent a lot of time watching people as well as creating elaborate games.[4][5]She credits a school teacher for encouraging her to perform in class plays using voices different to her own, which allowed her to disconnect from herself and speak fluently, and gave her confidence to continue, eventually leading her to discover her love for acting.[11][10]Blunt stated that her stutter largely receded in adulthood, but she still occasionally stutters when she feels stressed.[12][8][9]She attendedHurtwood House,asixth formboarding schoolinSurreyknown for its performing arts programme.[13]After performing in a school play that went to the Edinburgh Festival, Blunt was discovered and signed by an agent.[13][14]She finished her school exams and began auditioning.[14]

Career

2001–2004: Early work

In November 2001, Blunt made her professional acting debut at age 18 inPeter Hall'sWest Endproduction of the playThe Royal Family,in which she played the granddaughter ofJudi Dench's character.[15]Critic Tom Keatinge hailed the production, writing that "Peter Hall's direction and Anthony Ward's tremendous set combine with all this to makeThe Royal Familya terrific night's entertainment ", and that" it provides a vehicle for acting of the finest quality, with strong performances from the whole ensemble ".[16]For her performance, Blunt was named "Best Newcomer" by theEvening Standard.[17]The following year, she portrayed Eugenie inNicholas Wright's playVincent in Brixtonat the National Theatre, andJulietinIndhu Rubasingham's production ofRomeo and JulietatChichester Festival Theatre.[1][18]In 2003, Blunt made her screen debut in the British television dramaBoudica,about the life ofthe ancient Celtic warrior-queenwho fought theRomans.That same year, she was praised for her performance as the 16th-centuryQueen Catherine Howardin the two-part British television dramaHenry VIII.[18]

In 2004, Blunt made her theatrical film debut inPaweł Pawlikowski's critically acclaimed independent British dramaMy Summer of Love,about an infatuation between two young women from differentsocioeconomicbackgrounds in the English countryside.[18][5]The film involved a lot of improvisation, which Blunt found an interesting challenge, later stating that Pawlikowski's approach was "free spirited, collaborative and alive."[19][14]Co-starring as Tamsin, she received considerable attention for her performance,[18]garnering critical praise,[20]with David Ansen ofNewsweekwriting: "Press and Blunt are major discoveries... they conjure up the role-playing raptures of youth with perfect poetic pitch".[21]Blunt won theEvening Standard British Film Awardfor Most Promising Newcomer and was nominated for theBritish Independent Film AwardforMost Promising Newcomer.[22]She credited her experience making the film as having an impact on her career choices, stating that it was "such a foray into the great unknown....[like] putting your feet to the fire" and she "loved that feeling of terror and excitement" and "looked for it ever since."[14][23]

2005–2010:The Devil Wears Pradaand breakthrough

Blunt's international breakthrough came in 2006.[17]She co-starred as the troubled only child of aNew Labourspin doctorin the British television drama filmGideon's Daughter,[18]and played Emily Charlton, the senior assistant offashion magazineeditor Miranda Priestly (played byMeryl Streep), in the comedy-drama filmThe Devil Wears Prada.The Devil Wears Pradawas a commercial success, grossing $326 million.[24]Blunt's performance was deemed a standout,[1][17][25]with Clifford Pugh of theHouston Chronicleasserting that "[Blunt] has many of the film's best lines and steals nearly every scene she's in."[26]Blunt won theGolden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Filmfor her performance inGideon's Daughter,and was nominated for theGolden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picturefor her performance inThe Devil Wears Prada.[27]She also received aBAFTA Awardnomination forBest Actress in a Supporting Rolefor the latter.[28]At the79th Academy Awards,she and co-starAnne Hathawayco-presented theAcademy Award for Best Costume Design,with both acting as their characters from the film.[29]Blunt also appeared in the independent mystery dramaIrresistible(2006). AfterThe Devil Wears Prada,Streep described Blunt as "the best young actress I've worked with in some time, perhaps ever".[7]

Blunt at the60th British Academy Film Awardsin 2007, where she received twoBAFTA Awardnominations

Blunt's profile continued to rise, and in 2007, she appeared in four films: the horror filmWind Chill,the romantic dramaThe Jane Austen Book Club,the comedy-dramaDan in Real Life,and the biographical comedy-dramaCharlie Wilson's War.[18]In 2008, Blunt appeared inSunshine Cleaningin the role of Norah Lorkowski, an underachiever who starts a crime-scene clean-up business with her sister Rose (Amy Adams). The film premiered at the2008 Sundance Film Festival,where it received positive reviews, particularly for Adams' and Blunt's performances.Peter TraversofRolling Stonemagazine commented "This funny and touching movie depends on two can-do actresses to scrub past the biohazard of noxious clichés that threaten to intrude. Adams and Blunt get the job done."[30]A. O. ScottofThe New York Timesagreed, stating "Amy Adams and Emily Blunt [...] attack their roles with vivacity and dedication..."[31]She then starred inThe Great Buck Howardas Valerie Brennan, which premiered at the same festival.[18]

In 2009, Blunt portrayedQueen Victoriain the independent period dramaThe Young Victoria,directed byJean-Marc Valléeand written byJulian Fellowes,which focused primarily on her early life and reign, as well as her marriage toPrince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.[32]Blunt admitted to having little prior knowledge of the Queen, but after consulting her mother, found her to be "remarkable" and "a very 21st century sort of woman."[33]Blunt's performance earned critical accolades, and she was nominated for theGolden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama[34]andCritics' Choice Movie Award for Best Actress,[35]among others.Owen GleibermanofEntertainment Weeklyconcluded that "Director Jean-Marc Vallée's images have a creamy stateliness, but this is no gilded princess fantasy – it's the story of a budding ruler who learns to control her surroundings, and Blunt makes that journey at once authentic and relevant."[36]That same year, Blunt received theBAFTA Britannia Awardfor British Artist of the Year.[37]

She starred in the Toby Spanton–directed short filmCuriosity.[38]She also voiced Matilda Mouseling, the mother of the titular character, in the television seriesAngelina Ballerina: The Next Steps.In 2010, Blunt played a supporting role in theperiodhorror filmThe Wolfman,starringBenicio del ToroandAnthony Hopkins.A re-adaptation of the1941 film of the same name,the film received mainly negative reviews, and according to theLos Angeles Times,was one of the largest box-office failures of all time.[39][40]Blunt was offered the role ofNatasha Romanoff / Black WidowforIron Man 2(2010), but she was contractually obligated by20th Century Foxto join theJack Black-led comedy filmGulliver's Travelsafter the studio exercised an option it had for her when she signed on forThe Devil Wears Prada.[41][42]

2011–2014: Science-fiction and comedy films

In 2011, Blunt co-starred withMatt Damonin the thrillerThe Adjustment Bureau,playing a dancer who is "being mysteriously kept apart" from a politician. The film earned generally positive reviews, with critics praising Blunt and Damon's chemistry.[43]Blunt starred in the British romantic comedy-dramaSalmon Fishing in the Yemen,directed byLasse Hallström.She played a financial adviser who recruits a fisheries expert to help realise a sheikh's vision of bringing the sport offly fishingto theYemendesert, resulting in a spiritual journey for both in the process.[44]The film premiered at the2011 Toronto International Film Festival,[45]receiving positive reviews, as did Blunt's performance.Kenneth Turanof theLos Angeles Timesnoted "Blunt and [co-starEwan McGregor] are two of the most gifted and attractive actors working today, able to play off each other with great style... "[46]Blunt was nominated for theGolden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Comedy or Musicalfor her performance. Also that year, she made a cameo appearance inDisney'sThe Muppets,asMiss Piggy's receptionist, and starred in the independent comedy-dramaYour Sister's Sister.[47]In November 2011, Blunt was named the ambassador of the newYves Saint LaurentfragranceOpium.[48]

Blunt attending the premiere ofLooperat the2012 Toronto International Film Festival

In 2012, Blunt starred in the romantic comedyThe Five-Year Engagement,directed byNicholas Stollerand co-starringJason Segel,in which she and Segel played a couple whose relationship becomes strained when their engagement is continually extended. The film earned positive reviews, with Elizabeth Weitzman of theNew YorkDailyNewsremarking that "Blunt has never been more relaxed, and she and Segel have a believably warm chemistry."[49]She then starred inLooper,a science fiction action film directed byRian Johnson.Blunt played Sara, a tough farm woman and single mother, who aids and falls in love with a time-traveller. The film premiered at the2012 Toronto International Film Festival,where it served as the opening film, and earned highly positive feedback.Todd McCarthyofThe Hollywood Reportercredited Blunt for "effectively [revealing] Sara's tough and vulnerable sides."[50]Also that year, she starred in the comedy-dramaArthur Newmanas the troubled Charlotte, who is trying to run away from her past.[51]The film received generally mixed-to-negative reviews.[52][53]

In 2014, Blunt starred inEdge of Tomorrow,a film adaptation of the Japanese novelAll You Need Is Kill,written byHiroshi Sakurazaka.[54]Blunt played Sergeant Rita Vrataski, a Special Forces warrior tasked with training a public relations officer to defeat invading extraterrestrials. Blunt trained three months for her role, "focusing on everything from weights to sprints to yoga, aerial wire work and gymnastics", and studyingKrav Maga.[55]The film was commercially successful, grossing $370,541,256,[56]and earned positive reviews. Many critics took note of the atypically dominating role portrayed by Blunt, and Justin Chang ofVarietynoted that "Blunt is alert, energized and emotionally present in a none-too-ta xing role."[57]For her performance, Blunt won theCritics' Choice Movie Award for Best Actress in an Action Movie.[58]

Blunt then played the role of the Baker's Wife inThe Walt Disney Company'sfilm adaptationofStephen Sondheim's musicalInto the Woods,directed byRob Marshalland featuring an ensemble cast.[59][60]Ironically, Blunt was pregnant throughout filming, while playing a character who is barren throughout the film's first act.[61][62]The film was a commercial success and earned generally positive reviews, with Blunt earning praise for her acting and singing. Richard Corliss ofTimeremarked that "When Blunt is onscreen, these woods are alive with the magic of a fractured fairy tale..."[63]She was nominated for her second Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Comedy or Musical for her performance.[64]

2015–present: Established actress

Blunt attending the premiere ofSicarioat the2015 Cannes Film Festival

In 2015, Blunt starred in the crime thrillerSicario,directed byDenis Villeneuve.Blunt played Kate Macer, a principledFBIagent assigned to take down the leader of a powerfulMexican drug cartel.The film was selected to compete for thePalme d'Orat the2015 Cannes Film Festival,where it received critical acclaim. Blunt received considerable praise for her performance, with Dan Jolin ofEmpiremagazine calling it "nuanced", and stating that "her straight-arrow-sharp determination becomes painfully dulled",[65]and whilePeter BradshawofThe Guardianfound her character implausible, he praised Blunt for "[brazening] out any possible absurdity with great acting focus and front".[66]Blunt was nominated for her second consecutive Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Actress in an Action Movie.[67]

In 2016, Blunt co-starred inThe Huntsman: Winter's War,which serves as both a prequel and sequel toSnow White and the Huntsman(2012). The film, directed byCedric Nicolas-Troyan,was mostly dismissed by critics.[68][69]Blunt then headlined the mystery thrillerThe Girl on the Train,directed byTate Taylor.Based onPaula Hawkins's best-sellingnovel of the same name,Blunt played Rachel Watson, an alcoholic who becomes involved in a missing person investigation. While the film received mixed reviews from critics, who felt it failed to live up to the novel, Blunt's performance earned considerable praise. Writing forRolling Stone,Peter Traversremarked that "the movie gives away the game faster than the novel", but credited Blunt for "playing the hell out of [her character] and adding a touch of welcome empathy. [She] digs into the role like an actress possessed – there's not an ounce of vanity here, [and she] raise[s]Girlto the level of spellbinder. "[70]She was nominated for theBAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Roleand theScreen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role.[71][72]

After providing her voice for the 2017 animated filmsMy Little Pony: The MovieandAnimal Crackers,Blunt made her return to live action in her husbandJohn Krasinski's horror filmA Quiet Place,which follows a family being tormented by monstrous creatures that hunt by sound.[73]The script was originally written byScott Beck and Bryan Woods,who began writing it in January 2016 based on a concept they conceived in college,[74]and they wanted Blunt for the role of the mother.[75]When Krasinski re-wrote the script, he wrote it with Blunt in mind for the role, but did not ask her to do it as she had just had a child, was working on another film, and he was concerned that if he asked she would either decline it or accept it to support him. "I just thought if she does this, she has to come to it on her own."[76]Blunt initially did not want to be cast, but after reading Krasinski's draft on a plane flight she felt she needed to do it as the story "represented some of my deepest fears—of not being able to protect my children."[15][76]Blunt contributed to thepre-productionstage of the film.[77][76]A Quiet Placeserved as the opening night film at the 2018South by Southwestfilm festival, where it received critical acclaim;[78][79]Eric Kohn of IndieWire lauded the cast for "contribut[ing] credible intensity to their scenes with a degree of sophistication rare for this type of material", while Laura Prudom ofIGNremarked that, "Blunt, in particular, is put through the wringer in ways that would seem almost farcical, if she didn't play them with such compelling conviction."[80][81]

Blunt promotingA Quiet Placein 2018

The same year, Blunt played thetitle characterin Rob Marshall's musical fantasy filmMary Poppins Returns.It served as a sequel to the1964 film,with Blunt taking over the role fromJulie Andrews.[82]Owen Gleiberman ofVarietyfound Blunt to be "practically perfect in every way" and added that she "inhabits Mary Poppins' snappishly entrancing spirit, and in the musical numbers she generates her own spit-spot radiance".[83]She received two SAG nominations for her performances inA Quiet PlaceandMary Poppins Returns,winning Best Supporting Actress forA Quiet Place,and she also received her sixth Golden Globe nomination forMary Poppins Returns.[84][85]In 2020, Blunt guest-starred in her husband's web seriesSome Good News,which began streaming onYouTubeduring theCOVID-19 pandemic.[86]She starred in the romantic dramaWild Mountain Thyme– based onJohn Patrick Shanley's playOutside Mullingar.[87]The part required her to speak with an Irish accent; neither the film nor her accent were well received.[88][89][90]In the same year,Forbesranked her as the sixth highest-paid actress in the world, with annual earnings of $22.5 million.[91]

Blunt reprised her role in the horror sequelA Quiet Place Part II(2021), which was released after a year-long delay due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It became one of the first major Hollywood films to be released theatrically since the beginning of the pandemic.[92]Peter Bradshaw bemoaned that the "excellent" Blunt did not have more screen time.[93]As with the first film, it also emerged as a commercial success.[94]Later that year, Blunt starred alongsideDwayne Johnsonin the adventure filmJungle Cruise,based on theeponymous amusement ride.[95]It was released simultaneously in theatres and digitally onDisney+ Premier Access.[96]Jeannette Catsoulis ofThe New York Timesdisliked the picture and opined that "not even Emily Blunt, doing her bestKatharine Hepburnimpression, can keep this leaky boat ride afloat ".[97]The following year, Blunt played an avenging mother in the television miniseriesThe English,a western fromHugo Blick.[98]Critics were impressed with her performance.[99]Lucy Mangan ofThe Guardianopined, "Blunt is at her best yet, giving us a woman made brave and undauntable by resolve".[100]She received anotherSAG Awardnomination for it.[101]

InChristopher Nolan's biographical filmOppenheimer(2023), starringCillian MurphyasJ. Robert Oppenheimer,Blunt portrayed the eponymous scientist's wife,Katherine,who was a member of theCommunist Party USA.[102]She took a pay cut to work on the film, earning $4 million in lieu of her usual $10- to $20-million salary.[103]Nolan said that he thought about "running away" from the character while writing the script as she was "terrifying", but Blunt humanised her and surprised him in how she embraced her negative qualities; "No vanity, no fear of humiliation, no wanting to control the way she would appear".[104]The film was critically acclaimed, although some criticism was made of the writing of the female characters.[105][106]Blunt's performance received praise,[107][108]and was singled out for elevating the limited material she had.[109][110]Writing forEmpire,Dan Jolin said that Blunt "busts out of the supportive/suffering wife archetype as the alcoholic but sharp-witted Kitty Oppenheimer" and delivers "one of the film's most rousing scenes in an intense verbal duel with bullish lawyerRoger Robb",[111]and Tomris Laffly ofThe Wrapcalled her performance "subtly scene-stealing".[112]Blunt once again received nominations for the Golden Globe, SAG, and BAFTA Award,[113][114][28]in addition to her firstAcademy Awardnomination forBest Supporting Actress.[115]With a worldwide gross of over $950 million,Oppenheimeremerged as Blunt's highest-grossing film.[116]Her next release that year, theNetflixcrime dramaPain HustlersoppositeChris Evans,received poor reviews from critics.[117][118]

Blunt next starred withRyan GoslinginDavid Leitch's action comedy filmThe Fall Guy(2024).[119]For her part as a filmmaker in it, she drew inspiration fromGreta Gerwig.[120]IGN's Siddhant Adlakha was appreciate of the romantic chemistry between Blunt and Gosling.[121]She then had a voice role in Krasinski'slive-action animatedfantasy filmIF.[122]She will next star in the sports filmThe Smashing Machine,starring Dwayne Johnson as wrestlerMark Kerr.[123]

Reception

Journalists have noted Blunt's versatility as an actor and her roles in various genres, including drama, comedy, musicals, and action.[130]The Guardianobserved her ability to not be pigeonholed into a type of role, and wrote that she "specialises in a sort of calculated understatement", praising her "insight into what makes characters tick and her facility for accents".[5]Commenting on her engaging screen presence, Rachel Rosenblint ofEllestated that "she has a knack for playing subtle, unspoken notes like a virtuoso".[25]The New York Timesregarded Blunt as having a "taste for the offbeat and a fetching lack of vanity when it comes to playing disagreeable women" and noted her "adventurous spirit" as a performer.[3]Describing the nuances of a performance,The Agewrote, "It's no wonder that Meryl Streep has already pronounced Blunt" the best young actress I've worked with in some time, perhaps ever "."[124]Aaron Hicklin said inThe Guardianthat Blunt's career "has been marked by a succession of stretching new roles".[131]The Los Angeles Timesassessed that from the start of her career, Blunt "has always proved up for whatever the challenge may be", and noted her "fluidity" in working between drama and comedy.[132]Screen Rantstated that Blunt has "a number of iconic roles under her belt".[133]Her work in action roles has also been singled out, withColliderwriting that it is "proof that action cinema has the potential to be morally, ethically, and emotionally nuanced", and deeming Blunt one of the "rare performers" that exceed as both an actor and movie star.[128]Catherine Shoard ofThe Guardiannamed her "the biggest British female movie star of her generation", comparing her toKeira Knightley,Carey Mulligan,Rachel Weisz,andKate Winslet.[134]Vanity Faircommented that she has portrayed "a kaleidoscope of mesmerizing characters" and found a "delicate balance" as "a movie star with character-actor range".[15]

Advocacy

Blunt helps to promote and raise funds for theMalala Fund,a non-profit organisation that advocates for girls' education, co-founded byMalala Yousafzai.[135]She also works with Family Reach, an organisation that helps financially support families affected by cancer.[136]Blunt has also been working with theAmerican Institute for Stutteringsince 2006 to help children overcome stuttering through educational resources and raise awareness of the realities of the condition.[9]She is on the board of directors of the institute, and hosts a gala for it each year to raise funds for speech therapy scholarships for children and adults.[137][7]

Personal life

Blunt was in a relationship with Canadian singerMichael Bubléfrom 2005 to 2008.[138]She and American actorJohn Krasinskiwere introduced to each other by a mutual friend and began dating in November 2008.[139][140]They became engaged in August 2009 and married inComoin July 2010.[140][141]They have two daughters, one born in 2014 and the other in 2016.[142][143]

In 2012, Blunt became the sister-in-law of actorStanley Tucciwhen he married her sister Felicity.[144]In 2015, Blunt became anAmerican citizenthrough naturalisation, making her a dual citizen of the UK and US.[145]

Acting credits and awards

According to the review aggregator siteRotten Tomatoesand the box office siteBox Office Mojo,Blunt's most critically acclaimed and commercially successful films includeMy Summer of Love(2004),The Devil Wears Prada(2006),Sunshine Cleaning(2008),Your Sister's Sister(2011),Looper(2012),Edge of Tomorrow(2014),Into the Woods(2014),Sicario(2015),The Girl on the Train(2016),A Quiet Place(2018),Mary Poppins Returns(2018),A Quiet Place Part II(2021), andOppenheimer(2023).[146][147]

Blunt has receivedmultiple accoladesfor her workacross film, television and stage,including aGolden Globe Award,aScreen Actors Guild Award,and nominations for anAcademy Awardand fourBritish Academy Film Awards.

See also

References

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External links