Basic Information About Helen Mirren
Full Name | Helen Mirren |
---|---|
Category | Celebrities βΊ Actors |
Professions | Actor, Voice Actor, Film Producer |
Net worth | $100,000,000 |
Date of birth | 1945-07-26 (79 years old) |
Place of birth | Hammersmith |
Nationality | United Kingdom |
Education | New College of Speech and Drama in London |
Father | Vasily Petrovich Mironoff |
Mother | Kathleen Alexandrina Eva Matilda |
Siblings | Two |
Spouse | Taylor Hackford - (31 DecemberΒ 1997 - present) |
Gender | Female |
Height | 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m) |
Social Media | βοΈ Wikipedia βοΈ Instagram βοΈ Imdb |
Famous Network of Actors with Similar Net Worth
What Movie Awards did Helen Mirren win?
Oscar |
Golden Globe |
Golder Raspberry |
BAFTA |
Other |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 48 |
Helen Mirren awards
Award Name | State | Movie / Series Name | Year |
---|---|---|---|
BTVA Feature Film Voice Acting Award - Best Female Vocal Performance in a Feature Film in a Supporting Role | Winner | Monsters University | 2014 |
Actor - Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
Critics Choice Award - Best Acting Ensemble | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
EFA People's Choice Award - Best European Actress | Nominee | Gosford Park | 2002 |
FFCC Award - Best Ensemble Cast | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
LAFCA Award - Best Supporting Actress | Nominee | Gosford Park | 2001 |
NSFC Award - Best Supporting Actress | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
NYFCC Award - Best Supporting Actress | Winner | Gosford Park | 2001 |
OFTA Film Award - Best Supporting Actress | Nominee | Gosford Park | 2002 |
OFCS Award - Best Ensemble | Winner | Gosford Park | 2002 |
Movies for Grownups Award - Breakthrough Achievement | Winner | RED | 2011 |
EDA Female Focus Award - Actress Defying Age and Ageism | Winner | RED | 2011 |
Oscar - Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
Actor - Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
Movies for Grownups Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
AAFCA Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
EDA Award - Best Actress in a Dramatic Performance | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
ACCA - Best Actress in a Leading Role | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
BSFC Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
Critics Choice Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
COFCA Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
CFCA Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
DFWFCA Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
DFCC - Best Actress | Nominee | The Queen | 2006 |
European Film Award - European Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
FFCC Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
Gold Derby Award - Lead Actress of the Decade | Nominee | The Queen | 2010 |
Gold Derby Award - Lead Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
Golden Globe - Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
Golden Schmoes - Best Actress of the Year | Nominee | The Queen | 2006 |
ICP Award - Best Lead Performance | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
ICS Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
INOCA - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
IOFCP Award - Best Actress of the Decade | Nominee | The Queen | 2010 |
IFC Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
Audience Award - Best International Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
IOMA - Best Actress (Miglior attrice protagonista) | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
KCFCC Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
Sierra Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
LAFCA Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
NBR Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
NSFC Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
NYFCC Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
OFCC Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
OFTA Film Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
OFCS Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
PFCS Award - Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
SDFCS Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
SFFCC Award - Best Actress | Winner | The Queen | 2006 |
Outstanding Performer of the Year Award - | Winner | The Queen | 2007 |
Helen Mirren roles
Helen Mirren's Quotes
- [About herself] Being famous for being cool about not being gorgeous.
- The trick in life is learning how to deal with it.
- [About the Academy Awards] It's the creme-de-la-creme of bulls**t.
- Actors are rogues and vagabonds. Or they ought to be. I can't stand it when they behave like solicitors from Penge. I'm a would-be rebel. The good girl who'd like to be a bad one.
- All you have to do is to look like crap on film and everyone thinks you're a brilliant actress. Actually, all you've done is look like crap.
Interesting Facts about Helen Mirren
- Her paternal grandparents were Russian. Her grandfather, Piotr Vasilievich Mironoff, was a Tsarist aristocrat who was in London negotiating an arms deal during World War I when the 1917 Russian Revolution stranded him there. His wife and son (Helen's father) joined him in London. On her mother's side, she is of English descent.
- Before marrying director Taylor Hackford in 1997, she had lived with him in Los Angeles since 1986.
- Used to work in Southend-on-Sea, Essex at an amusement park "The Kursaal" as a "blagger" to attract customers on to rides.
- She was awarded the Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2003 Queen's Birthday Honours List for her services to drama.
- John Boorman said he cast her opposite Nicol Williamson in Excalibur (1981), against both of their protests, because he felt their dislike of each other made them perfect as rivals Morgana and Merlin.
- She allegedly refused the C.B.E. (Commander of Order of the British Empire) in 1996.
- Nominated for Best Actress, Laurence Olivier Theatre Award for her performance of "Orpheus Descending" at the Donmar Warehouse. [2001]
- Nominated for Best Actress, Laurence Olivier Theatre Award for her performance in "Mourning Becomes Electra" at the Royal National Theatre: Lyttelton Stage. [2004]
- Became an Associate Member of RADA.
- Nominated for Best Actress, Tony Award for "Dance of Death" by August Strindberg. [2002]
- Despite her Russian birth name and ancestry, she does not speak Russian, but is fluent in French.
- Her great-great-great-great-grandfather was field-marshal Kamensky, one of the Russian heroes of the Napoleonic wars.
- She is the only actress to play both Queen Elizabeth I (in Elizabeth I (2005)) and Queen Elizabeth II (The Queen (2006)).
- At the premiere of The Queen (2006) at the Venice Film Festival, her performance received a 5 minute standing ovation.
- Member of the jury at the Venice Film Festival in 2004.
- Played a Queen a total of six times: The Queen (2006), Elizabeth I (2005), The Prince of Egypt (1998), The Snow Queen (1995), The Madness of King George (1994), and Caligula (1979).
- Became the third person, after Sigourney Weaver and Joan Plowright, to win two Golden Globes for acting in the same year. The characters she played were both Queens of England, Queen Elizabeth I and Queen Elizabeth II.
- She dedicated her BAFTA win for The Queen (2006) (for Best Actress in a Leading Role) to Ian Richardson for playing a huge part in her success story. She said (in her acceptance speech) that Richardson was very supportive towards her when she started out acting, and without him she may not have been so successful. She dedicated this award two days after Richardson died. [2007]
- Nominated for Best Actress, Tony Award for "A Month in the Country" by Ivan Turgenev. [1995]
- She and her husband Taylor Hackford are both Oscar-winners.
Additional information of Helen Mirren
Zodiac | Leo |
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Lucky Number | 7 |
Lucky Stone | Ruby |
Lucky Color | Gold |
Best Match for Marriage | Sagittarius, Gemini, Aries |
Eye Color | Blue |
Hair Color | Blonde |
Ethnicity | mixed |