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Janet McTeer Biography, Age, Husband, Height, Appointments, Children, Movies & TV Shows

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BIOGRAPHY OF JANET MCTEER

Janet McTeer is an English actress born August 5, 1961 in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. In 1997, she won the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play, the Olivier Award for Best Actress and the Drama Desk Award for Best Actress in a Play for her role as Nora in “A Doll’s House”. She was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) on the 2008 Queen’s Birthday.

Janet McTeer attended the now defunct Queen Anne Girls’ High School and worked at the Old Starre Inn, York Minster and the city’s Theater Royal. She performed locally with the Rowntree Players at the Joseph Rowntree Theater and then trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, beginning a successful theater career with the Royal Exchange Theater upon graduation.

AGE OF JANET MCTEER

She was born on August 5 in Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom (57 years old in 2018)

JANET MCTEER HEIGHT

She is 6 ft ½ in. McTall is his nickname.

JANET MCTEER FAMILY

Janet McTeer is the second daughter of Allan and Jean McTeer, a former British Rail employee and retired police officer. McTeer’s father had lost a brother during World War II. Her sister, Helen, is five years older and is now a music teacher and a widowed mother of three adult children.

On Janet McTeer’s sixth birthday, the family moved from Newcastle, where she was born, to just outside the Roman walled city of York. In her sporting family – her parents, she became a strong tennis player and swimmer, but her main childhood memories are of cycling in the Yorkshire countryside and reading.

JANET MCTEER HUSBAND

She is married to Joe Coleman, an American painter, illustrator and performance artist.

JANET MCTEER CHILDREN

McTeer says it never occurred to him to want a family life until he was forty. She wanted excitement and danger.

Janet McTeer

CAREER OF JANET MCTEER

At sixteen, Janet McTeer and her girlfriends started hanging out at a cafe bar in the York Theater Royal. Soon, McTeer found a job selling coffee there on Saturdays, and she began meeting the actors. One day she was allowed to see Oliver Goldsmith’s ‘She Stoops to Conquer’.

Janet McTeer first audition was at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in London. She played Juliet. She was so nervous and just left. She later came back to the audition and she still wasn’t accepted. Her English teachers helped her recalibrate her audition material to better match her muscular personality: Goneril instead of Juliet, and the triumphant monologue, at the finale of Arnold Wesker’s “Roots,” in which Beatie Bryant finds his own voice that? … Did you listen to me? I’m talking. I quote no more…I’m on my own two feet”).

A few actors from York’s repertoire, including Gary Oldman, suggested he apply to rada. For her audition, she used the “Roots” monologue. McTeer was accepted. In her fifth term, she had decided to give up. Rada’s headmaster Hugh Cruttwell convinced her to stay, and by the time she graduated, McTeer was the star of her class.
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Over the years, Janet McTeer has played a number of dynamic, strong-willed, and complicated women. She was an imposing Beatrice for Mark Rylance’s little Benedick in ‘Much Ado About Nothing’, in London in 1993; a steel Mary Queen of Scots opposed to Harriet Walter’s Queen Elizabeth in Schiller’s “Mary Stuart,” in London in 2005 and on Broadway in 2009; a Nora reimagined in Ibsen’s ‘A Doll’s House’, in London in 1996 and New York the following year – in what Ben Brantley of The Times called ‘the most captivating performance I have ever seen’ . On screen, she portrayed Vita Sackville-West (“Portrait of a Wedding”, 1990), Vanessa Bell (“Carrington”, 1995), Clementine Churchill (“Into the Storm”, 2009) and Mary McCarthy (” Hannah Arendt,” 2012).

JANET MCTEERALBERT NOBBS

In 19th-century Ireland, terribly shy butler Albert Nobbs (Glenn Close) hides an incredible secret: she really is a she. Terrified that someone will find out who he is, Albert keeps a very low profile, until the arrival of Hubert Page (Janet McTeer) spells a drastic change in Albert’s life. Hubert is also secretly a woman and has managed to find a partner who helps him maintain his charade. Hoping to find a similar arrangement, Albert begins courting a maid (Mia Wasikowska).

JANET MCTEERJESSICA JONES

Janet McTeer stars as Alisa Campbell Jones, Jessica Jones’ mother, Alisa also survived the car accident that claimed the lives of Jessica’s father and brother – and like Jessica, Alisa was cured thanks to IGH experiences, which left him with heightened strength, as well as heightened rage. Unlike season one, in which Jessica worked tirelessly to keep the psychopath who once terrorized her from terrorizing someone else, season two sees Jessica coming to terms with having to save someone. whom she loves deeply with her own anger and power.

In the end, she fails: Jessica and Alisa nearly run away together, but when she finally realizes the magnitude of the impact this would have on her daughter, Alisa essentially accepts the end of her life and offers Jessica to sweet parting words – shortly before she was shot. inside the head of Trish Walker (Rachael Taylor), creating a rift between Jessica and her real sister that will be hard to reverse in a likely third season of the Marvel favorite.

JANET MCTEER MALEFICENT

Janet McTeer voiced the aged Aurora as the narrator in Maleficent.

JANET MCTEER MOVIES AND TV SHOWS

Films by Janet McTeer

  • 2016: Me Before You
  • 2011: Albert Nobbs
  • 2012: The Woman in Black
  • 2000: Tumbleweeds
  • 2000: Songcatcher
  • 2011: Cat Race
  • 2005: Tideland
  • 2012: Hannah Arendt
  • 2008: Into the Storm
  • 2014: Maleficent
  • 1998: Velvet Goldmine
  • 2000: Waking the Dead
  • 2016: the exception
  • 2015: Fathers and Daughters
  • 2002: The Intent
  • 2000: The King Is Alive
  • 1992: Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
  • 1991: The Black Velvet Dress
  • 1995: Carrington
  • 1989: Precious Scourge
  • 1988: Hawks
  • 1996: Saint-Ex
  • 2006: As You Like It
  • 2016: Paint It Black
  • 2015: Angelique
  • 2016: The Divergent Series: Allegiant
  • 1990: 102 Boulevard Haussmann
  • 2011: Island
  • 2007: Daphne
  • 2004: Agatha Christie Marple: Murder at the Parsonage
  • hunter
  • 2011: Weekends at Bellevue
  • 1991: I dreamed of waking up
  • A male end
  • Do not leave me like this
  • 2008: Masterpiece Classic: Sense and Sensibility
  • romantic death
  • Sweet words

Janet McTeer TV Shows

  • Since 2015: Jessica Jones
  • 2015: Battle Creek
  • 2014: The Honorable Woman
  • 2013: The White Queen
  • 2012: End of the parade
  • 2008: Sense and Sensibility
  • 2007-2010: five days
  • 2006: The Incredible Mrs. Pritchard
  • 1995 – 1996: The Governor
  • 1990: Portrait of a Wedding

JANET MCTEER AWARD

  • 2000: Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Tumbleweeds.
  • 1997: Tony Award for Best Leading Actress in a Play, A Doll’s House.
  • 1997: Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress, A Doll’s House.
  • 1997: Drama Desk Award for Best Actress in a Play, A Doll’s House.
  • 2009: Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play, Mary Stuart.
  • 1999: National Board of Review Award for Best Actress, Tumbleweeds.
  • 2000: Satellite Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture, Comedy or Musical, Tumbleweeds.
  • 1999: Gotham Independent Film Award for Breakthrough Actor, Tumbleweeds.
  • 1997: Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play, A Dollhouse.
  • 1997: Critics’ Circle Theater Award for Best Actress, A Doll’s House.

INTERVIEW WITH JANET MCTEER

Interviewer: How was it, sitting on the secret of who Alisa really is?

Janet McTeer: It’s absolutely brilliant. (Laughs.) It’s so much fun to do a character where nobody knows who she is. Everything is so secret. You do no press. Everyone leaves you alone. You go to your backyard in Maine and walk your dog. It’s awesome! I think some people are [skeptical] about secrecy, but the whole point of secrecy is to make it more pleasant for the observer. The fact that I’m not telling anyone – or anyone telling anyone what I’m playing – is that when people watch it, it’s a surprise. Hope this improves the viewing experience.

Interviewer: Did you pay attention to character speculation?

Janet McTeer: I know some people thought, “Ooh, is that it? It’s her? Is she the other? But I hid behind my hands. Hope people had fun with it!

Interviewer: How were your first conversations with Melissa Rosenberg?

Janet McTeer:We talked about it very specifically: if you’re playing this particular character, who is so convoluted and complex with so much big stuff, then he has to be grounded in some serious reality. We spoke at length about the experiences of IGH. What is that? What would that do to you? How would you compare it to something you could realistically relate to – like a brain injury or a stroke? Something that would give you anxiety for yourself or society or the world, where you would find yourself in a position where you no longer know yourself. Where you had a breakdown. We talked about how all of this could contribute to the creation of the character, so we have a complete character, not just someone

Interviewer: What was your entry point into Alisa?

Janet McTeer: The doorway to understanding it was its ability to protect, and what I just touched on: the damage done to someone who had a seizure. Someone who thought they knew themselves, and then they had this crisis, and they reinvented their life in a way. There is a trauma, a PTSD.

Interviewer: What do you take away from the collaboration with Krysten on the character and the mother-daughter relationship?

Janet McTeer: We’re both very legal experts. It’s useful. You build it with each other as you go. You do each episode in order, and that really helps. It really builds. Because we’re playing people who have been separated, that really helps. It all happened very organically as it went on.

We talked a lot about how you would immediately get back to where you imagined [a relationship] would go, and then the reality of it. How it is a real contradiction and a real struggle. You imagine how wonderful and wonderful it would be to meet someone you haven’t seen in a long time, since you were a teenager, and then they’re grumpy and easily irritated, and you think, “Oh, that’s not not how I imagined it.’ That was really part of it. We’ve talked a lot about damaged people who aren’t good at relationships. We wanted to give him a lot of places where we could go, which would involve very hard work.

Interviewer: What do you imagine Alisa expected from her relationship with Jessica, before it came true?

Janet McTeer: In acting terms, it’s more interesting to act something unexpected. If you’re playing something you expect, where’s the drama? It was just interesting for me to play someone who was expecting, in my loss and misery, to go, oh, it’s going to be amazing when we get together. It’s going to be awesome. We’re going to get along so well and it’s going to be fantastic. I’m going to live around the corner, we’re going to have coffee together, we’re going to get fat and have fun and go to yoga and be idiots and drink whiskey and margaritas…

Interviewer: Or very bad wine…

Janet McTeer: Right! Or maybe I’ll be a grandmother? All the usual stuff. And then that’s not what she gets at all.

Interviewer: With superhero stories, we’re used to the hero going up against a very clear villain. As Alisa commits horrible acts, the viewer is invited to understand where she came from. This season is less about fighting a “bad guy” and more about saving or protecting the antagonist.

Janet McTeer: It’s all about how good people do bad things and bad people do good things. It’s all a bit more complicated, which is why I found it so appealing. It is not so easy. As you say, it’s often easy to tell who’s the bad guy and who’s the good guy. It’s not that easy when the bad guys line and the good guys line are a bit confusing. I really found it complex and interesting.

Interviewer: Before reuniting with Jessica, Alisa is entrenched in her relationship with Dr. Karl Malus (Callum Keith Rennie), which upends everything we initially expect of them. They are actually very loving and warm people, even though Malus made some bad choices.

Janet McTeer: We were trying to come up with something unexpected. The series has established that the people who have these experiences are bad people. Then you meet someone who’s supposed to be a bad person, and you find out they’re not that bad. If you explore that and go deeper, then you ask, “Well, why are they doing what they’re doing?” It adds another layer of complication, which makes it interesting.

Interviewer: What did you think of your last scene in the series: alone with Jessica on the Ferris wheel, sharing a last moment of love, before being filmed by Trish?

Janet McTeer:I loved that just when you thought there might be a moment of togetherness, we came to the end. I think it’s shocking in a very good way. I thought about her character, she went so far that we slightly realized that she didn’t quite realize how far she had gone herself – until she did. And then she realizes, “I can’t do this. I thought we could run away. I thought we could live in the desert or somewhere else, but we can’t. I thought we could have this amazing life. But no, we can’t. I have done these things in this world. Even though I thought they were right? Maybe not. I’m not going to make it. But you know what? It’s okay, because [Jessica] is amazing. ‘ I thought it was a good place to come. She is at peace when she dies. She is not angry. It was pretty cool, because once you explore all the rage in a character, you know she did all of those things, so where else is it possible to go? We agreed with you, your life, what you did. Now we are at peace. I thought it was a really nice place to end the character. she did all these things, so where else is it possible to go? We agreed with you, your life, what you did. Now we are at peace. I thought it was a really nice place to end the character. she did all these things, so where else is it possible to go? We agreed with you, your life, what you did. Now we are at peace. I thought it was a really nice place to end the character.

Interviewer: Would you like to come back for a third season, even considering the ending?

Janet McTeer: I couldn’t tell you. (Laughs.) I don’t want to give anything away. I think the story is over, but I had a great time. … I loved working with all these fabulous women. Melissa is amazing. Krysten is fabulous. Rachael and Carrie…the list goes on. All those great women, and all the directors… I’ll be fair: there were some great guys there too! But having a female showrunner was particularly exciting. It’s someone my age, who writes at my age, who writes to the sensitivity of someone who has this history with life. I found that to be really helpful. It was a delicious set. An incredibly hardworking set. It was really great fun.

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