Cate Blanchett (birthname:
Catherine Elise Blanchett) is in the top ranks of screen actors of her generation, and as a leading figure in the second generation of the wave of Australian cinema, she combines the brilliance of a Judy Davis with the star power of a
Nicole Kidman.
Like certain British and Australian
film stars (and unlike the vast majority of her American peers), Blanchett has continued to hone her craft on the stage, consistently performing in the theatre from her professional debut in 1992 to the present, and remains a major Australian theatrical figure on stage and as a member of the board of the Sydney Theatre Company, where she served as co-CEO (with playwright husband Andrew Upton) and artistic director from 2008-2012. But it is Blanchett’s extraordinary film work that the world knows, earning her two Oscars (plus four Oscar nominations) and three SAG awards, BAFTA awards, and Golden Globes.
In only her third feature film credit, in Gillian Armstrong’s
Oscar and Lucinda (1997), with Ralph Fiennes, Tom Wilkinson, and Ciaran Hinds, Cate Blanchett earned strong reviews was nominated for best actress from the Film Critics Circle of Australia. Her breakthrough performance as Queen Elizabeth I in Shekhar Kapur’s
Elizabeth (1998) announced a powerful star with a commanding presence that reminded some of Katherine Hepburn—a notion solidified in 2004 by her Oscar/BAFTA/SAG-winning supporting actor portrayal of the great star in Martin Scorsese’s Howard Hughes drama,
The Aviator.
In 1999, Blanchett’s varied roles included co-lead in Mike Newell’s comedy-drama
Pushing Tin, with John Cusack, Billy Bob Thornton, and Angelina Jolie; a prime supporting role in Anthony Minghella’s version of Patricia Highsmith’s
The Talented Mr. Ripley, with
Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, and
Jude Law; and Blanchett even performed (uncredited!) the voice of a “Mysterious Woman” in Stanley Kubrick’s
Eyes Wide Shut, with
Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman.
Blanchett quickly established herself as a key player in the realm of quality, auteur-driven English-language cinema, working with directors such as Sally Potter (
The Man Who Cried in 2000, with Johnny Depp and Christina Ricci), Lasse Hallstrom (
The Shipping News in 2001, with Kevin Spacey and Julianne Moore), Gillian Armstrong (
Charlotte Gray in 2001) and Barry Levinson (
Bandits in 2001, with Bruce Willis and Billy Bob Thornton), Tom Tykwer (
Heaven in 2002, with Giovanni Ribisi), and Jim Jarmusch (his anthology film
Coffee and Cigarettes in 2003, in which Blanchett played herself and her fictitious cousin), Wes Anderson (2004’s
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, with a large ensemble led by Bill Murray), and Martin Scorsese (2004’s
The Aviator, with Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Beckinsale).
Of course, in 2001, Cate Blanchett’s face became an iconic part of the sprawling universe—as the majestic Galadriel--of Peter Jackson’s mega-blockbuster
Lord of the Rings series, including
The Fellowship of the Ring (2001),
The Two Towers (2002),
The Return of the King (2003), with Elijah Wood, Ian McKellan, Liv Tyler, Viggo Mortensen, and Sean Astin. The landmark trilogy grossed a combined worldwide total of nearly $3 billion.
It illustrated that for all of her attachment to first-class, director-driven material, Blanchett also had a knack for commercial Hollywood material, such as Ron Howard’s Western,
The Missing (2003), with Tommy Lee Jones and Evan Rachel Wood; Joel Schumacher’s crime thriller,
Veronica Guerin (2003); and
Steven Spielberg’s Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008), with Harrison Ford.
But for the most part, Blanchett has been remarkably successful at working in the relatively rarified waters of adult-oriented cinema, such as Steven Soderbergh’s WW2 drama,
The Good German (2006), with
George Clooney; the Richard Eyre/Patrick Marber psychological drama,
Notes on a Scandal (2006), with Judy Dench and Bill Nighy; Blanchett’s Oscar-nominated revival of her Queen Elizabeth character in Shekhar Kapur’s sequel,
Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007), with Geoffrey Rush, Clive Owen, and Rhys Ifans; another dazzling turn in David Fincher’s acclaimed
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008), with
Brad Pitt, Tilda Swinton, and Mahershala Ali; and an even more dazzling performance as Bob Dylan in Todd Haynes’
I’m Not There (2007), with
Christian Bale, Richard Gere, Heath Ledger, and Julianne Moore.
After a blazing decade in which she became the most interesting female movie actor of her generation, Cate Blanchett was very involved in her work as artistic director of the Sydney Theatre Company, and picking fewer, less time-consuming co-starring or supporting roles in such projects as Ridley Scott’s
Robin Hood (2010) with Russell Crowe, Joe Wright’s
Hanna (2011) with Saoirse Ronan, and a return to her Galadriel role in Peter Jackson’s box-office smash,
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012), the start of yet another Jackson-Tolkien trilogy, continuing with
The Desolation of Smaug (2013) and
The Battle of the Five Armies (2014), with Martin Freeman, Ian McKellan, and Richard Armitage.
Blanchett’s last true lead role was in
I’m Not There, but that changed in 2013 with her universally acclaimed performance, earning her only Best Actress Oscar (to date) in Woody Allen’s 2014 comedy-drama,
Blue Jasmine. Blanchett played one of the few female roles in George Clooney’s
The Monuments Men (2014), with Matt Damon, and performed the voice of Valka in Dean DuBlois’ acclaimed DreamWorks Animation fantasies
How to Train Your Dragon 2 (2014) and the sequel,
How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World (2019), marking the third series in which Blanchett played a continuing character.
Cate Blanchett joined writer-director Terrence Malick for his narrative
Knight of Cups (2015), with Christian Bale and Natalie Portman, and then as the narrator of his cosmic non-fiction piece,
Voyage of Time (2016), and then back to narrative with Malick’s
Song to Song (2017), with Michael Fassbender, Ryan Gosling, and Portman. Blanchett played in her first Disney movie as Cinderella’s Stepmother in Kenneth Branagh’s
Cinderella (2015), with Lily James, followed by her second, acclaimed film with director Haynes,
Carol (2015), with Rooney Mara, and the newspaper drama,
Truth (2015), with Robert Redford and Elisabeth Moss.
In one of Cate Blanchett’s most adventurous projects, she enacted twelve different characters delivering political and artistic statements of principle in artist-filmmaker Julian Rosefeldt’s
Manifesto (2015), marking her once again as a tour-de-force, theatre-trained performer. Blanchett trained in the Brazilian martial art of
capoeira for her role as Hela in Marvel’s
Thor: Ragnarok (2017), directed by
Taika Waititi and starring
Chris Hemsworth and Tom Hiddleston, grossing $854 million worldwide.
Blanchett joined another successful franchise—with an all-female twist—in Steven Soderbergh’s
Ocean’s 8 (2018), with
Sandra Bullock and
Anne Hathaway, followed by an uncharacteristic family movie for Universal,
The House with a Clock in Its Walls (2018), based on John Bellairs’ fantasy novel and co-starring Jack Black, and grossing $131 million globally.
Blanchett partnered with Richard Linklater for an interesting lead performance in the quirky but commercially disappointing
Where’d You Go, Bernadette? (2019), and though absent in 2020, returned in 2021 with a flashy satirical performance as a TV news anchor in Adam McKay’s dark comedy,
Don’t Look Up, with Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence, and then a decidedly noir-ish turn in Guillermo del Toro’s
Nightmare Alley, with Bradley Cooper, Toni Collette, and Rooney Mara.
Shifting from ensemble work, Cate Blanchett starred as the title character in writer-director
Todd Field’s highly anticipated music drama premiering at the Venice Film Festival,
Tár (2022), while doing voice work for the animated
Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (2022), starring
Tom Hanks; serving as narrator for Paul Feig’s fantasy released by Netflix,
The School for Good and Evil (2022); and working in the genre with
Eli Roth’s sci-fi comedy,
Borderlands (2024), with
Kevin Hart and
Jack Black.
For the first time, Blanchett worked with the great Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodovar on his adaptation of Lucia Berlin's short story,
A Manual for Cleaning Women (2023), and returned to Australia to collaborate as actor-producer with the fine writer-director Warwick Thornton on the drama,
The New Boy (2023).
Blanchett co-starred with Alicia Vikander in the German-Canadian black comedy,
Rumours (2024), co-written and co-directed by Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson, and Galen Johnson, with Charles Dance, Roy Dupuis, and Nikki Amuka-Bird, and premiering at the Cannes Film Festival.
Blanchett co-starred with Vicky Krieps and Adam Driver in Jim Jarmusch’s comedy-drama,
Father, Mother, Sister, Brother (date to be announced), with Mayim Bialik, Tom Waits, and Charlotte Rampling, and then Blanchett co-starred with Michael Fassbender in director Steven Soderbergh’s spy thriller,
Black Bag (date to be announced), with Naomie Harris, Pierce Brosnan, Regé-Jean Page, Marisa Abela, and Tom Burke, written by David Koepp and released by
Focus Features.
Cate Blanchett was the star/producer of filmmakers David and Nathan Zellner’s sci-fi comedy,
Alpha Gang (date to be announced), co-starring
Channing Tatum,
Dave Bautista,
Lea Seydoux,
Zoe Kravitz,
Steven Yeun, and Riley Keough, and which was produced by Dirty Films/Fat City/Felix Culpa.