Celebrities » Geoffrey Rush » Biography
Birthday:
Jul 6, 1951
Birthplace:
Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia

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Geoffrey Rush Biography

One of Australia's most popular and distinguished actors, Geoffrey Rush came to the attention of the international community in 1996 with his performance as pianist David Helfgott in Shine (1996). Rush won an Academy Award for Best Actor, Golden Globe, and Australian Film Institute Award for his work, and he subsequently began appearing in films that would further make him known to audiences all over the world. A Queensland native, Rush was born in Toowoomba on July 6, 1951. After taking an arts degree from the University of Queensland, he began his theater career at Brisbane's Queensland Theatre Company. In addition to honing his skills with the classics, Rush lived in Paris for two years, where he studied pantomime at the Jacques Lecoq School of Mime. After returning to Australia, the actor resumed his stage work, at one point co-starring in Waiting for Godot with former roommate Mel Gibson. He spent much of the early '80s as part of director Jim Sharman's Lighthouse troupe and he also began working in film; his debut came in the 1981 Hoodwink, which also featured a young Judy Davis. Rush continued to appear in Australian films and on the stage, directing a number of theatrical productions in addition to acting in them. His big international break came in the form of the aforementioned Shine; following the adulation surrounding his performance as the unbalanced piano prodigy, Rush began to garner substantial roles in a number of high-profile projects. First was Gillian Armstrong's Oscar and Lucinda (1997), in which he played Oscar's great-grandson. The following year the actor drew raves for his work in Elizabeth, which featured him as the Queen's casually sinister confidant, and Shakespeare in Love, for which he again donned tights, this time to play a debt-ridden theater owner. His work in that film scored him his second Oscar nomination, this time for Best Supporting Actor. The same year, he could also be seen as the dastardly Inspector Javert in Bille August's adaptation of Les Miserables.In 1999, Rush exchanged the past for the future with Mystery Men. Starring as the dastardly Casanova Frankenstein, he shared the screen with an unlikely assortment of actors, including Greg Kinnear, Janeane Garofalo, Ben Stiller, and Paul Reubens. The same year, he starred as an eccentric millionaire who invites a few guests (including Bridgette Wilson, Taye Diggs, and Peter Gallagher) over for some tea and terror in the remake of William Castle's 1958 classic The House on Haunted Hill.At this point audiences in the know were indeed well aware of Rush's versitility, and any actor able to move from the campy, big budget B-horror to the Oscar nominated art-house antics of Phil Kaufman's Quills had little need to prove himself to either critics or audiences. Though he may not have taken home the trophy at the 2001 Academy Awards, his performance as the Marquis de Sade in the Kaufman film drew praise from nearly every corner of the critical spectrum and Rush was now recognized as one of the premier talents of his generation. Whether appearing in such deadly serious independent drama as Frida or wide release cotton candy as The Banger Sisters, Rush was never anything less than fascinating to watch and his enthusiasm for his craft always managed to shine through into his performances. Though the film wasn't seen by the majority of stateside audiences, 2003's Swimming Upstream offered Rush in a meorable turn as the distant father of Australian swimmer Tony Figleton. After taking on one of Austrailia's most notorious outlaws in the 2003 drama Ned Kelley and offering vocal work for the popular Pixar family adventure Finding Nemo, Rush remained on this high seas - this time mostly above water - as the leader of an undead crew of pirates in the 2003 swashbuckler Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. Though his menacing performance may have been slightly overshadowed by the flamboyant antics of co-star Johnny Depp, Rush nevertheless managed to craft one of the most complex and rousing villians in recent screen history. Next turning up as the hapless victim of a gold-digging maneater in the Coen Brothers' Intolerable Cruelty, Rush soon began preparation for his role as none other than the immortal Inspector Clouseau in the made-for-television biography The Life and Death of Peter Sellers. Rush played the Mossad representative who acts as the contact for the group of avenging agents in Steven Spielberg's outstanding Munich. Then he returned to the biggest hit of his career, reprising his part as a pirate in the next two Pirates of the Carribean films. He also agreed to reteam with director Shekhar Kapur and co-star Cate Blanchett for the sequel to Elizabeth reprising his role as Sir Francis Walsingham.As anticipated, the 2006 Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest opened to spectacular box office and solid (if not exemplary) reviews, though few of the critics who praised the film actually singled out Rush's fine performance in it as Barbossa (doubtless blinded by the impressive torrent of special effects and the squishy villainry of Bill Nighy that took center stage). Rush also joined the cast of that same year's Candy. Not to be mistaken for the awful Christian Marquand picture of the same title (or a remake thereof), the film actually constitutes a finely-tuned gut-wrencher about the heroin addictions of a poet and art student who become romantically entwined and decide to wed. Rush plays the ultra-liberal professor who first encourages the heroin use as experimentation, but later acknowledges the couple's inseparable, volatile bond to one another other via shared use of the substance. The picture stars Abbie Cornish and Heath Ledger as the marrieds. THINKFilm scheduled Candy for release in October 2006 as Shekhar Kapur directed Rush in The Golden Age - the Elizabeth sequel for Universal and Working Title - which the studios slated for an October 2007 premiere. Meanwhile, the actor also lent a great deal of his time to shooting the third Pirates installment, also debuting in 2007.Rush married Shakespearean stage actress Jane Menelaus in 1988, with whom he has two children - Angelica and James. The couple resides in Melbourne. He is actively involved with environmental causes. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi

Geoffrey Rush Trivia

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Quotes from Geoffrey Rush's Characters

    1. Narrator: Oscar had tasted the pudding. It did not taste like the fruit of Satan.
    From Oscar and Lucinda. Submitted by Mich M (8 days ago)
    1. Sir Francis Walsingham: Madam, if I may. A prince should never flinch from being blamed for acts of ruthlessness which are necessary for safe guarding the state and their own person. You must take these things so much to heart that you do not fear to strike. Even the very nearest that you have if they be implicated.
    From Elizabeth. Submitted by Hussein A (15 days ago)
    1. Elizabeth I: She has such power over men's hearts. They died for her.
    2. Sir Francis Walsingham: They have found nothing to replace her.
    From Elizabeth. Submitted by Hussein A (15 days ago)
    1. Basil Hunter: I can't really afford to piss off my mother at the moment.
    From The Eye of the Storm. Submitted by Chris P (42 days ago)
    1. Captain Barbossa: Aye, we're good and lost now.
    2. Elizabeth Swann: Lost?
    3. Captain Barbossa: For certain you have to be lost to find a place as can't be found. Elseways, everyone would know where it was.
    From Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End. Submitted by Dann M (3 months ago)
    1. Captain Barbossa: You've always run away from a fight!
    2. Jack Sparrow: Have not!
    3. Captain Barbossa: You have so!
    4. Jack Sparrow: Have not!
    5. Captain Barbossa: You have so!
    6. Jack Sparrow: Have not!
    7. Captain Barbossa: Have so and you know it!
    8. Jack Sparrow: Have not slander and callumy. I have only embraced that oldest and noblest of pirate traditions. I submit that here now, that is what we all must do. We must fight... To run away.
    9. Gibbs: AYE! [other pirates repeat]
    From Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End. Submitted by Lewis H (3 months ago)
    1. Elizabeth Swann: Captain Barbosa, I have come to negotiate the cessation of hostilities against Port Royal.
    2. Captain Barbossa: That's a lot of long words, miss. We're naught but humble pirates! What is it you were wanting, exactly?
    3. Elizabeth Swann: I want you to leave and never come back.
    4. Captain Barbossa: I'm disinclined to acquiesce to your request. It means no.
    1. Jack Sparrow: I'd really hoped we could avoid this.
    2. Captain Barbossa: Jack, Jack, did you not notice? That be the same island we made you governor of last time around. Maybe you can conjure up another miraculous escape. But I doubt it.
    3. Jack Sparrow: Last time you gave me a pistol.
    4. Captain Barbossa: By thunder, your right! Where be Jack's pistol?
    5. Jack Sparrow: A gentleman would give me a Pair of pistols.
    6. Captain Barbossa: No, it'll be one pistol like before, and You can be the gentleman and shoot the lady and starve to death yourself.
    1. Captain Barbossa: Who are you?
    2. Jack Sparrow: He's nobody! A distant relation of my aunt's second cousin's nephew twice removed. [pointing back at Will] Eunuch.
    3. Will Turner: I am William Turner! The son of William Turner! His blood runs in my veins!
    4. Ragetti: He's the spitting image of old Bootstrap!
    5. Captain Barbossa: Name your terms Mr. Turner.
    6. Will Turner: Elizabeth goes free!
    7. Captain Barbossa: Yes, we know that one. Anything else?
    1. Lionel Logue: Do you know The 'F word'?
    2. George 'Bertie' VI: F-F-Fornication?
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Devin F (4 months ago)
    1. King George VI: Listen to Me! Listen to Me!
    2. Lionel Logue: Why would I waste my time listening to you?
    3. King George VI: because I have a voice!
    4. Lionel Logue: Yes you do.
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Barron Louise M (5 months ago)
    1. Ephraim: We have eleven Palestenian names, each who handed on planning Munich, you are going to kill' em one by one.
    From Munich. Submitted by Javis C (6 months ago)
    1. King George VI: [Sees Logue is sitting on the coronation throne] What are you doing? Get up! You can't sit there! GET UP!
    2. Lionel Logue: Why not? It's a chair.
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Lousy W (7 months ago)
    1. Lionel Logue: Do you know the "f" word?
    2. George 'Bertie' VI: Ffff... fornication?
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Jose O (9 months ago)
    1. Lionel Logue: You still stammered on the 'W'.
    2. King George VI: Well I had to throw in a few so they knew it was me.
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Christopher H (11 months ago)
    1. Lionel Logue: I believe that sucking smoke into your lungs will kill you.
    2. King George VI: My physicians say it relaxes the throat.
    3. Lionel Logue: They're idiots.
    4. King George VI: They've all been knighted.
    5. Lionel Logue: Makes it official then.
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Michael C (11 months ago)
    1. Tomar-Re: The greatest threat the Corps ever faced was Parallax, an entity that fed on the yellow energy of fear.
    From Green Lantern. Submitted by Alec B (11 months ago)
    1. Captain Barbossa: Better were the days when mastery of seas came not from bargains struck with eldritch creatures, but from the sweat of a man's brow and the strength of his back alone. You all know this to be true!
    From Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End. Submitted by Lea L (12 months ago)
    1. Elizabeth Swann: I hardly believe in ghost stories, Captain Barbossa.
    2. Captain Barbossa: Aye. That's exactly what I thought when first told of the tale. Buried in the island of the dead that which cannot be found except by those who already knows where it is. Find it, we did. And there be the chest, and inside, be the gold. We took them all! Spent 'em, traded 'em and fritted 'em away, for drink and food and pleasurable company. But the more we gave them away, the more we came to realize. The drink would not satisfy, food turned to ash in our mouths, nor the company in the world would harm or slake our lust. We are cursed men, Miss Turner. Compelled by greed, we were. But now, we are consumed by it.
    1. Lionel Logue: You don't need to be afraid of things you were afraid of when you were five.
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Robert R (12 months ago)
    1. Lionel Logue: Pauses are fine, it shows solemnity
    2. King George VI: Then I'm the solemnest King in the world!
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Malou E (12 months ago)
    1. King George VI: My doctor said smoking relaxes the larynx
    2. Lionel Logue: Well, they're idiots.
    3. George 'Bertie' VI: But I'm not supposed to light it.
    4. Lionel Logue: That makes it official.
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Malou E (12 months ago)
    1. Lionel Logue: Do you know the 'F' word?
    2. George 'Bertie' VI: Fu...fu...fu.... Fornication!
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Malou E (12 months ago)
    1. Tomar-Re: The ring turns thought into reality.
    From Green Lantern. Submitted by Alec B (12 months ago)
    1. Nigel: Fish are friends, not food.
    From Finding Nemo. Submitted by Tj J (12 months ago)
    1. Captain Barbossa: Better were the days when mastery of seas came not from bargains struck with eldritch creatures... but from the sweat of a man's brow and the strength of his back alone. You all know this to be true!
    From Pirates of the Caribbean: At Worlds End. Submitted by rob g (14 months ago)
    1. Lionel Logue: I believe sucking smoke into your lungs, well, it will kill you.
    2. George 'Bertie' VI: My physicians all say it relaxes the throat.
    3. Lionel Logue: Well, they're idiots.
    4. George 'Bertie' VI: They've all been knighted.
    5. Lionel Logue: (pause) Makes it official then.
    From The King's Speech. Submitted by Brandon W (14 months ago)
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