Celebrities » Julianne Moore » Biography
Birthday:
Dec 3, 1960
Birthplace:
Fayetteville, North Carolina, USA

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Julianne Moore Biography

Boasting talent, versatility, and one of the most distinctive heads of hair in Hollywood, Julianne Moore has proven herself equally adept in both mainstream blockbusters and smaller, more intelligent films. The daughter of a military judge and a Scottish social worker, Moore was born in Fayetteville, NC, on December 3, 1961. After attending Boston University, she began her acting career via the taxing world of soap opera. From 1985 until 1988, she was best-known for her role as Franny Hughes on As the World Turns. The part, which on occasion required her to play twins, won Moore a 1988 Daytime Emmy Award.The actress made her entrance into the big-screen arena with a 1990 debut in the schlocktastic Tales From the Darkside: The Movie (which also featured Steve Buscemi). Two years later, after making various TV movies, Moore reappeared in feature films with supporting parts in Curtis Hanson's tale of a babysitter gone bad, The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, and the comedy The Gun in Betty Lou's Handbag. The following year, her exposure increased further thanks to roles in four different films that ranged from the half-baked thriller Body of Evidence to the sweetly quirky Benny and Joon to the big-budget smash The Fugitive to Robert Altman's epic Short Cuts. The last film gave Moore literal exposure in addition to the more figurative kind: she was required to play one scene naked from the waist down, something that predictably won the attention of critics and filmgoers.The intermittent praise that had been afforded Moore was amplified in 1994 with her performance as Yelena in Vanya on 42nd Street. The object of adjectives ranging from "luminescent" to "radiant" to "revelatory," the actress went on to play a very different character in Todd Haynes' Safe (1995). Moore won an Independent Spirit Award nomination for her portrayal of a woman (literally) sickened by the environment around her and further proved that she was an actress of distinct versatility. The same year she again demonstrated this ability with a starring role opposite Hugh Grant in the comedy Nine Months.Following a turn as one of Picasso's numerous lovers in Surviving Picasso (1996), a lead in the family drama The Myth of Fingerprints (she would later have a son with the film's director, Bart Freundlich), and a substantial part in The Lost World: Jurassic Park, Moore nabbed what was one of the plum roles of her career in Paul Thomas Anderson's Boogie Nights. For her portrayal of a porn actress, she won Golden Globe and Academy Award nominations. A substantial role as an erotic artist in Ethan Coen's and Joel Coen's The Big Lebowski followed in 1998, along with a turn as Marion Crane's sister in Gus Van Sant's Psycho remake. The next year, Moore starred in a number of high-profile projects, beginning with Robert Altman's Cookie's Fortune, in which she was cast as the dim sister of a decidedly unhinged Glenn Close. A portrayal of the scheming Mrs. Cheveley followed in Oliver Parker's An Ideal Husband, with a number of critics asserting that Moore was the best part of the movie. The actress then enjoyed another collaboration with director Anderson in Magnolia, an epic telling of nine interweaving stories inspired by Short Cuts and featuring an impressive cast that included Anderson regulars Philip Seymour Hoffman, Philip Baker Hall, and John C. Reilly. The same year, Moore also starred in the drama The End of the Affair, with Ralph Fiennes and Stephen Rea, and portrayed a grieving mother in A Map of the World, which premiered at the 1999 Toronto Film Festival.2001 found the popular actress stepping into dark territory with the role of FBI Agent Clarice Starling in Ridley Scott's Hannibal, the long-awaited and eagerly anticipated follow-up to Jonathan Demme's numbingly suspenseful Silence of the Lambs. A few short months later, Moore lightened the mood substantially with her humorous turn as a bumbling government scientist in the sci-fi comedy Evolution. Increasingly comfortable alternating between big-budget features and more personal art-house films, Moore bowled over audiences with a pair of powerhouse performances in both Far From Heaven and The Hours. A detailed throwback to the forgotten Hollywood melodrama, the former featured Moore's Oscar nominated role as a housewife who enters into a controversial relationship after discovering her husband's homosexuality and provided audiences a dose of Douglas Sirk that hadn't been tasted since the mid-1950s. A variation on the themes presented in Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway, the film version of Michael Cunningham's Pulitzer prize winning novel The Hours once again found Moore Oscar nominated for her role as a repressed 1950s era housewife, this time taking a special shine to Mrs. Dalloway while pondering an escape from her stifling marriage. In the wake of arguably her most successful year to date, Moore began to dabble behind the scenes for the first time, serving as executive producer on the 2003 independent adaptation of Wallace Shawn's play Marie and Bruce, a film that she also starred in. The following year, audiences could find Moore onscreen opposite Pierce Brosnan in the romantic comedy The Laws of Attraction and in the poorly-received thriller The Forgotten. In 2005 she earned good reviews for The Prize Winner of Defiance, OH, but the film failed to catch on with audiences. She continued to work steadily starring opposite Sam Jackson in the adaptation of Richard Price's Freedomland, and starring opposite Clive Owen in Alfonso Cuaron's futuristic thriller Children of Men. She once again teamed with her director husband Bart Freundlich in the relationship comedy Trust the Man. Shortly after returning to television with a recurring role on the hit comedy series 30 Rock, the talented actress earned numerous positive reviews for her nuanced performance in The Kids Are All Right, and while she failed to earn a BAFTA Award as one half of a same sex couple attempting to help their children come to terms with being adopted, Moore's memorable performance as a frustrated housewife in 2011's Crazy, Stupid, Love. showed an actress still capable of balancing drama and comedy to striking effect. On the heels of her performance in Paul Weitz's Being Flynn the following year, it was announced that Moore would be following in the formidable footsteps of Piper Laurie in the 2013 remake of the Stephen King's Carrie starring Chloe Grace Moritz (Let Me In, Hugo). ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi

Julianne Moore Trivia

She and her "The End of the Affair" co-star, Ralph Fiennes, have starred in their own Hannibal Lecter films; she worked on Hannibal while Fiennes was in Red Dragon.
- submitted by Lindsay Elizabeth M (22 months ago)
Shares a birthday with Brendan Fraser, and was also born on the same day as Daryl Hannah.
- submitted by Lindsay Elizabeth M (22 months ago)

Quotes from Julianne Moore's Characters

    1. Sarah Harding: By moving the baby Rex into our camp we may have changed the adult's perceived territory.
    2. Peter Ludlow: Their what?
    3. Robert Burke: It's why they persisted in destroying the trailers. They now feel they have to defend this entire area.
    From The Lost World - Jurassic Park. Submitted by Jed G (5 days ago)
    1. Eddie Carr: What's hurt? What do you need?
    2. Ian Malcolm: We need rope!
    3. Eddie Carr: Rope, okay! Anything else?
    4. Ian Malcolm: Yeah, three double cheeseburgers with everything.
    5. Nick Van Owen: No onions on mine.
    6. Sarah Harding: And an apple turnover!
    From The Lost World - Jurassic Park. Submitted by Jed G (5 days ago)
    1. Nick Van Owen: Hammond told me these people might show up. He thought we'd be finished by the time they got started, but in case they weren't, he did send a backup plan.
    2. Sarah Harding: What backup plan?
    3. Nick Van Owen: Me.
    From The Lost World - Jurassic Park. Submitted by Jed G (5 days ago)
    1. Catherine: How do you do this?
    2. Chloe: I try to find something to love in everybody. Even if it's a small thing. Something about the way someone smiles. There's always something, there has to be. I try to make myself generous. I do things I don't want to do. I... I think about what not to criticize. And the strangest things come back to me.
    3. Catherine: Like?
    4. Chloe: You.
    5. Catherine: Me?
    6. Chloe: Yeah. Yeah people like you walk into my life.
    From Chloe. Submitted by Alicia C (25 days ago)
    1. Chloe: I liked it. Last night.
    2. Catherine: Yeah, I liked it, too. I can't say that I didn't.
    From Chloe. Submitted by Daniel K (48 days ago)
    1. Catherine: You're amazing. You're so beautiful.
    From Chloe. Submitted by Daniel K (48 days ago)
    1. Callie Ferris: You have CTV camera here inside?
    2. Diner Manager: Here? um. No.
    3. Callie Ferris: So, inside?
    4. Liz Cooper: Uh. No.
    From Next. Submitted by Facebook U (3 months ago)
    1. Marlene: If don't like this movie,then you don't enjoy good suspenseful movies. A lot of movies put you to sleep, not this one, entertaining.
    From The Hand That Rocks the Cradle. Submitted by Pat M (4 months ago)
    1. Emily Weaver: Spreadsheets.
    2. David Lindhagen: Spreadsheets.
    3. Emily Weaver: See you at work...
    4. David Lindhagen: Yeah...see you at work
    From Crazy, Stupid, Love.. Submitted by Stephen S (4 months ago)
    1. Jules: [on lesbian pornography] ...usually they just hire two women to pretend, and the inauthenticity is just unbearable.
    From The Kids Are All Right. Submitted by Jose D (5 months ago)
    1. Clarice Starling: This is from the Guinness Book of World Records, congratulating me on being the female FBI Agent who has shot and killed the most people.
    From Hannibal. Submitted by Joel L (6 months ago)
    1. Laura Brown: It would be wonderful to say you regretted it. It would be easy. But what does it mean? What does it mean to regret when you have no choice? It's what you can bear. There it is. No one's going to forgive me. It was death. I chose life.
    From The Hours. Submitted by Sara T (6 months ago)
    1. Maude Lebowski: Lord. You can imagine where it goes from here.
    2. The Dude: He fixes the cable?
    From The Big Lebowski. Submitted by sean b (7 months ago)
    1. Emily Weaver: You know when I told you when I had to work late? I really went to go see the new twilight movie by myself, and it was so bad.
    From Crazy, Stupid, Love.. Submitted by Chris P (10 months ago)
    1. Linda Partridge: And you fucking call me lady? Shame on you. Shame on you. Shame on both of you!
    From Magnolia. Submitted by Jacob Z (13 months ago)
    1. Catherine: My husband's cheating on me. At least, I think he is.
    From Chloe. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Catherine: This business transaction, which is what this was, is over!
    From Chloe. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
    1. Jules: ...marriage is hard... Just two people slogging through the shit, year after year, getting older, changing. It's a fucking marathon, okay? So, sometimes, you know, you're together for so long, that you just... You stop seeing the other person. You just see weird projections of your own junk. Instead of talking to each other, you go off the rails and act grubby and make stupid choices... You know if I read more Russian novels, then...
    From The Kids Are All Right. Submitted by rob g (14 months ago)
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