Rachel Hannah Weisz was born on 7 March 1971 and is a British-American actress.
Weisz began acting in British stage and television productions in the early 1990s and made her film debut in Death Machine (1994).
She won a Critics’ Circle Theatre Award for her role in the 1994 revival of Noël Coward’s play Design for Living and went on to appear in the 1999 Donmar Warehouse production of Tennessee Williams’ drama Suddenly, Last Summer.
For her performance as an activist in the 2005 thriller The Constant Gardener, she won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, and for playing Blanche DuBois in a 2009 revival of A Streetcar Named Desire, she won the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress.
In the 2010s, Weisz continued to star in big-budget films such as the action film The Bourne Legacy (2012) and the fantasy film Oz the Great and Powerful (2013) and garnered critical acclaim for her performances in the independent films The Deep Blue Sea (2011), Denial (2016), and The Favourite (2018).
For her portrayal of Sarah Churchill in the latter, she won the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role and received a second Academy Award nomination.
Rachel Weisz Parents: Meet George Weisz and Edith Ruth Weisz
Her father, George Weisz, was a Hungarian-Jewish mechanical engineer. Her mother, Edith Ruth, was a teacher-turned-psychotherapist originally from Vienna, Austria. Her parents emigrated to the United Kingdom as children around 1938, prior to the outbreak of World War II, in order to escape the Nazis.
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