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Isla Fisher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australian actress (born 1976)

Isla Fisher
Fisher in 2013
Born
Isla Lang Fisher

(1976-02-03)3 February 1976 (age 49)
NationalityAustralian
OccupationActress
Years active1985–present
Spouse
Children3

Isla Lang Fisher (/ˈlə/; born 3 February 1976) is an Australian actress. Born inOman to Scottish parents who moved with her toAustralia during her childhood, she began appearing in television commercials and came to prominence for her portrayal ofShannon Reed on the Australian soap operaHome and Away (1994–1997), for which she received twoLogie Award nominations.

Fisher transitioned to Hollywood with a supporting role in the comedy horror filmScooby-Doo (2002) and has since starred in films such asWedding Crashers (2005),Wedding Daze (2006),Confessions of a Shopaholic (2009),Bachelorette (2012),The Great Gatsby (2013),Now You See Me (2013), andNocturnal Animals (2016). Her other credits includeI Heart Huckabees (2004),Definitely, Maybe (2008),Keeping Up with the Joneses (2016),Tag (2018), andThe Beach Bum (2019), in addition to voice roles in animated films such asHorton Hears a Who! (2008),Rango (2011),Rise of the Guardians (2012),Back to the Outback (2021), andDog Man (2025).

Fisher had a recurring role on thefourth andfifth seasons of the sitcomArrested Development (2013–2019) and has starred in the comedy drama seriesWolf Like Me since 2022. She has authored twoyoung adult novels and theMarge in Charge book series. From 2010 to 2024, she was married to English comedianSacha Baron Cohen, with whom she has three children.[1]

Early life

[edit]

Isla Lang Fisher was born inMuscat, Oman, on 3 February 1976,[2][3] the daughter of Scottish parents Elspeth Reid and Brian Fisher.[4][5] At the time, her father was working there as a banker for theUnited Nations.[6] Fisher and her family returned to their hometown ofBathgate, Scotland, then moved to Australia when she was six years old and settled inPerth.[7] She has four brothers and said that she had a "great" upbringing in Perth with a "very outdoorsy life".[8] She has stated that her "sensibility is Australian", she has a "laid-back attitude to life", and that she feels "very Australian".[9] Her parents later separated; her mother and brothers now live inAthens, Greece, while her father lives inFrankfurt, Germany.[9] Fisher attendedSwanbourne Primary School andMethodist Ladies' College in Perth. She appeared in lead roles in school productions such asLittle Shop of Horrors. At the age of 21, she attendedL'École Internationale de Théâtre Jacques Lecoq inParis, where she studied clown, mime, musical theatre, andcommedia dell'arte.[10]

Career

[edit]

1985–2001: Early acting credits

[edit]

Fisher made her first on-screen appearances in commercials on Australian television at the age of 9, and made her professional acting debut in 1993 with two guest-starring roles in the children's television showsBay City andParadise Beach. At 18, with her mother's help, she published two teen novels,Bewitched andSeduced by Fame.[11] In a 2005 interview withSunday Mirror, she said that had she not been successful as an actress, she would probably have been a full-time writer.[12]

Between 1994 and 1997, Fisher played Shannon Reed, a young, woman who developsanorexia, on the Australian soap operaHome and Away. In a 1996 interview withThe Sun-Herald, she spoke of her success and experiences on the show: "I would be stupid to let it go to my head because it could all end tomorrow and I would just fade back into obscurity. I like working onHome and Away but it's a heavy workload so I get stressed out a lot. We work about 15 hours a day, including the time it takes to learn lines. I know a lot of people work those sort of hours but I think we really feel it because most of us are young and fairly inexperienced. But I am very grateful because it is good experience. It's like an apprenticeship, but we do it in front of 20 million people so all our mistakes are up for the world to see."[13] For her performance in the series, Fisher received nominations forMost Popular New Talent at the 1995Logie Awards,[14] and forMost Popular Actress at the 1997 ceremony.[15]

After leaving the soap, Fisher enrolled atL'École Internationale de Théâtre Jacques Lecoq, a theatre and arts training school in Paris, and went on to appear inpantomime in the United Kingdom.[16][17] She also toured withDarren Day in the musicalSummer Holiday; appeared in the London theatre production ofCosì,[18] and played an ill-fated member of an elite group of international students in the German slasher filmSwimming Pool (2001).[19]

2002–2004: Move to Hollywood

[edit]

Fisher transitioned toHollywood in 2002, with the part of the love interest of a cowardly slackerShaggy Rogers in the live-action filmScooby-Doo. AlthoughScooby-Doo received negative reviews, the film was a commercial success, grossing US$275.7 million worldwide.[20] On that early stage in her career, Fisher remarked: "I only came out on the back of the movie for the premiere ofScooby Doo. And then, I ended up getting representation and ended up getting a job, almost straight away. So, I was fortunate, in that I didn't have to come out to L.A. and join a queue of however many people, and try to get work. I came in on the back of what was deemed as a big studio movie that had had extraordinary success".[21] She subsequently played supporting roles in the independent filmDallas 362 (2003) and the Australian comedyThe Wannabes (also 2003). In his review for the latter, David Rooney ofVariety felt that Fisher "adds easy charm and a thinly developed hint of romantic interest", in what he summed as an "uneven but endearing farce about breaking into showbiz".[22] In the comedyI Heart Huckabees (2004), directed byDavid O. Russell, she played what was described as a "punchy little part", by newspaperThe Age.[23]

2005–2009: Breakthrough

[edit]
Fisher at the66th Golden Globe Awards (2009)

Fisher's breakthrough came with the comedyWedding Crashers (2005), oppositeVince Vaughn andOwen Wilson,[24] taking on the role of the seemingly sexually aggressive and precocious younger daughter of a politician falling in love with an irresponsible wedding crasher. On her part in the film, she remarked: "It was an interesting character to play, because she was so crazy and lacking in any kind of social etiquette. She doesn't care what anyone thinks." For one particular scene, involving sexual content, she used abody double. "I negotiated that from the beginning, trying to analyse why. I find pornographic violence, just gratuitous and unnecessary than nudity, because there's nothing more peaceful and beautiful".[25] The film was favourably received by critics and made US$285.1 million worldwide.[26]Empire magazine found Fisher to be an "unexpected, scene-stealing joy",[27] and her performance earned her theBest Breakthrough Performance Award at the 2006MTV Movie Awards and twoTeen Choice Awards nominations.

Fisher appeared as aManhattan party host in the independent dramaLondon (2005), oppositeJessica Biel,Chris Evans andJason Statham. She next starred in the romantic comedyWedding Daze (2006), withJason Biggs, playing a dissatisfied waitress who spontaneously gets engaged to a grieving young man. WhileWedding Daze opened in second place on its UK opening weekend,[28] the film received mediocre reviews from critics.[29] Nevertheless,Reel Film Reviews found the film to be an "irreverent, sporadically hilarious romantic comedy that boasts fantastic performances from stars Jason Biggs and Isla Fisher".[30] In the thrillerThe Lookout (2007), oppositeJoseph Gordon-Levitt andMatthew Goode, Fisher played a woman used by a gang leader to seduce a man with lasting mental impairments. Describing on how she took her character, she said: "It was one of those situations where I read the script and thought, 'This is the take. I don't want to play the cliché femme fatale. I don't want to come in and be the woman with the sexual appetite, who wants to take down this man. I want to come in and make her this big beating heart, and innocent a woman who has no identity, who knows the man she's with, who doesn't have an agenda.' Because every character in the script has an agenda. I thought how interesting if my character doesn't have one if she's a victim of her own kindness. So, that was my starting point."[21] WhileThe Lookout received a limited release, the film was favourably received.[31] The comedyHot Rod (also 2007), withAndy Samberg, saw Fisher star as the college-graduate neighbour on whom an amateur stuntman has a crush.

Fisher played a copy girl who becomes romantically involved with an ambitious political consultant in the romantic comedyDefinitely, Maybe (2008), withRyan Reynolds,Elizabeth Banks,Rachel Weisz andAbigail Breslin.[8] Reviewers felt the film was a "refreshing entry into the romantic comedy genre",[32] andThe New Yorker wrote that the "interest lies" in the female characters, concluding: "Isla Fisher, short, with thick auburn hair, is a changeable free spirit who keeps the male lead, and maybe herself off balance".[33] Budgeted at US$7 million,Definitely, Maybe was a commercial success, grossing US$55.4 million worldwide.[34] Fisher also voiced a professor in a city of microscopic creatures in the animated comedy filmHorton Hears a Who! (2008), featuringJim Carrey,Steve Carell,Will Arnett, among others.[35]

Fisher obtained her first leading film role in the comedyConfessions of a Shopaholic (2009), where she played a college graduate who works as a financial journalist in New York City to support her shopping addiction. She felt "apprehensive" as she took on her firststar vehicle, stating: "I was gobsmacked that anyone would give me my own movie. I am eternally bewildered. Every time I see [producer]Jerry Bruckheimer, I want to shake him and say: 'Are you mad? Why would you put me on a poster?'".[36] Upon its release, the film received lukewarm reviews from critics; whileTime Out described her as "silly and adorable",The Christian Science Monitor remarked: "Isla Fisher is such a bundle of comic energy that watching her spin her wheels in the aggressively unfunnyConfessions of a Shopaholic counts as cruel and unusual punishment for her as well as for us".[37] Despite the critical response, the film was a commercial success; it opened with US$15 million on its North America opening weekend and went on to gross US$108.3 million worldwide.[38] Fisher received her thirdTeen Choice Award nomination.[39]

2010–2013: Mainstream recognition

[edit]

In the British black comedyBurke and Hare (2010), loosely based on theBurke and Hare murders, Fisher starred oppositeSimon Pegg andAndy Serkis as a young former prostitute and the love interest of one of the titular characters.[40] The film found a limited audience in theatres,[41] andVariety wrote that "Pegg and Fisher, just about holding up their end of the bargain by delivering the film's portion of sweet romance, are hardly given anything funny to say", as part of an overall mixed reception.[42] Fisher voiced a hot-tempered but good-hearteddesert iguana befriending an eccentricchameleon in the3D animatedWestern action comedyRango (2011), featuringJohnny Depp,Abigail Breslin andBill Nighy.[43] The film received positive reviews and made US$245.7 million worldwide.[44] For her role, Fisher won theAlliance of Women Film Journalists Award for Best Animated Female.[45]

Fisher at the premiere ofThe Dictator in London, May 2012

Fisher starred in the comedyBachelorette (2012), oppositeKirsten Dunst,Lizzy Caplan andRebel Wilson, portraying a ditzy party girl and one-third of a trio of troubled women who reunite for the wedding of a friend who was ridiculed in high school. In its review for the film,Daily Telegraph found Fisher to be "brilliantly slow as a hot mess whose main ambition is to get coked out of her skull".[46] Budgeted at US$3 million,Bachelorette was a commercial success; it grossed US$11.9 million in theatres worldwide and more than US$8 million on VOD.[47][48] In another voice-over role, Fisher voiced theTooth Fairy in what she summed up as an "animatedAvengers",[49] the filmRise of the Guardians (also 2012), which earned her an Alliance of Women Film Journalists Award nomination for Best Animated Female.[citation needed]

Fisher found mainstream recognition in 2013, with roles in two highly successful filmsThe Great Gatsby andNow You See Me.[50]The Great Gatsby, an adaptation ofF. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel, directed byBaz Luhrmann, and oppositeLeonardo DiCaprio,Carey Mulligan andTobey Maguire, saw her portray an ambitious social climber and the mistress of an upper-class socialite. Fisher described as "surreal" the experience to work for Luhrmann. "He's my dream director. I've only ever had a short list of people I've wanted to work with, and he was at the top of it. I honestly couldn't stop smiling the whole time".[49] While reviewers described her role as brief,[51][52] the film made US$353.6 million worldwide.[53] Fisher garnered nominations for the Best Supporting Actress award from theAACTA Awards, theAustralian Film Critics Association and theFilm Critics Circle of Australia Awards.[54] Fisher took on a larger role as an escapist and stage magician in the heist thrillerNow You See Me, withJesse Eisenberg,Mark Ruffalo,Woody Harrelson,Mélanie Laurent andMorgan Freeman.The Hollywood Reporter felt that Fisher's portrayal was "loaded withchutzpah",[55] andIndieWire remarked in its review for the film: "While Fisher and Laurent bring their charm, they still don't quite flesh out underwritten parts".[56] LikeThe Great Gatsby,Now You See Me grossed more than US$350 million globally.[57]

Also in 2013, Fisher obtained the nine-episode role of an actress in the fourth season ofArrested Development, which was released onNetflix,[58] and appeared oppositeJennifer Aniston,Tim Robbins, andWill Forte inLife of Crime, a film adaptation ofElmore Leonard's 1978 novelThe Switch, as the mistress of a wealthy man who refuses to pay the ransom for his kidnapped wife. The film received a limited theatrical release and favorable reviews from critics.[59] Fisher, along with the cast ofArrested Development, received aScreen Actors Guild Award nomination forOutstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series, and describing her work on the series as a career highlight, she said: "I've been really fortunate in my career to work with a lot of great people and get a lot of great gigs, but my favourite phone call ever was theArrested Development one from my agent, It was very exciting".[60]

2014–present: Various roles and writing

[edit]

InVisions (2015), an independent horror film, Fisher starred as a pregnant woman who begins to experience supernatural manifestations after moving to a vineyard with her husband. Distributed for a limited release in most international markets,[61]Visions was released for VOD in North America,[62] and in its review for the film, Spanish newspaperReforma wrote: "Predictable and boring, even Isla Fisher, who is usually pretty good, delivers a very boring performance."[63] 2016 saw Fisher star in two action comedy filmsGrimsby andKeeping Up with the Joneses. She collaborated for the first time with husbandSacha Baron Cohen in the British filmGrimsby, playing the handler of the bestMI6 agent, and inKeeping Up with the Joneses,[64][65] she starred as one half of a suburban couple who begin to suspect their new neighbours are secret agents. Both films were budgeted at over US$35 million,[66] but only made less than US$30 million at the box office.[67][68]

John Hodgman,Denis Leary and Fisher at theBookExpo in 2017

Based onAustin Wright's novelTony and Susan,Tom Ford's neo-noir thrillerNocturnal Animals (2016) featured Fisher as the blighted wife of a motorist inside a violent novel written by a recently divorced man. The film was the winner of theGrand Jury Prize at the73rd Venice International Film Festival and was an arthouse success.[69] Her third book and first children's novel,Marge in Charge, revolving around a mischievous babysitter with rainbow hair who tends to bend the rules,[70] was published in 2016.[71] The book was met with a positive reception;Publishers Weekly noted that "spontaneity and mayhem" reign in the work,[72] whileThe Daily Express found "the comic tale of [the] anarchic babysitter" to be "perfect for reading aloud".[73] Fisher subsequently authored three follow-ups:Marge and the Pirate Baby, in 2017,[74]Marge and the Great Train Rescue, also in 2017, andMarge in Charge and the Stolen Treasure, in 2018.[75] In 2019, she guest starred in an episode of the tenth season ofHBO'sCurb Your Enthusiasm.[76] In 2020, Fisher starred in theWalt Disney Pictures filmGodmothered, which was released onDisney+ on 4 December of that year.[77]

In 2025, she voiced Sarah Hatoff in the animated filmDog Man.

Philanthropy

[edit]

In 2014 and 2015, Fisher donated her signed shoes for the Small Steps Project Celebrity Shoe Auction.[78]

In 2015, Fisher and her husbandSacha Baron Cohen donated£335,000 toSave the Children as part of a programme to vaccinate Syrian children againstmeasles, and another £335,000 to theInternational Rescue Committee to helpSyrian refugees.[79][80][81]

Personal life

[edit]

In 2001, Fisher met English comedian and actorSacha Baron Cohen at a party inSydney.[82] They became engaged in 2004 and were married on 15 March 2010 in aJewish ceremony inParis.[83][84]

Sheconverted to Cohen'sJudaism in order to marry him.[85][86] She took theHebrew name Ayala (אילה), the Hebrew word for a doe, and has described herself as keeping theJewish Sabbath.[87][88][89]

Baron Cohen and Fisher have three children, born in 2007, 2010 and 2015.[90][91][92][93] They resided in Sydney, having previously divided their time betweenLos Angeles andLondon.[94][95]

On 5 April 2024, Fisher announced that she and Baron Cohen had made the decision to end their 13-year marriage, separating at the end of 2023.[96]

Fisher considers herself afeminist.[97]

Filmography

[edit]

Film

[edit]
YearTitleRoleNotesRef.
1997Bum MagnetEmmaShort film
1998Furnished RoomJennie
2000Out of DepthAustralian Girl #1
2001Swimming PoolKim
2002Dog DaysBianca
Scooby-DooMary Jane
2003The WannabesKirsty
Dallas 362Redhead
2004I Heart HuckabeesHeather
2005Wedding CrashersGloria Cleary
LondonRebecca
2006Wedding DazeKatie
2007The LookoutLuvlee
The Simpsons MovieConsultantVoice, scenes deleted[98]
Hot RodDenise
2008Definitely, MaybeApril
Horton Hears a Who!Dr. Mary Lou LarueVoice
2009Confessions of a ShopaholicRebecca Bloomwood
2010Burke and HareGinny Hawkins
2011RangoBeansVoice
2012BacheloretteKatie
Rise of the GuardiansTooth FairyVoice
2013The Great GatsbyMyrtle Wilson
Now You See MeHenley Reeves
Life of CrimeMelanie Ralston
2015VisionsEveleigh
Klown ForeverHerselfCameo
2016GrimsbyJodie Figgs
Keeping Up with the JonesesKaren Gaffney
Nocturnal AnimalsLaura Hastings
2018TagAnna Malloy
2019The Beach BumMinnie
GreedSamantha
2020Blithe SpiritRuth Condomine
GodmotheredMacKenzie Walsh
2021Back to the OutbackMaddieVoice
2023StraysMaggie
2024The PresentJen Diehl
2025Dog ManSarah HatoffVoice
Bridget Jones: Mad About the BoyRebeccaCameo
Now You See Me 3Henley ReevesFilming[99]
Jay KellyPamela PalmerPost-production[100]
TBAPlaydateLesliePost-production

Television

[edit]
YearTitleRoleNotes
1993Bay CoveVanessa WalkerSeries
Paradise BeachRobyn Devereaux Barsby2 episodes
1994–1997Home and AwayShannon Reed345 episodes
1999Oliver TwistBetMiniseries
2000SunburnWoman1 episode
Hearts and BonesAustralian Barmaid
2001AttilaCercaMiniseries
2002BeastmasterDemon Manaka1 episode
2003Da Ali G ShowThug Bitch (Spyz)Episode: "Belief"
2004Pilot SeasonButterfly1 episode
2010Neighbors from HellUnnamed3 episodes; voice
2011Bored to DeathRose2 episodes
2013, 2018Arrested DevelopmentRebel Alley13 episodes (season 4–5)
2015Sofia the FirstButton2 episodes; voice
2018Angie TribecaLana BobannaEpisode: "Glitch Perfect"
2020Curb Your EnthusiasmCarol1 episode
2022–presentWolf Like MeMaryLead role, also executive producer

Awards and nominations

[edit]
YearAssociationCategoryWorkResultRef.
2006MTV Movie AwardsBest Breakthrough PerformanceWedding CrashersWon[101]
Teen Choice AwardsChoice Breakout (Female)Nominated
Teen Choice AwardsChoice Hissy FitNominated
2008Elle Women in Hollywood AwardsIcon AwardWon[102]
2009Teen Choice AwardsChoice Movie Actress: ComedyConfessions of a ShopaholicNominated
2012Alliance of Women Film JournalistsBest Animated FemaleRangoWon[103]
2013Alliance of Women Film JournalistsBest Animated FemaleRise of the GuardiansNominated
2014AACTA AwardsBest Supporting ActressThe Great GatsbyNominated
Australian Film Critics AssociationBest Supporting ActressNominated
Film Critics Circle of Australia AwardsBest Supporting ActressNominated
Jupiter AwardBest International ActressNominated
Screen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy SeriesArrested DevelopmentNominated[104]
2016AACTA AwardsTrailblazer AwardWon[105]

Works and publications

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Stahl, Jay (5 April 2024)."Sacha Baron Cohen, Isla Fischer to divorce after nearly 14 years of marriage".USA Today. Retrieved5 April 2024.
  2. ^@islafisher (3 February 2021)."45th Birthday today 🌸 🌺". Archived fromthe original on 23 December 2021. Retrieved28 February 2022 – viaInstagram.
  3. ^"Sacha Baron Cohen Jokes He Forgot Wife Isla Fisher's Birthday as He Celebrates Golden Globe Nominations".E!. 3 February 2021. Retrieved17 May 2021.However, that wasn't the only celebratory post Cohen shared on Feb. 3. He also made sure to tell the world that it was his wife Isla Fisher's 45th birthday.
  4. ^"Isla Fisher Reveals Husband Sacha Baron Cohen Bought Her a Ring After Her Father Died to 'Hold His Memory Close' — People".
  5. ^Marcie Muir, Kerry White (1992).Australian Children's Books: 1989–2000. Melbourne University Publishing.ISBN 9780522850888.
  6. ^"Oman-born actress, spouse donate $1 million for Syrian children".Times of Oman. 28 December 2015. Archived fromthe original on 1 January 2016. Retrieved27 February 2020.
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  9. ^ab"Isla an Aussie at heart".Sunday Mail. 25 March 2007.Archived from the original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved26 March 2007.
  10. ^"The Vanities Girls".Vanity Fair. New York. 1 March 2009. Archived fromthe original on 6 June 2014.
  11. ^Pringle, Gill (28 September 2007). "Hot Bod is keeping mum".The Independent.
  12. ^Harry, Ethan (17 July 2005). "Interrogation Isla Fisher".Sunday Mirror.
  13. ^Browne, Rachel (15 April 1996)."The Money and the Box".The Sun-Herald.Fairfax Media. p. 126. Retrieved15 July 2012.
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  20. ^"Scooby-Doo (2002)".Box Office Mojo. Retrieved28 February 2022.
  21. ^ab"Isla Fisher Interviewed – THE LOOKOUT".Collider. 28 March 2007.
  22. ^Rooney, David (13 May 2003)."The Wannabes".Variety.
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  28. ^"Around the World Roundup: 'At World's End' Dominates Again".Box Office Mojo. Retrieved28 February 2022.
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  37. ^"Review: 'Confessions of a Shopaholic'".Christian Science Monitor. 14 February 2009.
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  40. ^"More Cast Members for Burke and Hare".Dread Central. 22 January 2010. Retrieved28 February 2022.
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  42. ^Gant, Charles (27 October 2010)."Burke & Hare".Variety.
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  45. ^Silverstein, Melissa (11 January 2012)."Alliance of Women Film Journalists Award Winners".IndieWire. Archived fromthe original on 23 May 2018. Retrieved22 May 2018.
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  48. ^Thompson, Anne (8 March 2016)."The Weinstein Co. to Reconfigure RADiUS".IndieWire. Retrieved3 March 2017.
  49. ^ab"Isla Fisher: Confessions of a seriously funny girl".The Independent. 10 November 2012.
  50. ^"Isla Fisher Talks 'Great Gatsby': 'I Was Nervous She Wouldn't Make An Impact'".Uproxx. 28 May 2013. Retrieved28 February 2022.
  51. ^"'The Great Gatsby' Review".ScreenRant. 10 May 2013.
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  56. ^Jagernauth, Kevin (30 May 2013)."Review: 'Now You See Me' Starring Jesse Eisenberg, Woody Harrelson, Isla Fisher & Mark Ruffalo".IndieWire. Archived fromthe original on 16 January 2017. Retrieved22 May 2018.
  57. ^"Now You See Me (2013)".Box Office Mojo. Retrieved28 February 2022.
  58. ^"'Arrested Development': Isla Fisher, Terry Crews Join Season 4".HuffPost. 14 September 2012. Retrieved22 April 2014.
  59. ^"Life Of Crime".Rottentomatoes.com.
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  62. ^"Visions".Uphe.com. 8 July 2015.
  63. ^"Login Grupo Reforma".Elnorte.com.
  64. ^"Isla Fisher and Rebel Wilson join cast of Sacha Baron Cohen comedy film Grimsby". The Telegraph. Archived fromthe original on 7 October 2015. Retrieved3 October 2015.
  65. ^"Isla Fisher Joins Jon Hamm, Zach Galifianakis in 'Keeping Up With the Joneses'". The Wrap. 29 October 2014. Retrieved3 October 2015.
  66. ^McNary, Dave (21 October 2016)."Box Office: 'Jack Reacher: Never Go Back' Dominates 'Ouija 2,' 'Madea Halloween' on Thursday Night".Variety.
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  72. ^Isla Fisher (3 October 2017).Children's Book Review: Marge in Charge. Harper.ISBN 978-0-06-266218-7.
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  74. ^"Marge and the Pirate Baby".Goodreads.
  75. ^"Marge in Charge and the Stolen Treasure".Goodreads.
  76. ^Fogarty, Paul (27 February 2020)."CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM ADDS ISLA FISHER TO SEASON 10 – WEDDING CRASHERS FANS CAN'T HANDLE IT!".HITC.com. Archived fromthe original on 12 April 2020. Retrieved27 February 2021.
  77. ^"Jillian Bell, Isla Fisher to Star in Disney+ Comedy 'Godmothered' (Exclusive)".The Hollywood Reporter. 9 January 2020. Retrieved28 February 2022.
  78. ^"Isla Fisher".Smallstepsproject.org.
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