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Helena Bonham Carter

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English actress (born 1966)
‹ Thetemplate below (British barrelled name) is being considered for deletion. Seetemplates for discussion to help reach a consensus. ›
This British surname isdouble-barrelled, being made up of multiple names. It should be written asBonham Carter, notCarter.

Helena Bonham Carter
Helena Bonham Carter onstage, holding a cup
Bonham Carter in 2024
Born (1966-05-26)26 May 1966 (age 59)[1]
Islington, London, England
Education
OccupationActress
Years active1983–present
WorksFull list
Partners
Children2
FatherRaymond Bonham Carter
RelativesEdward Bonham Carter (brother)
FamilyBonham Carter
AwardsFull list

Helena Bonham Carter (born 26 May 1966) is an English actress. She is known for her portrayals of eccentric women inblockbusters andindependent films,[2] particularlyperiod dramas. She rose to prominence by playing Lucy Honeychurch inA Room with a View (1985) and the title character inLady Jane (1986). Her early period roles saw her typecast as a virginal "English rose", a label with which she was uncomfortable.[3] She is recognized for her unconventional fashion choices and dark aesthetic.[4][5] For her role as Kate Croy inThe Wings of the Dove (1997), Bonham Carter received a nomination for theAcademy Award for Best Actress, and for her portrayal ofQueen Elizabeth inThe King's Speech (2010), she won theBAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role, and was nominated for theAcademy Award for Best Supporting Actress.

Her other films includeHamlet (1990),Howards End (1992),Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1994),Mighty Aphrodite (1995),Fight Club (1999),Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), theHarry Potter series (2007–2011),Great Expectations (2012) asMiss Havisham,Les Misérables (2012),Cinderella (2015),Ocean's 8 (2018), andEnola Holmes (2020). Her collaborations with directorTim Burton includeBig Fish (2003),Corpse Bride (2005),Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005),Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (2007),Alice in Wonderland andDark Shadows (2012).

For her role as children's authorEnid Blyton in theBBC Four biographical filmEnid (2009), she won the 2010International Emmy Award for Best Actress and was nominated for theBritish Academy Television Award for Best Actress. Her other television films includeFatal Deception: Mrs. Lee Harvey Oswald (1993),Live from Baghdad (2002),Toast (2010), andBurton & Taylor (2013). From 2019 to 2020, she portrayedPrincess Margaret inseasons three andfour ofNetflix'sThe Crown earning twoPrimetime Emmy Award nominations.

Ancestry

Paternal

See also:Bonham Carter family andAsquith family

Bonham Carter's paternal grandparents were BritishLiberal politicians SirMaurice Bonham-Carter and LadyViolet Bonham Carter. Sir Maurice was descended fromJohn Bonham Carter, Member of Parliament for Portsmouth. Violet was a daughter ofH. H. Asquith, 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith and Prime Minister of Britain 1908–1916. Violet's brother wasAnthony Asquith, English director of such films asCarrington V.C. andThe Importance of Being Earnest. Helena is also a first cousin of the economistAdam Ridley[6] and of politicianJane Bonham Carter.

Bonham Carter is a distant cousin of actorCrispin Bonham-Carter. Her other prominent distant relatives includeLothian Bonham Carter, who playedfirst-class cricket forHampshire, his son, Vice Admiral SirStuart Bonham Carter, who served in theRoyal Navy in bothworld wars, and pioneering English nurseFlorence Nightingale.[7]

Maternal

See also:Fould family

Her maternal grandfather, Spanish diplomatEduardo Propper de Callejón, saved thousands of Jews from theHolocaust during theSecond World War, for which he was recognised asRighteous Among the Nations,[8] and posthumously received theCourage to Care Award from theAnti-Defamation League.[9] His own father was aBohemian Jew, and his wife, Helena's grandmother, was aJewishconvert to Catholicism.[10][8] He later served as Minister-Counselor at the Spanish Embassy in Washington, D.C.[11]

Her maternal grandmother,Baroness Hélène Fould-Springer, was from an upper-classJewish family; she was the daughter of Baron Eugène Fould-Springer (a French banker descended from theEphrussi family and theFould dynasty) and Marie-Cécile von Springer (whose father was Austrian-born industrialist Baron Gustav von Springer, and whose mother was from the deKoenigswarter family).[12][13][14] Hélène Fould-Springerconverted to Catholicism after the Second World War.[10][15] Hélène's sister was the French philanthropist Liliane de Rothschild (1916–2003), the wife of BaronÉlie de Rothschild, of the prominentRothschild family (who had also married within the von Springer family in the 19th century);[16] Liliane's other sister, Therese Fould-Springer, was the mother of British writerDavid Pryce-Jones.[13]

Early life and education

Bonham Carter was born inIslington,London.[17] Her father,Raymond Bonham Carter, who came from a prominentBritish political family, was amerchant banker and served as the alternative British director representing theBank of England at theInternational Monetary Fund in Washington, DC, during the 1960s.[12][18] Her mother, Elena (née Propper de Callejón), is a psychotherapist who is of Spanish and mostlyBohemian andFrench-Jewish background, and whose parents were diplomatEduardo Propper de Callejón from Spain and painterBaroness Hélène Fould-Springer.[12][19] Bonham Carter's paternal grandmother was politician and feministViolet Bonham Carter, daughter ofH. H. Asquith, theprime minister of the United Kingdom during the first half of theFirst World War.[20]

Bonham Carter has two older brothers;Edward and Thomas. They were brought up inGolders Green, and she was educated atSouth Hampstead High School, and completed herA-levels atWestminster School.[21] Bonham Carter applied toKing's College, Cambridge, but was rejected "because officials were afraid that she would leave mid-term to pursue an acting career."[22]

When Bonham Carter was five, her mother had a seriousnervous breakdown, from which she needed three years to recover. Soon afterwards, her mother's experience in therapy led her to become a psychotherapist herself. Bonham Carter has since paid her to read her scripts and deliver opinions on the characters' psychological motivations.[23] Five years after her mother's recovery, her father was diagnosed withacoustic neuroma. He suffered complications during an operation to remove the tumour, which led to a stroke, leaving him half-paralysed and using a wheelchair.[24] With her brothers at college, Bonham Carter was left to help her mother cope. She later studied her father's movements and mannerisms for her role inThe Theory of Flight.[25] He died in January 2004.[26]

Career

Early work and breakthrough (1980s–1990s)

Bonham Carter, who has had no formal acting training,[27] entered the field winning a national writing contest in 1979, and used the money to pay for her entry into the actors'Spotlight directory. She made her professional acting debut at the age of 16 in a television commercial. She also had a minor part in the 1983 TV filmA Pattern of Roses.[28] In the early 1990s, Bonham Carter studied clown under master clownPhilippe Gaulier atÉcole Philippe Gaulier.[29][30]

Bonham Carter's first lead film role was asLady Jane Grey inLady Jane (1986), which was given mixed reviews by critics. Her breakthrough role was as Lucy Honeychurch inA Room with a View (1985), an adaptation ofE. M. Forster's1908 novel, which was filmed afterLady Jane, but released two months earlier. She also appeared in episodes ofMiami Vice asDon Johnson's love interest during the 1986–87 season, and then in 1987 withDirk Bogarde inThe Vision,Stewart Granger inA Hazard of Hearts, andJohn Gielgud inGetting It Right. Bonham Carter was originally cast for the role of Bess McNeill inBreaking the Waves, but backed out during production owing to "the character's painful psychic and physical exposure", according toRoger Ebert.[31] The role went toEmily Watson, who was nominated for an Academy Award for her performance.[32]

Her early films led to her being typecast as a "corset queen" and "English rose", playing pre- and early 20th century characters, particularly inMerchant Ivory films.[3] Uncomfortable with this image, she states: "I looked, as someone said, like a bloated chipmunk".[3] In 1994, Bonham Carter appeared in a dream sequence during the second series of the British sitcomAbsolutely Fabulous, asEdina Monsoon's daughter Saffron, who was normally played byJulia Sawalha. Throughout the series, references were made to Saffron's resemblance to Bonham Carter.[33]

Bonham Carter, who speaks French fluently, starred in a 1996 French film titledPortraits chinois. That same year, she played Olivia inTrevor Nunn's film version ofTwelfth Night. One of the high points of her early career was her performance as the scheming Kate Croy in the 1997 film adaption ofThe Wings of the Dove, which was highly acclaimed internationally and saw her receive her first Golden Globe and Academy Award nominations. Then followedFight Club in 1999, in which she played Marla Singer, a role for which she won the 2000Empire Award for Best British Actress.[34]

Worldwide recognition and blockbuster films (2000s–2020s)

Bonham Carter at the2005 Toronto International Film Festival

In August 2001, she was featured inMaxim. She played her second Queen of England when she was cast asAnne Boleyn in the ITV1 miniseriesHenry VIII; however, her role was restricted, as she was pregnant with her first child at the time of filming.[35] In 2005, she voiced Lady Tottingham, a wealthy aristocratic spinster in the 2005 stop-motion animated comedyWallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit. Starring alongsideRalph Fiennes andPeter Sallis, the film serves as part of theWallace & Gromit series.[36][37]

She was a member of the2006 Cannes Film Festival jury that unanimously selectedThe Wind That Shakes the Barley as best film.[38] In May 2006, Bonham Carter launched her own fashion line, "The Pantaloonies", with swimwear designer Samantha Sage. Their first collection, called Bloomin' Bloomers, is aVictorian style selection ofcamisoles,mob caps, andbloomers. The duo worked on Pantaloonies customised jeans, which Bonham Carter describes as "a kind of scrapbook on the bum".[39]

Bonham Carter played the evil witchBellatrix Lestrange in the final fourHarry Potter films (2007–2011). While filmingHarry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, she accidentally perforated the eardrum ofMatthew Lewis (playingNeville Longbottom) when she stuck her wand into his ear canal.[40] Bonham Carter received positive reviews as Bellatrix, described as a "shining but underused talent".[41][40] She playedMrs. Lovett,Sweeney Todd's (Johnny Depp) amorous accomplice, in the film adaptation ofStephen Sondheim's Broadway musical,Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, directed by Burton.[42]Bonham Carter received a nomination for theGolden Globe for Best Actress for her performance. She won the Best Actress award in the 2007Evening Standard British Film Awards for her performances inSweeney Todd andConversations With Other Women, along with another Best Actress award at the2009 Empire Awards. Bonham Carter also appeared in the fourthTerminator film, entitledTerminator Salvation, playing a small but pivotal role as a personification ofSkynet.[43]

A man and woman standing side by side
Bonham Carter withColin Firth on the set ofThe King's Speech in 2009

In 2009, Bonham Carter was the mother squirrel narrator in the30-minute animated film adaptation of the best-selling children's bookThe Gruffalo, which was broadcast onBBC One on 25 December 2009.[44] Bonham Carter joined the cast of Tim Burton's 2010 film,Alice in Wonderland, as theRed Queen.[45]She appears alongsideJohnny Depp,Anne Hathaway,Mia Wasikowska,Crispin Glover, and Harry Potter co-starAlan Rickman. Her role was an amalgamation ofthe Queen of Hearts and the Red Queen.[46][47][48]In early 2009, Bonham Carter was named one ofThe Times's top-10 British Actresses of all time, along with fellow actressesJudi Dench,Helen Mirren,Maggie Smith,Julie Andrews, andAudrey Hepburn.[49]

In 2010, Bonham Carter playedQueen Elizabeth in the filmThe King's Speech. As of January 2011[update], she had received numerous plaudits and praise for her performance, including nominations for theBAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role and theAcademy Award for Best Supporting Actress.[50][51] She won her first BAFTA Award, but lost the Academy Award toMelissa Leo forThe Fighter.[52]

Bonham Carter signed to play authorEnid Blyton in theBBC Four televisionbiopic,Enid. It was the first depiction of Blyton's life on the screen; she starred withMatthew Macfadyen andDenis Lawson.[53] She received her first TelevisionBAFTA Nomination for Best Actress, forEnid. In 2010, she starred withFreddie Highmore in theNigel Slater biopicToast, which was filmed in theWest Midlands[54] and received a gala at the 2011Berlin International Film Festival.[55][56] She received the Britannia Award for British Artist of the Year fromBAFTA LA in 2011.[57]

Bonham Carter at the2011 Berlin International Film Festival

In 2012, she appeared as the eccentric, jilted brideMiss Havisham—one of the most potent figures in Victorian gothic fiction—inMike Newell'sadaptation of theCharles Dickens novelGreat Expectations.[58][59] In April 2012, she appeared inRufus Wainwright'smusic video for his single "Out of the Game", featured on the album ofthe same name.[60] She co-starred in afilm adaptation of the musicalLes Misérables, released in 2012. She played the role ofMadame Thénardier.[61]

She also appeared in a short film directed byRoman Polanski for the clothing brandPrada. The short was entitledA Therapy and she appeared as a patient ofBen Kingsley's therapist.[62]

In 2013, Bonham Carter appeared inThe Young and Prodigious T.S. Spivet, an adaptation ofReif Larsen's bookThe Selected Works of T.S. Spivet.[63]

In 2013, she played Red Harrington, a peg-legged brothel madam, who assists Reid and Tonto in locating Cavendish, in the movieThe Lone Ranger. Also that year, Bonham Carter narrated poetry forThe Love Book App, an interactive anthology of love literature developed byAllie Byrne Esiri.[64] Also in 2013, Bonham Carter appeared asElizabeth Taylor, alongsideDominic West asRichard Burton, in BBC4'sBurton & Taylor, which premiered at the 2013Hamptons International Film Festival.[65] She played the Fairy Godmother in the 2015live-action re-imagining ofWalt Disney'sCinderella.[66]

In 2016, Bonham Carter reprised her role of the Red Queen inAlice Through the Looking Glass. In June 2018, she starred in a spin-off of theOcean's Eleven trilogy, titledOcean's 8, alongsideSandra Bullock,Cate Blanchett,Anne Hathaway, andSarah Paulson.[67] She plays an olderPrincess Margaret—whom Bonham Carter knew in person through her uncleMark[68]—for theNetflix seriesThe Crown, replacingVanessa Kirby, who played a younger version for the first two seasons. Her performance earned her nominations for thePrimetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series, theGolden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film, theBritish Academy Television Award for Best Supporting Actress, theCritics' Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Drama Series and theScreen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series. She was also a part of the ensemble cast that won theScreen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series in 2019 and 2020. In 2020, Bonham Carter starred as Eudoria Holmes in theNetflix filmEnola Holmes, which is based on the Sherlock Holmes adaptation,The Enola Holmes Mysteries.[69]

Personal life

In August 2008, four of Bonham Carter's relatives were killed in asafari bus crash in South Africa,[70] and she was given indefinite leave from filmingTerminator Salvation, returning later to complete filming.[71]

In early October 2008, Bonham Carter became the firstpatron of the charity Action Duchenne, the national charity established to support parents and sufferers ofDuchenne muscular dystrophy.[72]

In August 2014, Bonham Carter was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter toThe Guardian opposingScottish independence in the run-up to September'sreferendum on that issue.[73]

In 2016, Bonham Carter said she was keen on the UK remaining in theEuropean Union in regard to thereferendum on that issue.[74]

In 2022 Bonham Carter was appointed to the honorary position of theLondon Library's president, making her their first female president. She has been a member of the London Library since 1986.[75]

Relationships

In 1994, Bonham Carter andKenneth Branagh met while filmingMary Shelley's Frankenstein. They began an affair while Branagh was still married toEmma Thompson.[76] At the time, Thompson's career was soaring, while Branagh was struggling to make a success of his first big-budget film.[76] Following the affair, Branagh and Thompson divorced in 1995.[77] In 1999, after five years together, Bonham Carter and Branagh separated.[78]

Thompson has said she has "no hard feelings" towards Bonham Carter, calling her affair with Branagh "blood under the bridge".[79] She explained: "You can't hold on to anything like that. It's pointless. I haven't got the energy for it. Helena and I made our peace years and years ago. She's a wonderful woman."[79] Thompson, Branagh, and Bonham Carter all later went on to appear in theHarry Potter series (none of them shared any scenes); Thompson and Bonham Carter both appeared inOrder of the Phoenix.

In 2001, Bonham Carter began a relationship with American directorTim Burton, whom she met while filmingPlanet of the Apes. Burton cast her in a number of his other films, includingBig Fish,Corpse Bride,Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street,Alice in Wonderland, andDark Shadows. After their separation, Bonham Carter said, "It might be easier to work together without being together anymore. He always only cast me with great embarrassment."[80]

Mill House in Oxfordshire, bought by Bonham Carter in 2006

Bonham Carter and Burton lived in adjoining houses inBelsize Park, London. She owned one of the houses; Burton later bought the other, and they connected the two. In 2006, they bought theMill House inSutton Courtenay,Oxfordshire.[81] It was previously leased by her grandmother,Violet Bonham Carter, and owned by her great-grandfatherH. H. Asquith.[81][82]

Bonham Carter and Burton have a son and daughter together.[83][84][19] She toldThe Daily Telegraph of her struggles withinfertility and the difficulties she had during her pregnancies. She said that before the conception of her daughter, she and Burton had been trying for a baby for two years and, although they conceived naturally, they were consideringin vitro fertilisation.[85]

On 23 December 2014, the two announced that they had "separated amicably" earlier that year.[86][87] Of the separation, Bonham Carter toldHarper's Bazaar: "Everyone always says you have to be strong and have a stiff upper lip, but it's okay to be fragile. ...You've got to take very small steps, and sometimes you won't know where to go next because you've lost yourself." She added: "With divorce, you go through massive grief—it is a death of a relationship, so it's utterly bewildering. Your identity, everything, changes."[80]

Since 2018, Bonham Carter has been in a relationship with art historian Rye Dag Holmboe.[88] Holmboe is 21 years her junior. Regarding their age gap, Bonham Carter toldThe Times in 2019: "Everybody ages at a different rate. My boyfriend is unbelievably mature. He's an old soul in a young body, what more could I want? People are slightly frightened of older women, but he isn't. Women can be very powerful when they're older."[89]

Public image

Bonham Carter is known for her unconventional and eccentric sense of fashion.[90][91]British Vogue described her dark style in clothing and acting as "quirky and irreverent".[92]Vanity Fair named her on its 2010 Best-Dressed List[93] and she was selected byMarc Jacobs to be the face of his Autumn/Winter 2011 advertising campaign.[94] She has citedVivienne Westwood andMarie Antoinette as her main style influences.[93]

In May 2021, Bonham Carter featured in a commercial for British furniture retailerSofology, taking viewers through the quirks and stylistic flourishes of her home.[95] In 2021, she wrote an article forHarper's Bazaar on the influence ofLewis Carroll'sAlice's Adventures in Wonderland on her life since she first read the book as a child: "As far back as I can remember, I've been a wannabeAlice", adding, "everywhere I look at home, every view has some reference toAlice: frog footman candlesticks, teacup constructions, a teapot lamp, a chessboard teapot, an oversized pocket watch, undersized doors, bunnies, internal windows that look like mirrors, and mirrors that look like windows".[96]

Acting credits

Main article:List of Helena Bonham Carter performances

Accolades and honours

Main article:List of awards and nominations received by Helena Bonham Carter

Bonham Carter has been the recipient of aBAFTA Award, aCritics' Choice Movie Award, anInternational Emmy Award and threeScreen Actors Guild Awards, as well as receiving further nominations for twoAcademy Awards, nineGolden Globe Awards and fivePrimetime Emmy Awards. She has received other prestigious awards such as aLos Angeles Film Critics Association Award and twoNational Board of Review awards.[50]

Bonham Carter was made aCBE in the2012 New Year Honours list for services to drama,[97] and Prime MinisterDavid Cameron announced that she had been appointed to Britain's new nationalHolocaust Commission in January 2014.[98]

See also

References

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External links

Helena Bonham Carter at Wikipedia'ssister projects
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