Name: Helena Bonham Carter
Date of Birth: May 26 1966
Birth Place: Golders Green London UK
Nationality: British
Education: Westminster School in London, UK
Claim to fame: as Kate Croy in Wings of the Dove (1997)
Occupation: Actress, Model
Helena Bonham Carter's career has been one long struggle
against preconceptions and virus-like rumours. Many,
particularly in America, believe her to be related to
the Royal Family, and thus born with a silver spoon
in her mouth - neither is true. Many more consider her
to be the quintessential English rose, her pre-Raphaelite
looks priming her for a lifetime of Shakespeare, EM
Forster and Henry James adaptations. In fact, she's
performed a huge variety of roles and, by birth, is
actually far from pure-blood English. Only now, after
her star-turn alongside Brad Pitt in Fight Club and,
coming soon, her appearance with Steve Martin in Novocaine,
and as Ari, an activist chimpanzee in Tim Burton's Planet
Of The Apes, has she come to be recognised for what
she is - one of the UK's finest and most successful
contemporary actresses.
She may not be royalty but, born in Golders Green,
north London, on May 26th, 1966, Helena does come from
classy stock. Her great-grandfather was Lord Asquith,
liberal Prime Minister between 1908 and 1916. Her grandmother
was Violet Bonham Carter, a renowned politician, orator
and member of the House Of Lords (an excellent female
role model), while her grand-uncle was Anthony Asquith,
legendary English director of such classics as Carrington
VC and The Importance Of Being Earnest. Yet, despite
this exceptionally English bloodline, Helena's corpuscles
are a heady mix, her father, Raymond Bonham Carter,
a merchant banker by trade, having married Elena, predominantly
French and Spanish - with a smattering of Jewish, Russian
and Viennese for good measure.
It was Elena who made the first violent impact upon
Helena's young life. When the girl was just 5, her mother
had a serious nervous breakdown, from which it took
her three years to recover. Upon her recovery, her experience
in therapy led her to become a psychotherapist herself
- Helena now pays her to read her scripts and deliver
her opinion of the characters' psychological motivations.
Five years after her mother's recovery, there was a
more terrible familial blow. While holidaying in Greece,
Raymond went deaf in one ear. He was diagnosed with
acoustic neuroma, and a routine operation was carried
out to remove the benign tumour. It went badly wrong.
After 9 hours in theatre, Raymond, only 50 years of
age, had a stroke that left him half-paralysed and confined
to a wheelchair. With her two older brothers (both now
bankers) at college, Helena was left to help her mother
cope. She would later study her father's movements and
mannerisms for her role in The Theory Of Flight.
Helena is not a natural exhibitionist yet, for some
reason, her father's illness drove her to pursue acting.
Perhaps a sudden realisation of his mortality made her
want to impress him quickly. She remembers thinking
about becoming an actress when she was 5, and later
wanting to be Kate Jackson from Charlie's Angels. She
also recalls a visit from a family friend, a glamorous
actress, and how impressed she was that both her brothers
(and her father) were noticeably attracted to the woman.
Attending South Hampstead School For Girls, Helena took
a leaf from a schoolmate's book and, using money she'd
won in a national poetry competition, got herself an
agent and placed a photo of herself in a casting directory.
Work would finally come in 1982, when she was 16 -
though she had already begun to perform onstage. Now
attending Westminster School, she got a part as Juliet
in an ad for stereos. Then came a real break. Accompanying
a schoolfriend who needed moral support, she went to
an audition in Nothing Hill. This was for A Pattern
Of Roses, based on KM Peyton's 1972 novel and to be
financed by Channel 4. In it, a sick young boy uncovers
a tale of disastrous young love from 70 years before,
and finds himself haunted by the protagonists. Spotting
Helena, the producers decided she would make an excellent
Edwardian ghost and hired her - once they'd convinced
her father that it wouldn't interfere with her exams.
As a side-note, Helena was not a union member and, being
as only one non-union actor could be used, another non-union
hopeful was bumped off the bill. His name was Hugh Grant
(learning little from the experience, he'd later also
get dropped from Mel Gibson vehicle The Bounty).
Though still at school, Helena persisted with acting
and, when a picture of her in the Tatler was spotted
by renowned director Trevor Nunn, she found herself
cast in Lady Jane. This was a classic historical tragedy,
about Lady Jane Grey who, in the chaotic aftermath of
Henry VIII's death, finds love in an arranged marriage,
is placed on the throne of England, and is then usurped
and executed. Helena's looks and natural reserve and
enthusiasm served her well - she was excellent. This
led to a terrifying test, as she was cast as Lucy Honeychurch
in EM Forster's A Room With A View and, having hardly
learned to act at all, was matched with Maggie Smith
and Judi Dench.
A Room With A View was a huge success, rushing the
release of Lady Jane which was shot before it. Helena
would present an Oscar with Matthew Broderick, creating
her own costume and introducing the world to what she
knows as "shambles chic". Having won the part
of Lucy, Helena had been prompted by her father to take
this opportunity to launch an acting career. Consequently,
she decided against going to Cambridge University and
continued on. Tormented from youth by self-esteem problems
(she would spend years in therapy), it was hard to stay
confident. With all her friends at college, she felt
terribly alone. Furthermore, she was already being dangerously
typecast as a period drama heroine. Keen to make a break
from this, she took off to America and starred as Theresa,
Don Johnson's junkie fiancee in Miami Vice. She got
on well with Johnson's co-star Philip Michael Thomas,
with whom she shares her birthday.
This statement made, further wing-spreading proved
difficult. A Hazard Of Hearts saw her alongside Diana
Rigg and Edward Fox as an aristocratic girl gambled
away by her dice-a-holic father: then came The Vision
with Eileen Atkins and Dirk Bogarde: then a cameo in
public school drama Maurice. She was a tragic heroine
again, as Ophelia in Mel Gibson's Hamlet, then came
another Forster adaptation with Where Angels Fear To
Tread, this time with Rupert Graves and Helen Mirren.
Then ANOTHER Forster, with the superior Howard's End,
which won an Oscar for Emma Thompson. All very, very
English - even the one where the Australian played the
Dane.
Throughout, Helena continued to take what unusual roles
she was offered. She was the flamboyant, anorexic seducer
Lady Minerva Munday in Getting It Right: she was the
confused and fearful wife of Lee Harvey Oswald in Marina's
Story (for which she was nominated for a Golden Globe):
she even played a stripper, winning the heart of Rik
Mayall in Dancing Queen. But there was no escape from
period stuff - she just suited it too well - and next
came one of the greats, Frankenstein (the book being
one of the greats, not the film), where Helena revealed
a quite stunning gothic look, only to have it spoiled
when Robert De Niro's Monster literally knocked her
head off her shoulders.
During the filming of Frankenstein, the star and director
Kenneth Branagh was undergoing a painful separation
from Emma Thompson. He and Helena got on well, and eventually
began a relationship which would last till 1999. Unwilling
to score any publicity or professional kudos from this,
she would never talk about her personal life with Branagh,
despite hundreds of journalistic proddings. Instead,
she persisted in her efforts to depart from straight-laced
period drama wherever possible. She was tortured by
coal-mining disasters in Nova Scotia in Margaret's Museum:
she did the complicated relationship thing in Portraits
Chinois (speaking French, her mother's native tongue),
which meant she couldn't play Desdemona in Branagh's
Othello: and she married Woody Allen in Mighty Aphrodite.
When, in 1998, she played her own grandmother, Violet,
in a radio play, she did some research and discovered
a postcard Violet had sent to her husband in 1911. It
featured an odd-looking Italian hotel - by strange coincidence
the one where Helena had stayed while filming with Allen.
Now maturing rapidly as an actress, Helena could return
to period drama confident that she could bring more
power to her roles, and avoid the shrinking violet tag.
She played Olivia in Trevor Nunn's production of Twelfth
Night, took on George Orwell's Keep The Aspidistra Flying
and, most notably, played Kate Croy in Henry James'
The Wings Of The Dove. Here she was tremendous as a
manipulative young women attempting to keep her fortune
and also a penniless lover she's been forbidden to see.
Once again, she was nominated for a Golden Globe and,
as proof positive of her massive progress, also gained
an Oscar nomination. She took her mother to the ceremony,
rather than Branagh and is typically good-humoured about
her defeat by As Good As It Gets' Helen Hunt, saying
"I'd won for the first two syllables".
Finally accepted as an actress, she threw herself into
out-there roles with a vengeance. There was the dark
laugh-fest of The Revengers' Comedies, where she meets
Sam Neill on Tower Bridge, both about to jump. Instead
they decide to take vengeance on those who've hurt the
other. There was the aforementioned Theory Of Flight
where she played a victim of motor neurone disease who
wants Branagh to help her be deflowered before her death.
And there was Merlin (with Neill again), where she played
Morgan Le Fey to Miranda Richardson's superb, hissing
Queen Mab, receiving nominations for both a Golden Globe
and an Emmy. In the meantime, she finally moved out
of her parents' house, and got a flat in Belsize Park,
next door to producer Nellee Hooper, famed for his work
with Bjork. She also rid herself of a frighteningly
obsessive stalker who once called her 16 times in one
minute.
Now came a major breakthrough. Fight Club was her first
blockbuster, her first "girlfriend role",
as she calls it. Here she was the fabulously neurotic
Marla Singer, who meets Ed Norton at a testicular cancer
group and engages in an affair with Brad Pitt, in the
midst of which she performs the loudest and most hilarious
orgasm since Meg Ryan's in When Harry Met Sally - scandalous
behaviour for an English rose. Then came the rough,
Edinburgh-set Women Talking Dirty: the scary, animated
Carnivale: and Burton's Planet Of The Apes, where she
helps out marooned astronaut Mark Wahlberg and is quite
evidently not trading on her looks (an occasional accusation
- she did in fact model Yardley cosmetics, briefly,
in 1995, but quit because she hated it so). After that
will come Novocaine, where she seduces dentist Steve
Martin into prescribing her drugs. While filming, having
now split from Branagh, she had a fling with Martin
but found the 21-year age difference too much. Martin,
who'd had thoughts of marriage, was devastated.
Whether Helena Bonham Carter will rise to even greater
heights in Hollywood is debateable. She jokes that her
short-sightedness (she wears lenses, or glasses) has
caused her to ignore many a high-powered celebrity when
they've attempted to introduce themselves, thus limiting
her potential for advancement. Also, she's quite clearly
drawn to low-budget projects that interest her - not
a characteristic of many superstars. But that's Helena.
Having spent a decade and a half battling against that
English Rose thing, she's not giving up the fight now,
even though it's already won. The girl got good - there
can no longer be any argument.