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Katrin Cartlidge

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Occupation
  
Actress

Role
  
Actress

Name
  
Katrin Cartlidge


Partner(s)
  
Peter Gevisser

Years active
  
1982–2002

Books
  
Film: Naked

Katrin Cartlidge Cineplexcom Katrin Cartlidge

Born
  
15 May 1961 (
1961-05-15
)
London, England

Died
  
September 7, 2002, London, United Kingdom

Parents
  
Bobbi Cartlidge, Derek Cartlidge

Siblings
  
Michelle Cartlidge, Tony Cartlidge

Movies
  
Breaking the Waves, Before the Rain, Career Girls, No Man's Land, From Hell

Similar People
  

Katrin cartlidge


Katrin Juliet Cartlidge (15 May 1961 – 7 September 2002) was an English actress. She first appeared on screen as Lucy Collins in the Channel 4 soap opera Brookside (1982–83), before going on to win the 1997 Evening Standard Film Award for Best Actress for the Mike Leigh film Career Girls. Her other film appearances included Leigh's Naked (1993), Before the Rain (1994), Breaking the Waves, (1996), and From Hell (2001).

Contents

Katrin Cartlidge Katrin Cartlidge Filmweb

The canon ep 2 katrin cartlidge


Biography

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Cartlidge was born in London to Derek, an English father and Bobbi, a German Jewish refugee mother. She was educated at the Parliament Hill School for Girls in Camden.

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Her work on Manchevski's Before the Rain, and on No Man's Land made her well known in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Balkans. Sophie, in Mike Leigh's Naked, was her first leading role. Cartlidge worked in two more Leigh films: in Career Girls she played one of the lead roles, Hannah, at both 20 and 30, and in Topsy Turvy she was a madam in a Paris brothel. She was due to play the lead role in Polish director Lech Majewski's 2004 film The Garden of Earthly Delights—that of an art historian dying of cancer—but she left shortly before production began.

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Cartlidge died at age 41, due to complications from pneumonia and septicaemia, stemming from a pheochromocytoma.

Legacy

The impact of Cartlidge's sudden death saw the creation of the Katrin Cartlidge Foundation by the trustees Mike Leigh, Peter Gevisser, Simon McBurney, Chris Simon and Cat Villiers. The patrons include Lars von Trier and Cartlidge's sister Michelle. Established at the Sarajevo Film Festival, an annual bursary is awarded by "an elected curator, chosen by the (Foundation) Trustees from a wide and eclectic number of Katrin Cartlidge’s friends and colleagues...(to) a new creative voice... While the new talent nominated each year will be a filmmaker, it is anticipated that the choices will be as varied and extraordinary as Katrin’s own choice of filmmakers and friends from across the arts."

Mike Leigh: "She took to the improvisation and character work instantly, easily and with extraordinary commitment and imagination. Other than in the Royal Court Young Peoples Theatre, she had had no formal training, but you would never have guessed it. (Drama Centre London turned her down, and that put her off). She often talked to me about [a] move into directing. I am in no doubt that we have lost not only one of our greatest actors but also one of the most interesting new directors of the future."

Following her death, British singer Morrissey dedicated a performance of his song "Late Night, Maudlin Street" at the Royal Albert Hall to Cartlidge, describing her as "brilliant person and fantastic actor".

Filmography

Film

Television

Television film and short works

References

Katrin Cartlidge Wikipedia