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Juliet Aubrey : ウィキペディア英語版
Juliet Aubrey

Juliet Aubrey (born 17 December 1966) is an award winning English actress, of Theatre, Film, and Television. Amongst other roles she is particularly celebrated for playing Dorothea in Middlemarch, and Helen Cutter in Primeval.
==Career==
Born in Fleet, Hampshire, Aubrey attended King's College London from 1984, where she studied Classics and Archaeology. While there, however, her love of acting grew, and during a year studying in Italy where she joined a travelling theatre company, Aubrey decided to apply for drama school on her return. She did, and went on to train for three years at the Central School of Speech and Drama.
Her first job was with the Oxford Stage Company playing Miranda in ''The Tempest''. The Italian director Roberto Faenza gave Juliet her first film role playing opposite Jean Hughes Anglade in ''Look to the Sky'', a film produced by Elda Ferri, and set during the Nazi Holocaust. Juliet won the Davide Donatelli award for Best Actress for her role as Hannah. Antony Page and Louis Marks then cast Juliet as Dorothea in the BBC adaptation of ''Middlemarch'' opposite Rufus Sewell, for which she won a BAFTA for Best Actress,〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.whosdatedwho.com/tpx_2870597/bafta-awards/1995 )〕 and the Broadcasting Press Guild for Best Actress.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.broadcastingpressguild.org/awards/1995.html )〕 She then joined Haris Pasovic's Sarajevo Theatre Company. She appeared in several plays with the company, all created through the actors' improvisation. She continued to build her career as a theatre actress, appearing next in Trevor Nunn's ''Summerfolk'' and Katie Mitchell's ''Ivanov'' at The National, Tim Crouch's ''An Oak Tree'' for Karl James at The Soho Theatre, and ''Three Sisters'', ''Twelfth Night'' and ''The Collection'' all for Chris White. Michael Winterbottom then cast her opposite Robert Carlyle and James Nesbitt in the much acclaimed film ''Go Now''.
Aubrey's subsequent films include Winterbottom's ''Welcome to Sarajevo'', Stephen Poliakoff's ''Food of Love''—for which she won Best Actress at La Baule European Film Festival〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://en.unifrance.org/festivals-and-markets/750/la-baule-european-film-festival/ )〕—Faenza's ''The Lost Lover'', Giacomo Campiotti's ''Time to Love'', Richard Eyre's ''Iris'', Fernando Meirelles's ''Constant Gardener'' and Brian Gibson's ''Still Crazy'', nominated for two Golden Globes. Other features include Matt Lipsey's ''Caught in the Act'', and Mat Cod's ''Super Eruption''. Television work includes ''The White Queen'', ''Criminal Justice'', ''Vera'', ''Hunted'', and the highly acclaimed ''Five Daughters''.
She plays Joy Dangerfield, a follower of Marie Stopes, in the second series of ''The Village'', and in 2015 she will appear in Scott Hicks' fantasy-romance film ''Fallen'' and in Mitch Davis' film ''Stuck''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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