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Kirsten Dunst

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Kirsten Dunst
at the Spider-Man 3 premiere in New York, 2007
Born
Kirsten Caroline Dunst
Years active1989–present
AwardsSaturn Award for Best Younger Actor
1994 Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles
BSFC Award for Best Supporting Actress
1994 Interview with the Vampire: The Vampire Chronicles ; Little Women
Empire Award for Best Actress
2002 Spider-Man

Kirsten Caroline Dunst (born April 30, 1982) is an American actress and singer. She made her film debut in Oedipus Wrecks, a short film directed by Woody Allen for the anthology New York Stories (1989). She appeared in Little Women (1994) opposite Winona Ryder and Claire Danes, before securing the role that brought her widespread recognition, as the vampire Claudia in Interview with the Vampire (1994). She was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance.

Dunst achieved international recognition as a result of her portrayal of Mary Jane Watson in the Spider-Man films. Since then, she has played the title role in Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette (2006), and How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (2008). She has accepted leading roles in the 2009 films All Good Things and Sweet Relief.

Dunst made her singing debut in the film Get Over It (2001), in which she performed two songs. In the 2001 film The Cat's Meow, she performed Henry Creamer and Turner Layton's song "After You've Gone" for the end credits of the film. Early in 2008 Dunst admitted that she was suffering from depression. She checked into a treatment center, discharging herself in March and resuming her career. She has dated playwright Jeff Smeenge, actor Jake Gyllenhaal and Razorlight frontman Johnny Borrell.

Early life

Dunst was born in Point Pleasant, New Jersey to Klaus and Inez Dunst. She has a younger brother, Christian.[1] Her father was a medical services executive and her mother was an artist and former gallery owner.[2] Dunst is of German descent on her father's side, and Swedish on her mother's.[3][4]

Dunst lived in New Jersey until the age of six, where she attended Ranney School, before she moved with her mother and younger brother to Los Angeles, California in 1991. In 1995, her mother filed for divorce from her father.[3] In 1996, she began attending Notre Dame, a private Catholic high school in Los Angeles. Dunst graduated from Notre Dame in 2000 and left to continue her acting career.[1] When asked if she had any regrets about the way she spent her childhood, Dunst said: "Well, it's not a natural way to grow up, but it's the way I grew up and I wouldn't change it. I have my stuff to work out... I don't think anybody can sit around and say: 'My life is more screwed up than yours.' Everybody has their issues."[4]

Career

Early work

Dunst began her career at the age of three as a child fashion model in television commercials.[2][5] She was signed with Ford Models and Elite Model Management.[2] At the age of eight Dunst made her film debut in Woody Allen's Oedipus Wrecks, a short film that was released as one-third of the anthology New York Stories (1989).[2] Soon after, she landed a small part in The Bonfire of the Vanities (1990), as Tom Hanks' daughter.[2] In 1993, Dunst played Hedril in "Dark Page", the seventh season episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation.[6] She also stared in small soldiers and jumiji

Dunst portrayed young Amy March in the 1994 film adaptation of Little Women.[2] The film received favorable reviews;[7] critic Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote that the film was the greatest adaptation of the novel, and also remarked on Dunst's performance: "The perfect contrast to take-charge Jo comes from Kirsten Dunst's scene-stealing Amy, whose vanity and twinkling mischief make so much more sense coming from an 11-year-old vixen than they did from grown-up Joan Bennett in 1933. Ms. Dunst, also scarily effective as the baby bloodsucker of Interview With the Vampire, is a little vamp with a big future."[8]

Critical success

She made her break-through role in Interview with the Vampire, a 1994 film based on Anne Rice's novel, in which she played the child vampire Claudia, a surrogate daughter to Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt's characters in the film.[9] The film received generally unfavorable reviews,[10] but every film critic complimented Dunst's performance; Roger Ebert commented: "One of the creepier aspects of the story is the creation of the child vampire, Claudia, played by Kirsten Dunst, who is about 12 years old. The character was six in the novel, but even twice as old she is disturbing, trapped in her child's body as she ages, decade after decade. Dunst, perhaps with the help of Stan Winston's subtle makeup, is somehow able to convey the notion of great age inside apparent youth."[11] Todd McCarthy in Variety noted: "Dunst is just right in the difficult part of the child vampire."[12] The film featured a scene in which Dunst, then aged 11, received her first kiss from Brad Pitt, who was 29.[13] During an interview with Interview magazine, she revealed, while questioned about her kissing scene with Pitt, "Kissing Brad was so uncomfortable for me. I remember saying in interviews that I thought it was gross, that Brad had cooties. I mean, I was 10."[14] Her performance earned her the MTV Movie Award for Best Breakthrough Performance, the Saturn Award for Best Young Actress, and her first Golden Globe Award nomination.[1][15][16]

Dunst during the 2005 Toronto Film Festival

She later appeared in the fantasy film Jumanji (1995), loosely based on Chris Van Allsburg's 1981 book of the same name.[17] The story is about a supernatural and ominous board game which makes animals and other jungle hazards appear upon each roll of the dice.[17] She was part of an ensemble cast that included Robin Williams, Bonnie Hunt, and David Alan Grier. The movie grossed $100 million worldwide.[18] That same year, she was named one of People magazine's 50 Most Beautiful People,[2] which she repeated in 2002. The following year, she also had a recurring role as a child prostitute, Charlie Chiemingo, taken under the guidance of Doctor Doug Ross, played by George Clooney, on NBC's medical drama ER.[1] In 1997, she was the voice of Young Anastasia in the animated musical film Anastasia,[19] and was the voice of the title character, Kiki, a 13-year-old apprentice witch, who leaves her home village to spend a year on her own, in the 1997 anime film Kiki's Delivery Service.[20]

Dunst was also offered the role of Angela in the 1999 drama film American Beauty, but turned it down because she did not want to appear in the film's suggestive sexual scenes or kiss co-star Kevin Spacey.[14] Also adding, "When I read it, I was 15 and I don't think I was mature enough to understand the script's material."[14] That same year, she appeared in the comedy Dick, alongside Michelle Williams. The film is a parody retelling the events of the Watergate scandal which lead to the resignation of then US president Richard Nixon.[21]

She had the role of troubled adolescent Lux Lisbon in Sofia Coppola's independent film The Virgin Suicides.[22] The film was screened at a special presentation at the 43rd San Francisco International Film Festival in 2000.[23] The film received generally favorable reviews;[24] San Francisco Chronicle critic Peter Stack noted in his review that Dunst "beautifully balances innocence and wantonness."[25]

In 2000, she played Torrance Shipman the captain of a cheerleading squad in Bring It On.[26] The film generated mostly critical reviews,[27] with Charles Taylor of Salon.com noting: "'Bring It On' doesn't provide Dunst with as good a role as she had in last year's underrated political satire Dick or as she had earlier this year playing '70s dreamboat Rapunzel of The Virgin Suicides."[28] While Jessica Winter of The Village Voice complimented Dunst, stating "Dunst... delivers a performance as sprightly and knowingly daft as her turn in Dick. She provides the only major element of Bring It On that plays as tweaking parody rather than slick, strident, body-slam churlishness."[29] The movie grossed $68 million worldwide.[18]

The following year, Dunst depicted the late American actress Marion Davies in The Cat's Meow (2001). The film was directed by Peter Bogdanovich. Derek Elley of Variety described the film as "playful and sporty" and said of Dunst, "[She] gives her best performance to date amid a skilled older cast. Believable as both a spoiled ingenue and a lover to two very different men, Dunst endows a potentially lightweight character with considerable depth and sympathy."[30] In the Esquire review, Tom Carson called her performance "terrific".[31] For her work, she won the Best Actress Silver Ombú category award at the 2002 Mar del Plata Film Festival.[32] Also, in 2001, she had a role in the comedy Get Over It.[33]

Spider–Man and after

Dunst at San Diego Comic-Con International in 2006

In the 2002 film Spider-Man, the most successful film of her career to date, she played Mary Jane Watson, the best friend and love interest of the title character, played by Tobey Maguire.[34] The film was directed by Sam Raimi. Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly wrote: "Dunst has a role that's no more fleshed out than Maguire's, yet she lends even the smallest line a tickle of flirtatious music."[35] In the Los Angeles Times review, critic Kenneth Turan wrote: "Dunst and Maguire make a real connection on screen, and we are involved in their relationship to an extent that's rare in films like this."[36] Spider-Man was a commercial and critical success.[37] The film earned $114 miliion during its opening weekend.[18]

Following the success of Spider-Man, she starred in Mona Lisa Smile (2003), part of an ensemble cast that included Julia Roberts, Maggie Gyllenhaal, and Julia Stiles. The film generated mostly critical reviews,[38] with Manohla Dargis of the Los Angeles Times describing it as "smug and reductive".[39] She next appeared in supporting roles in films Levity (2003),[40] and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004).[41] In 2004, she appeared in the romantic comedy Wimbledon (2004), a film in which she plays a rising tennis player in the Wimbledon Championships opposite Paul Bettany, who plays a fading former tennis star. Reviews for the movie were somewhat lukewarm,[42] but many critics enjoyed Dunst's performance;[43][44] Claudia Puig of USA Today noted: "She also does a fine job as a sassy and self-assured player."[45]

The success of the first Spider-Man film led her to reprise the role in the 2004 sequel, Spider-Man 2.[46] The film was relatively well received by critics.[47] Spider-Man 2 was a big financial success, setting a new opening weekend record at the North America box office.[48] With revenue of $783 million worldwide, it became the second highest grossing film in 2004.[18] In 2005, she appeared as flight attendant Claire Colburn, alongside Orlando Bloom, in Elizabethtown. The film was written and directed by Cameron Crowe. The film premiered at the 2005 Toronto Film Festival. Dunst revealed that working with Crowe was "enjoyable".[4] The film was garnered with mixed reviews,[49] and was a box office failure.[50]

Dunst attending the European premiere of Spider-Man 3 in 2007

Dunst's next film role was the title character in the 2006 biographical film Marie Antoinette. The film, adapted from Antonia Fraser's book Marie Antoinette: The Journey was Dunst's second with director Sofia Coppola.[51][52] The film was screened at a special presentation at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival.[53] During promotion of the film, she noted of her portrayal of the character: "I was able to walk around and be myself and look at myself and look at myself in a mirror and feel, like, a destiny within my character. That it all took place in the actual spot was so overwhelmingly moving to me. Yes, it was a sad destiny, but it was almost a relief almost [for her] to be faced with some kind of reality. [...] This is the beginning step of her becoming the queen who was admired in the prison - when she really became a dignified queen."[54]

The film's success of Spider-Man 2 led to another sequel Spider-Man 3 (2007).[55] Although Spider-Man 3 received generally mixed reviews from critics,[56] in contrast to the previous two films' highly positive reviews,[37][47] it stands as the most successful film in the series worldwide and it has become her highest grossing film to date.[18] Initially, Dunst was signed on to appear in three Spider-Man films. When asked if she would return for a fourth film, she revealed that she would do it, only if Raimi and Maguire returned.[57]

Dunst was next seen in the 2008 film How to Lose Friends and Alienate People, opposite Simon Pegg.[58] The movie is an adaptation of the memoir of the same name by former Vanity Fair contributing editor, Toby Young. The film follows a similar storyline about Young's five year struggle to make it in the United States after employment at Sharps magazine.[59] Impressed with the script, Dunst signed on to the film, and later revealing that she joined the project, after learning that Pegg was scheduled to appear in the film.[5] She completed work in All Good Things, to be released in 2009, in which she plays a beautiful girl from the wrong side of the tracks who goes missing, opposite Ryan Gosling.[60][61]

For future films, she will portray peace activist Marla Ruzicka, a US relief worker killed by a suicide bomb in Baghdad, in a film about the Iraq war, in Sweet Relief, to be released in 2009.[62][63] She has expressed interest in playing the role of Blondie frontwoman Debbie Harry in Michel Gondry's upcoming biopic about the band.[64][65] Dunst also expressed interest in playing Jean Seberg in an upcoming biopic.[66]

Music

Dunst made her singing debut in the 2001 film Get Over It, performing two songs written by Marc Shaiman.[67] She also lent her voice to the end credits of The Cat's Meow, singing Henry Creamer and Turner Layton's jazz standard "After You've Gone".[57][68] In Spider-Man 3, she sings two songs as part of her role as Mary Jane Watson, one during a Broadway performance, and one as a singing waitress in a jazz club.[57][69] Dunst revealed that the songs were recorded earlier, in which she lip-synced to it when filming began.[57] She also appeared in the music video for Savage Garden's "I Knew I Loved You".[70] Dunst also sang two tracks, "This Old Machine" and "Summer Day", on Jason Schwartzman's solo album, Coconut Records.[71]

Personal life

In an article for Premiere, Sam Raimi confirmed the long-standing rumor that Dunst and her Spider-Man co-star Tobey Maguire had "a thing" going on during the 2001 shooting of the first film. As Raimi explained for the article, "I'm so dumb, because I met with them for dinner one night during the shooting to talk about the next day's scenes. And I go, 'Okay, well, that's it for the meeting.' And then I ask Kirsten, 'Can I drive you home?' And they look at each other and she goes, 'No, no, I'm going to play a game of Touch 10 with Tobey.' I don't know, it was some game. I thought, 'That's weird. She's got to work tomorrow.'"[72]

After briefly dating her longtime friend, playwright Jeff Smeenge, she started dating actor Jake Gyllenhaal in September 2002, after meeting him through his sister, Maggie her Mona Lisa Smile co-star.[73] However, they broke up in July 2004.[74][75] In March 2007, she dated frontman Johnny Borrell of Razorlight.[76] However, they broke up later that year.[77]

Dunst supported Democratic candidate John Kerry in the 2004 US presidential election.[78] She supported Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential election.[5][79] Viewed as a sex symbol, she was ranked in the "Hot 100 List" by Maxim magazine in 2003 and 2004.[80][81] She was ranked at number 59 on VH1's 100 Greatest Kid Stars.[82] Dunst was featured on Richard Blackwell's famous Best Dressed List for 2005.[83]

Dunst confirmed that she was treated for depression early in 2008.[84] She sought treatment at the Cirque Lodge treatment center in Utah.[73][84] She explained that she had been feeling "low" in the six months prior to her going to rehab.[84] In late March, she checked out from the treatment center and began filming All Good Things. In May, she went public with this information to "highlight the struggle faced by so many other successful women" and to dispel false rumors that had "been very painful for my friends and family".[85][86]

Filmography

Year Film Role Other notes
1989 New York Stories Lisa's daughter Uncredited
1990 The Bonfire of the Vanities Campbell McCoy
1993 Star Trek:The Next Generation Hedril Episode: "Dark Page"
1994 Little Women Younger Amy March BSFC Award for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated – Chlotrudis Award for Best Supporting Actress
Interview with the Vampire Claudia BSFC Award for Best Supporting Actress
CFCS Award for Most Promising Actress
MTV Movie Award for Best Breakthrough Performance
Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture
Nominated – Chlotrudis Award for Best Supporting Actress
Greedy Jolene
High Strung Young Girl
1995 Jumanji Judy Shepherd Nominated – Saturn Award for Best Performance by a Younger Actor
1996 Mother Night Young Resi Noth
1997 Wag the Dog Tracy Limes
Anastasia Young Anastasia Voice
The Outer Limits Joyce Taylor Episode: "Music of the Spheres (The Outer Limits)"
Tower of Terror Anna Petterson
True Heart Bonnie
1998 Kiki's Delivery Service Kiki Voice in English language dubbed version
Fifteen and Pregnant Tina Spangler Television movie
The Hairy Bird Verena von Stefan
Small Soldiers Christy Fimple
1999 Dick Betsy Jobs
Drop Dead Gorgeous Amber Atkins
The Virgin Suicides Lux Lisbon Nominated – Teen Choice Award for Film - Choice Actress
The Devil's Arithmetic Hannah Stern Television movie
2000 Deeply Silly
Bring It On Torrance Shipman
Luckytown Lidda Doyles
The Crow: Salvation Erin Randall
Lover's Prayer Zinaida
2001 The Cat's Meow Marion Davies Mar del Plata Film Festival for Best Actress
Crazy/Beautiful Nicole Oakley
Get Over It Kelly Woods/Helena Nominated – Teen Choice Award for Film - Choice Chemistry
2002 Spider-Man Mary Jane Watson Empire Movie Award for Best Actress
MTV Movie Award for Best Female Performance
MTV Movie Award for Best Kiss
Teen Choice Award for Film - Choice Lip Lock
Nominated – Teen Choice Award for Film - Choice Chemistry
Nominated – Teen Choice Award for Film - Choice Actress, Drama/Action Adventure
2003 Mona Lisa Smile Betty Warren Nominated – Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Sleazebag
Kaena: The Prophecy Kaena Voice
Levity Sofia Mellinger
2004 Wimbledon Lizzie Bradbury
Spider-Man 2 Mary Jane Watson Empire Movie Award for Best Actress
Nominated – People's Choice Award for Favorite On-Screen Chemistry
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Mary Svevo
2005 Elizabethtown Claire Colburn
2006 Marie Antoinette Marie Antoinette
2007 Spider-Man 3 Mary Jane Watson Nominated – People's Choice Award for Favorite On Screen Match-up
Nominated – Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie: Liplock
Nominated – Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Actress: Action Adventure
Nominated – National Movie Award for Best Performance by a Female
2008 How to Lose Friends and Alienate People Alison Olsen
2009 All Good Things post-production
A Jealous Ghost announced
Sweet Relief Marla Ruzicka announced
Elements of Power Kyoko announced

References

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Preceded by MTV Movie Awards host
2001 (with Jimmy Fallon)
Succeeded by


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