Sofia Coppola

A member of the filmmaking dynasty that includes such heavy hitters as father Francis Ford Coppola and cousin Nicolas Cage, Sofia Coppola parlayed her Hollywood clout and calling into various ventures, working as an actress, costume designer, screenwriter and later most notably, a director. Debuting onscreen not long after her on location birth, Coppola was featured in the climactic scene of her father's epic "The Godfather" (1972), playing the male infant being baptized. She went on to appear in several other of her father's films (credited as Domino) playing bit parts in the features "Rumble Fish" and "The Outsiders" (both 1983) and "The Cotton Club" (1984). Next, Coppola took a supporting role as the younger sister of Kathleen Turner's title character in the 1986 comedy "Peggy Sue Got Married", co-starring cousin Nicolas. The father-daughter team worked together behind the scenes on the "Life Without Zoe" segment of "New York Stories" (1989), with Sofia earning screenplay, costume designer and main title design credits. The following year, the young Coppola replaced Winona Ryder as Mary Corleone in "The Godfather, Part III", reportedly as a favor to her father who was at a loss to find a replacement after Ryder's abrupt departure. Coppola's Mediterranean good looks were fitting for the role, but her California girl accent was less appropriate and her otherwise stilted turn sparked one of the more vicious rounds of movie criticism in recent memory. Being cast in such a high profile role could have served as Coppola's breakthrough, but her unimpressive turn transformed it into just the opposite, a hurdle that she would struggle to overcome throughout her career, her name now notorious and almost synonymous with badly placed nepotism. Understandably, in a move that would prove auspicious down the line, she set her sights on goals other than acting, save for a part as Patricia Arquette's lover in the little-seen comedy "Inside Monkey Zetterland" (1992) and a cameo role as a handmaiden to Princess Amidala in "Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace" (1999).

Although she wasn't appearing onscreen, Coppola stayed in the public eye with various artistic ventures. Her interest in fashion (she interned with Karl Lagerfeld at Chanel while in high school) was employed in film again in 1990 when she added a costume design credit for "Spirit of '76" (produced by brother Roman) to her resume. Coppola's next endeavor was Milk Fed, her own line of designer clothing. Joining the ranks of other "celebutots" like Zoe Cassavetes and Donovan Leitch and musicians like Sonic Youth and the Beastie Boys, Coppola was a noted mover on the Los Angeles/New York young hipster scene, a hot-list favorite often seen on the pages of magazines. She and Cassavetes even hosted their own tongue-in-cheek magazine show "Hi-Octane" (1994), a limited run series aired on Comedy Central in 1995, covering music, fashion and lifestyles. Coppola cemented her status as a consistent pop culture presence, additionally enjoying exposure as a music video star, starting with a cameo role in Madonna's "Deeper and Deeper" and moving up to memorable featured turns in "Sometimes Salvation" by The Black Crowes and "Elektrobank" by The Chemical Brothers. The latter (directed by future husband and fellow auteur Spike Jonze) starred Coppola as a gymnast while the former showed her in the midst of a breakdown. While her turn in "The Godfather, Part III" may have indicated a less than stellar screen presence, she was striking and inherently watchable in this capacity, and generated even more underground buzz.

Coppola began to broaden her range of behind the scenes work, beginning with the 28-minute short "Bed, Bath and Beyond" (shot on video), which she edited and co-directed along with Ione Skye and Andrew Durham. She subsequently produced, wrote and directed the black and white comedy short "Lick the Star" (1998) which screened at festivals and aired on both Bravo and the Independent Film Channel. Now a driven filmmaker, Coppola next endeavored to make her feature debut, and courageously chose "The Virgin Suicides" (2000), Jeffrey Eugenides' atmospheric hit novel about a family of teenage girls dealing with their younger sister's shocking death, told from the point of view of a group of neighborhood boys obsessed with them. Oddly structured, sincerely moving and irreverently comedic, the multifaceted novel was an ambitious choice for adaptation. Coppola deftly handled the intricacies of the source material and captured the spirit of Eugenides' fiction, imparting the undercurrents of both innocent enthusiasm and heartbreaking hopelessness. She set the film in suburban Michigan in the 1970s and managed to steer clear of broad stereotypical era markers, giving this singular and yet transcendent tale an appropriately subtle Everyman air. Starring her "Peggy Sue Got Married" co-star Kathleen Turner as the girls' overprotective mother, James Woods as the defeated father, and hot young players Kirsten Dunst and Josh Hartnett, "The Virgin Suicides" also introduced a cast of newcomers, and following its acclaimed screenings at Cannes and Sundance, would introduce Coppola into the ranks of esteemed new filmmakers.

Indeed, her follow-up film "Lost In Translation" (2003) would catapult her into the ranks of the industry's most respected directors. Working from her own somewhat autobiographical screenplay, Coppola crafted a moody, mesmerizing meditation on alienation set in modern Tokyo, where a slumming 50ish Hollywood movie star (Bill Murray), who is on location filming liquor commercials while avoiding his fading marriage, encounters a drifting twentysomething young wife (Scarlett Johansson) left to her own devices by her career-preoccupied director husband (Giovanni Ribisi, in role much rumored to be not-too-loosely based on Coppola's director husband Spike Jonze, who she divorced shortly after the movie's release). The two loners find a common ground in their alienation and form a strong emotional bond, bordering on romantic love. Although the story is simple and wafer-thin, the dissaffected yet charming characters were involving and the performances (Murray's a career re-definer and Johansson's a major breakthrough) and presentation invited audiences to soak in the film's ambiance. As much a validation of Coppola's enviable taste and aesthetics (she pursued the notoriously elusive and noncommital Murray valiantly for many months before finally persuading him to take on the part) her assured direction and visual style established her as a visionary helmer in her own right, entirely apart from her famous family name, and the film earned an abundance of critical accolades--both mainstream and independent--for both her and the film's stars. Coppola herself took home a Golden Globe for Best Screenplay and became the first-ever American woman nominated for an Academy Award as Best Director. She also was nominated for Original Screenplay and as one of the producers of the film, nominated in the Best Picture category. Because her grandfather Carmine and father Francis each won Oscars, and her Oscar victory in the Original Screenplay Category made the Coppolas the second three-generation family of Oscar winners (after the Hustons).

  • Also Credited As:
    Domino, Sofia Carmina Coppola
  • Born:
    Sofia Carmina Coppola on May 12, 1971 in New York City, New York, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Producer, Screenwriter, TV host, Actor, Costume designer, Fashion designer
Family
  • Aunt: Talia Rose Coppola. born on April 25, 1945; formerly married to composer David Shire who scored Francis Ford Coppola s The Conversation ; subsequently wed to producer Jack Schwartzman from August 23, 1980 until his death from cancer in 1994
  • Brother: Gian-Carlo Coppola. born on September 17, 1963; killed in boating accident in May 1986
  • Brother: Roman Coppola. born in 1965; headed Black Diamond Productions
  • Cousin: Christopher Coppola. born in 1962; son of August Coppola
  • Cousin: Jason Schwartzman. son of Talia Shire and late producer Jack Schwartzman; born on June 26, 1980; star of comedy hit Rushmore
  • Cousin: Marc Coppola. born in 1957; son of August Coppola
  • Cousin: Nicolas Cage. son of August Coppola; born on January 7, 1964; won Oscar for Leaving Las Vegas ; married to and divorced from actress Patricia Arquette
  • Cousin: Robert Schwartzman. born on December 24, 1982; son of Talia Shire and the late Jack Schwartzman
  • Daughter: Romy Mars. born November 28, 2006 to Sofia and boyfriend Thomas Mars in Paris, France
  • Father: Francis Ford Coppola. directed daughter in films including Peggy Sue Got Married and The Godfather, Part III ; collaborated on the Life With Zoe segment of New York Stories
  • Grandfather: Carmine Copppola. born on July 11, 1910; died on April 26, 1991; Italian-American; played in Toscanini s NBC Symphony Orchestra; scored some of Francis Ford Coppola s films, including The Godfather, Part II , for which he shared an Oscar
  • Grandfather: Clifford Neil. born in 1891; died in 1945
  • Grandmother: Italia Coppola.
  • Great-grandfather: August Coppola. emigrated to USA from Naples as Enrico Caruso s piano accompanist
  • Great-uncle: Antonio Coppola. born in 1917 conductor of symphony orchestras; also with the San Francisco Opera and New York City Opera; also conducted Broadway musicals like My Fair Lady ; was opera advisor on The Godfather, Part III
  • Great-uncle: Archimedes Coppola. born in 1909; died in 1927
  • Great-uncle: Michael Coppola. born in 1914
  • Mother: Eleanor Coppola. born c. 1936; married Francis Ford Coppola in February 1963; directed documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker s Apocalypse
  • Niece: Gian Carla Coppola. daughter of late Gian-Carlo Coppola and Jackie De La Fontaine; born six months after Gian-Carlo s death in 1986
  • Uncle: August Coppola. dean of the School of Creative Arts at San Francisco State University; involved with Audio Vision which provides a taped soundtrack of a narrator describing visual information for blind filmgoers
  • Uncle: William Neil. born in 1939
Significant Others
  • Companion: Quentin Tarantino. dated in 2004; no longer together
  • Companion: Thomas Mars. frontman for the French band Phoenix
  • Husband: Spike Jonze. married on June 26, 1999; collaborated with Coppola on Comedy Central s Hi-Octane ; directed her in The Chemical Brothers Elektrobank music video; separated December 2003; divorced
  • Husband: Spike Jonze. married on June 26, 1999; collaborated with Coppola on Comedy Central s Hi-Octane ; directed her in The Chemical Brothers Elektrobank music video
Education
  • St Helena High School, Napa Valley, California
Milestones
  • 1971 Born in New York during the filming of father Francis Ford Coppola s epic The Godfather
  • 1972 Made film debut as an infant in the climactic baptism scene in The Godfather
  • 1983 Had small roles in her father s adaptations of the S.E. Hinton novels Rumblefish and The Outsiders ; credited as Domino
  • 1984 Acted in Tim Burton s short Frankenweenie
  • 1984 Appeared in Coppola s The Cotton Club , credited as Domino
  • 1986 Played the younger sister of Kathleen Turner s character in the comedy Peggy Sue Got Married , directed by her father
  • 1987 Appeared in Yurak Bogayevicz s drama Anna , starring Sally Kirkland and Paulina Porizkova
  • 1989 Contributed to the Life Without Zoe segment of New York Stories , with credits for screenplay, costume design and main title design
  • 1990 Made her lead acting debut quite notoriously as Mary Corleone in The Godfather, Part III
  • 1990 Was costume designer for the flashback comedy The Spirit of 76 , produced by her brother Roman Coppola
  • 1992 Appeared in the music video for Madonna s Deeper and Deeper
  • 1992 Had a featured role as Patricia Arquette s lover in the comedy Inside Monkey Zetterland
  • 1992 Was featured in the music video Sometimes Salvation by The Black Crowes
  • 1994 Along with Zoe Cassavettes, hosted the limited run lifestyle magazine series Hi-Octane ; director Spike Jonze worked on the project
  • 1996 Edited and co-directed (with Ione Skye and Andrew Durham) the 28-minute video production Bed, Bath and Beyond
  • 1997 Starred as a gymnast performing a routine to the song Elektrobank by The Chemical Brothers in the music video directed by Jonze
  • 1998 Produced, directed and wrote the black and white comedy short Lick the Star , screened at festivals and aired on Bravo and the Independent Film Channel
  • 1999 Played Sache, one of Queen Amidala s handmaidens in Star Wars Episode I - The Phantom Menace
  • 2000 Made feature directorial debut with The Virgin Suicides , a 1970s suburbia-set adaptation of Jeffrey Eugenides cult novel; also scripted
  • 2003 Produced, wrote and directed second feature Lost in Translation , with Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson; received a Golden Globe nomination for Best Director; received a nomination by the Directors Guild of America for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Feature Film; received Academy Award nominations for Best Director and Best Picture
  • 2006 Directed Kirsten Dunst in, Marie-Antoinette, as the ill-fated French queen opposite Jason Schwartzman s Louis XVI
  • Began designing her own clothing line Milk Fed
  • Raised primarily in Napa Valley, California, but moved around frequently with father on movie locations
  • Worked as an intern at Chanel under Karl Lagerfield while in high school

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