Caroline Goodall

Blonde British stage actress who began to garner attention in important supporting roles in mainstream Hollywood fare in the early 1990s. An experienced stage actress, Goodall performed with the Royal Court, the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal National Theatre both in her native land and on international tours in plays ranging from contemporary comedies to the Bard's tragedies. Several TV appearances and a small role in a middling Tom Hanks romantic drama, "Every Time We Say Goodbye" (1986), did little to open up a feature career, but several years later Goodall gave a lovely glow to the role of the adult Peter Pan's wife in Steven Spielberg's fantasy "Hook" (1991). After an episode of “Quantum Leap” (NBC, 1988-1993) and a small role in “After the War” (1990), one of ten parts for PBS’s “Masterpiece Theatre,” Spielberg used the actress again in his epic of the Holocaust, "Schindler's List" (1993), playing as the eponymous hero's wife. She also enjoyed a sizable role in "Cliffhanger" (1993) as an airplane pilot in cahoots with the villainous John Lithgow, then returned to television for an episode of “The Commish” (ABC, 1991-1995).

Goodall was the physician wife of the skipper of a floating school in "White Squall" (1996) before playing the battered wife of a prominent police officer who has an affair with a charming, but psychotic man (Mark Harmon) from her cooking class in the psychological thriller, “Casualties” (1997). After appearing in the romantic dramedy, “The Secret Laughter of Women” (1998), and an episode of the British mystery series, “Murder in Mind” (BBC, 2001-2003), Goodall had a minor part in “Harrison’s Flowers” (2002), a drama set in war-torn Yugoslavia about the wife (Andie MacDowell) of a photojournalist (David Strathairn) who goes on a quest to find him after he’s reported dead. She was then the eccentric and fun-loving artist mom of a young girl (Anne Hathaway) who suddenly discovers she’s the sole heir to the throne of Genovia in the wildly successful family comedy, “The Princess Diaries” (2001). A supporting role as the lesbian assistant and ex-wife of an Irish cable talk show host (Brian F. O’Byrne) in the romantic comedy “Easy” (2003) was followed by her return for the sequel, “The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement” (2004).

In “Chasing Liberty” (2004), Goodall was the First Lady of the United States who, along with her good-intentioned president husband (Mark Harmon), wants nothing more than the best for her one and only child (Mandy Moore)—even if it means nonstop protection from the Secret Service. Goodall then joined a strong cast, which included Ralph Fiennes, Carrie-Anne Moss and Glenn Close, for “The Chumscrubber” (2005), a black comedy about Dean (Jaime Bell), an emotionally vacant teenager whose only friend (Josh Janowicz) commits suicide, leaving him to face a trio of bullies (Justin Chatwin, Lou Taylor Pucci and Camilla Belle) demanding the dead friend’s stash of drugs. When the request is denied, the gang’s attempt to kidnap Dean’s little brother results in nabbing the wrong kid, leaving Dean to rescue a boy he neither knows nor cares about.

  • Born:
    November 13, 1959 in London, England, United Kingdom
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Comedian
Family
  • Daughter: Gemma Pecorini. born c. 1994; father, Nicola Pecorini
  • Son: Leo Pecorini. born c. 1997
Education
  • Bristol University, England, English literature and drama, BA
Milestones
  • 1978 At age 18, spotted in school play by BBC director and hired for first TV role in the British children s serial The Moon Stallion
  • 1982 First major US TV credit, acting on the ABC movie, Charles & Diana: A Royal Love Story
  • 1985 Acted on two-part episode ( Steele Searching ) of NBC detective drama, Remington Steele
  • 1986 Feature film debut, Every Time We Say Goodbye
  • 1986 Toured Australia with the Royal Shakespeare Company in Richard III
  • 1990 Nominated as Best Actress by the Australian Film Institute for her role in the thriller, Cassidy
  • 1990 Played Sally Raglan on the ten-part Masterpiece Theatre dramatic miniseries, After the War
  • 1991 Co-starred as Mrs. Peter Pan in Hook , directed by Steven Spielberg
  • 1993 Appeared in Cliffhanger with Sylvester Stallone; met future husband Nicola Pecorini during filming
  • 1993 Cast by Spielberg as the wife of Oskar Schindler in the Holocaust drama Schindler s List
  • 1994 Cast as Michael Douglas wife in Disclosure
  • 1996 Co-starred in the BBC drama The Sculptress (aired on PBS in 1997)
  • 1996 Had featured role in White Squall
  • 1999 Had supporting role of a career woman engaged to a widower in Rhapsody in Bloom (aired on Starz! after festival screenings)
  • 1999 Starred as producer of a live late night TV show in the British situation comedy Sex and Death (BBC-2)
  • 2001 Appeared in the TNT miniseries The Mist of Avalon
  • 2001 Played featured role in The Princess Diaries
  • 2004 Reprised role as Anne Hathaway s mother in The Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement
  • 2005 Co-starred in Arie Posin s ensemble The Chumscrubber, a darkly satiric story about life crumbling in the midst of a seemingly idyllic suburbia
  • 2006 Played Orlando Bloom s mother in Haven
  • Apprenticed in British regional theater and with the Royal Shakepeare Company and the National Theatre
  • Briefly tried stand-up comedy in Great Britain
  • US stage debut in the West Coast premiere of David Hare s Secret Rapture

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