Rebecca Hall


The daughter of one of England’s most acclaimed theater and film directors, Rebecca Hall began making her first on-screen appearances in British television while still an adolescent. She honed her craft and reputation for the next decade in a series of award-winning performances on the international stage, before returning to films with supporting roles as willowy but tragic types in “The Prestige” (2006), among other projects. Hall was then thrust further into the spotlight with a co-starring role as one of two American tourists (the other being Scarlett Johansson) who fall for a married Spanish painter (Javier Bardem) in Woody Allen’s sexy comedy “Vicky Cristina Barcelona” (2008).

Born in the United Kingdom in 1982, she was the daughter of opera singer Maria Ewing and Sir Peter Hall, founder of the Royal Shakespeare Company and one of his country’s leading theatrical figures. The couple separated when she was five. Hall spent a good portion of her childhood watching her mother from the wings of the Royal Opera House performing in productions directed by her father, and made her own acting debut at the age of eight in her father’s TV adaptation of the novel “The Camomile Lawn” in 1992. More minor television appearances followed, but she cut her career shot in 1993 to attend to her studies. She attended the exclusive girls’ school Rodean Hall on an art scholarship before moving on to Cambridge University. There, she pursued a degree in English literature while amassing considerable experience in school productions and even starting her own theater company. After two years at Cambridge, she dropped out in 2002 to pursue her acting career in earnest.

Her professional stage debut came that same year in her father’s production of “Mrs. Warren’s Profession,” which earned her rave reviews and the Ian Charleson Award, which recognized performances in classical roles by actors under 30. A second Charleson Award nomination came the following year in Shakespeare’s “As You Like It,” again under the direction of her father. She accompanied the production on a worldwide tour in 2005 before returning to feature films with “Starter for 10” (2006). A comedy set in England circa 1985, Hall starred as an irreverent college student who falls for James McEvoy’s trivia enthusiast. A modest success in the UK, it was the first of her film efforts to be seen by an American audience.

A turn as the doomed heroine of a BBC adaptation of Jean Rhys’ “Wide Sargasso Sea” preceded her first Hollywood effort in “The Prestige.” Cast as the wife of a magician (Christian Bale) locked in a decades-long battle of wills with a rival (Hugh Jackman), Hall brought great depth to the supporting role, which found her working alongside such screen stars as Scarlett Johansson, Michael Caine, Andy Serkis and David Bowie. She then returned to England for the TV production “Joe’s Palace” before making a lifelong dream come true with her next project.

An unabashed fan of Woody Allen and who claimed that “Manhattan” was her favorite film of all time, Hall called on the director to give her a part during an interview for “Starter for 10.” Allen, who was working in London at the time, summoned her shortly thereafter and cast her as one of the leads in his 2008 film “Vicky Cristina Barcelona.” Hall was reunited with her “Prestige” co-star Scarlett Johansson as the more thoughtful of two American tourists who are seduced by Bardem’s earthy artist, only to discover that his hot-tempered ex-wife (Penelope Cruz) was still very much in the picture. The critical acclaim that preceded the film’s release laid the groundwork for a great deal of focus on Hall in subsequent months, thanks to her participation in such high-profile projects as Ron Howard’s “Frost/Nixon” (2008). Hall continued making a name for herself with her first-ever Golden Globe nomination, earning a nod for Best Performance by an Actress for “Vicky Cristina Barcelona.”

  • Born:
    in United Kingdom
  • Job Titles:
    Actress
Family
  • Father: Peter Hall. Best known for his work with the Royal Shakespeare Company which he founded in 1960; formerly married to Leslie Caron; married opera singer Maria Ewing from 1982-1990
  • Half-brother: Edward Hall.
  • Mother: Maria Ewing. Married English theatre director Sir Peter Hall from 1982-1990
  • Sister: Emma Hall.
Significant Others
  • Companion: Freddie Stevenson. Acted together in a 2003/04 production of As You Like It
Education
  • University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England, English Literature
Milestones
  • 1992 First role was as Young Sophy in her father s television adaptation of Mary Wesley s The Camomile Lawn
  • 1993 Lent her voice to the BBC animated series The World of Peter Rabbit and Friends
  • 2002 Professional stage debut as Vivie in her father s production of Mrs Warren s Profession at the Strand Theatre in London
  • 2003 Appeared as Rosalind in her father s production of As You Like It
  • 2003 Starred in the title role of Thea Sharrock s revival of D. H. Lawrence s The Fight For Barbara
  • 2004 Directed by her father, Peter Hall in Galileo s Daughter
  • 2004 Played the part of Elvira in Molière s Don Juan ; again directed by Sharrock
  • 2005 Reprised her role of Rosalind in a touring production of As You Like It ; again under the direction of her father
  • 2006 Feature film debut in the film adaptation of David Nicholls Starter for Ten
  • 2006 Played Christian Bale s wife in Christopher Nolan s The Prestige ; appeared opposite Scarlett Johansson
  • 2008 Featured in Woody Allen s Vicky Cristina Barcelona ; again collaborated with Johansson
  • 2008 Nominated for the 2008 Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy ( Vicky Cristina Barcelona )
  • 2008 Played Caroline Cushing in Ron Howard s film adaption of Peter Morgan s Frost/Nixon

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