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Golden Globes set new faces on road to stardom
Jill Serjeant
LOS ANGELES—Some stars are born, others toil for years before landing a
dream role and occasionally the road to Hollywood’s red carpet starts at
a New York ice cream shop. Nikki Blonsky, the teenager plucked from that
ice cream shop to star in the musical “Hairspray,” was one of a crop of
new faces nominated on Thursday for a Golden Globe award that could
propel them to Hollywood’s A-list.
Blonsky, 19, picked up a nomination for best actress in a musical or
comedy for her debut role as a plump girl who wants to dance on a 1960s
TV show. At 16, she auditioned for the part on Broadway but was turned
down because she was too young. “A year or so ago she was in high
school. She’d never done anything in her life and now to be a Golden
Globe nominee — it’s unbelievable. It’s so thrilling, “said Craig Zadan,
one of the “Hairspray” producers.
Blonsky’s co-star John Travolta, who got a supporting actor nod, said
she was born for the part. “Once every decade or so, there is a person
who has a passion for the role.” Blonsky was joined by Canadian Ellen
Page, 20, also nominated for best actress in a musical or comedy for
playing a an insouciant, pregnant teen in coming-of-age movie “Juno.”
Page has said she tries to steer clear of stereotypical roles for
teenage girls and has already won two breakthrough awards in the United
States for her role in “Juno.” Scottish actor James McAvoy, 29, could
become a household name in the United States after picking up his first
major best actor nomination as the romantic lead in “Atonement,” the
epic 1940s drama that led the Golden Globe list of nominees.
‘THAT TYPE OF ACTOR’
McAvoy won praise in 2006 for playing a naive British doctor in “The
Last King of Scotland” and is a regular face on British TV, but he
remains little known in the United States. “It’s a bit of a surprise to
me, really, and I do find it quite funny because I’ve never really
considered myself that type of actor,” McAvoy told Reuters.
“Atonement” director Joe Wright called McAvoy an “extraordinary actor”
and said he hoped the nomination would boost his career. “I don’t know
of another actor who deserves it quite so well as James,” Wright told
Reuters. Marion Cotillard, 32, is also a newcomer to Hollywood despite
14 years in the industry in her native France before landing her dream
role as singer Edith Piaf in “La Vie en Rose” or its French title, “La
Mome.”
“When you do a French movie, you don’t know it’s going to cross the
cultures,” Cotillard told reporters. “What I like right now is that I
have the chance to meet very interesting directors, amazing actors and
producers. The fact that I would be well-known is less important than
all the people you meet,” she added. Cotillard was nominated for best
actress in a musical. |