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Genevieve Bujold Biography
With her warm, intelligent performances
and piercing almond eyes, the French-Canadian actress Genevieve Bujold
cut a striking figure throughout the international film community during
the 1960s and beyond. Born July 1, 1942, in Montréal, Quebec, Bujold
studied acting at the Montréal Conservatoire d'Art Dramatique but
exited prior to graduation in order to join a touring company's
production of The Barber of Seville. She subsequently enlisted
with another performing company, Rideau Vert, and also began appearing
on television. Her film debut was in 1962's Amanita Pestilens,
followed in 1964 by La Fleur de l'Age. In 1965, the Rideau Vert
troupe traveled to Moscow and Paris, where Bujold came to the attention
of filmmaker Alain Resnais. He cast her in 1966's La Guerre est Finie,
where her turn as a pro-Spanish activist earned international attention.
She remained in France to star in Philippe de Broca's cult hit Le Roi
de Coeur, then appeared opposite Jean-Paul Belmondo in Louis Malle's
1967 effort Le Voleur. Upon returning to Canada, Bujold appeared
in 1967's Entre la Mer et L'eau Douce. The following year, she
starred in Isabel, winning Best Actress honors at the Toronto
Film Festival as well as marrying the picture's director, Paul Almond. |
Genevieve Bujold Biography
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Genevieve Bujold Bio
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Bujold then traveled to
Britain to star as Anne Boleyn in Anne of the Thousand Days, a
performance which won her an Academy Award nomination and made her a
star. A three-picture deal with Universal followed, but she first
detoured back to Canada to star in Almond's 1970 film Act of the
Heart. Universal then cast her as the titular Mary Queen of Scots,
but, fearing typecasting, Bujold refused the role, resulting in a
lawsuit from the studio. Instead of paying damages, she returned to
Europe to co-star in The Trojan Women, which failed to measure up
to box-office expectations. Almond's Journey and Claud Jutra's
1973 feature Kamouraska further derailed her career, and after
appearing opposite Alec Guinness in Caesar and Anthony for
British television she journeyed to Hollywood, where as part of her
Universal pact the studio pointed her to 1974's disaster epic Earthquake.
After again starring with Belmondo in de Broca's L'Incorrigible,
Bujold made 1976's Swashbuckler to appease Universal. Brian
DePalma's Vertigo homage Obsession resuscitated her
career, although the follow-up, John Korty's Alex and the Gypsy,
was a disappointment.
In 1978, Bujold starred in Michael Crichton's Coma, one of her
biggest hits to date. After starring alongside Clint Eastwood in 1984's Tightrope,
Bujold teamed with director Alan Rudolph on the superb romantic comedy Choose
Me. In Rudolph, she found a director unusually sympathetic to her
style of performing, and she subsequently appeared under him in 1985's Trouble
in Mind and 1988's The Moderns, delivering some of her
strongest work to date. David Cronenberg's stunning Dead Ringers
followed, but the 1990s proved a disappointment as Bujold appeared in a
series of lackluster Canadian productions which rarely appeared anywhere
outside of their land of origin. She also made headlines for exiting a
starring role in the TV series Star Trek: Voyager just prior to
production. In 1997, after a long absence, Bujold finally returned to
American cinema in the independent hit The House of Yes. Jason
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