| Displaying talent both for acting and for appearing at awards ceremonies
wearing dresses that attract more attention than the awards themselves,
Minnie Driver rose from almost complete obscurity to her position as one
of the most visible British actresses of the 1990s over the course of just
a few years. Born Amelia Driver in London on January 31, 1971, she was
christened "Minnie" by her sister, who was too young to
pronounce her little sister's name correctly. Raised in the Barbados and
schooled in locales as diverse as Paris, Grenoble, and Hampshire, Driver
attended the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in London, where she
studied drama. Driver got her start on the stage and on television and
made her big screen debut in Circle of Friends in 1995. Playing the film's
protagonist--a "big, soft girl," as one of the film's characters
calls her--she was required to gain over twenty pounds for the role. She
won critical acclaim for her performance, but had trouble finding more
work until she lost the weight. Once she was revealed to be a statuesque
beauty in the James Bond film GoldenEye (1995), she soon was being written
up in a number of magazine articles that hailed her as one to watch.
Critical appreciation for her work in Sleepers and Stanley Tucci's Big
Night followed in 1996, and the next year, Driver proved herself capable
of handling both comedy and a convincing Midwestern accent in Grosse
Pointe Blank. That same year, she had what was possibly her most
high-profile role to date in Gus Van Sant's Good Will Hunting. Starring as
Matt Damon's brilliant girlfriend (a role she reportedly played off-screen
as well), she earned a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for her
performance. In 1998, Driver could be seen in The Governess and At Satchem
Farm, a romantic comedy she executive-produced with her sister, Kate, and
actor Nigel Hawthorne. She also ventured into the action realm with Hard
Rain. Driver then put her voice to lucrative use, voicing characters in
both Disney's Tarzan and South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut in 1999.
That same year, she took a swing at Oscar Wilde, starring in Oliver
Parker's adaptation of Wilde's An Ideal Husband with Rupert Everett, Cate
Blanchett, Julianne Moore, and Jeremy Northam. Driver then shed her corset
and donned an American accent for her starring role in Bonnie Hunt's
Return to Me (2000), a romantic comedy that cast the actress as a woman
who falls in love with a widowed architect (David Duchovny) and discovers
a surprising secret about the identity of his dead wife. |