
Personal details
All About this Star
Biography:
It's bizarre, isn't it, how even the greatest and most beautiful of French actresses have seldom had any kind of impact in Hollywood. Catherine Deneuve made only a few forays, as a high-class hooker alongside Burt Reynolds in The Hustle and as a bisexual vampire in The Hunger. Isabelle Adjani made a promising debut in Walter Hill's Driver, only to suffer the humiliation of Ishtar, while Isabelle Huppert took a major dive with Heaven's Gate, redeemed herself with the superior thriller The Bedroom Window then abruptly disappeared. Nathalie Baye would not cross the Atlantic till she was in her forties, for And The Band Played On and, later still, Catch Me If You Can. Neither would Fanny Ardant, briefly appearing in Sabrina. Others would pop up only in the very occasional blockbuster - Emmanuelle Beart in Mission: Impossible, Juliet Binoche in The English Patient, Irene Jacob in US Marshals, Sophie Marceau in Braveheart and The World Is Not Enough. Considering how brilliant these actresses can be, that's a pretty sorry combined CV.
Maybe it's due to language difficulties, maybe because they find a wealth of interesting work in the perennially strong French film industry, as well as in the rest of Europe. Perhaps it's simply because their huge hits at home mean nothing to the American audience, consequently they're not seen as bankable and are thus offered little. If that's the case, there may be a French actress about to break from the norm. As the charismatic lead in Jean-Pierre Jeunet's Amelie, Audrey Tautou spearheaded that movie's assault on the US market, allowing it to make $33 million on a very low budget. $100 million worldwide and five Oscar nominations - these were serious figures, the movers and shakers took note. When Tautou then joined Tom Hanks' mystic quest in The Da Vinci Code, genuine Hollywood stardom was beckoning.
Audrey Tautou was born on the 9th of August, 1976, in the small town of Beaumont, on the southern edge of Clermont-Ferrand at the northern tip of the Central Massif. Some 300 miles south of Paris, this was a place of plains and mountains, a true rural economy trading on its own purity (the town of Volvic was very close by). Audrey's father was a dental surgeon hailing from the department of the Correze, some 70 miles to the south-west, much of his family residing in Brive-la-Gaillarde, Egletons and Marcillac-la-Croizelle (Tautou is a prevalent surname in La Correze). Her mother, meanwhile, a teacher working in the field of adult literacy, was more local, an Auvergne girl through and through.





























