
Personal details
All About this Star
Biography:
Ellen Page's Oscar nomination in January, 2008, was unusual in that, even at the tender age of 20, she was not seen as a dark horse. Already ten years into her career, she was a serial award-winner in her native Canada, had stunned audiences with deeply convincing performances in Hard Candy and Mouth To Mouth and had entered the Hollywood mainstream as a mutant hero in the third installment of the X-Men franchise. Where other youngsters up for an Academy Award had arrived out of the blue due to a single stand-out performance based on a single superior script, for Page to be so honoured was predictable. She was expected to reach great heights and had duly done so.
She was born Ellen Philpotts-Page in Halifax, Nova Scotia, on the 21st of February, 1987. Her mother, Martha Philpotts, was a primary school teacher - she'd later teach First and Second Grade at the Ecole Grosvenor-Wentworth Park School in Halifax. Ellen's father was Dennis Page, a graphic designer hailing from Lockeport, a small fishing village with a population of some 700, on an island in Ragged Islands Bay near the south end of Nova Scotia. Dennis had been married before, giving Ellen a stepbrother and stepsister. He and Martha would split when Ellen was young, though both would be heavily involved in her upbringing. Later he'd marry again, to Debbie.
Having trained at Mount Royal College, the Alberta College of Art and Design and at NSCAD University, Dennis had been working in art direction and advertising since 1979, dealing in food, finance, building products, transportation and energy. The year after Ellen's birth, he'd set up the design agency Page & Wood Inc with his friend Eric Wood. He'd spend long hours building the business, eventually winning the prestigious job of designing sets of stamps for the Canadian post office, a task he'd perform regularly from 1999. His business would be rebranded as a "creative boutique" and renamed Trampoline in 2004, with Dennis serving as Director of Design.
With both parents working, young Ellen would spend much time entertaining herself, inventing outlandish scenarios for her Peter Pan and Batman action figures and becoming a voracious reader and film-watcher, making use of Halifax's renowned Video Difference store. She'd also turn out sporty, rugged Nova Scotia lending itself to an outdoor life, and enjoyed basketball, skiing, cycling, snowboarding, hockey, swimming, track and field and, especially, football.

























