filmmakers and actors, making consistently interesting films that span both arthouse and blockbuster. She landed a plum role in the biggest blockbuster of recent times, The Lord of the Rings trilogy, playing the pointy-eared elf queen. Galadriel. The prosthetic lugs share pride of place in her home with the Oscar statuette she finally received in 2004 for her turn as Katharine Hepburn in Martin Scorsese’s Howard Hughes biopic The Aviator.

‘When the “golden guy” came my way, I thought “It’s a bit of a curse”,’ she says. “‘The phone’s going to stop ringing now that you’ve arrived somewhere”. Not that you feel you have arrived somewhere yourself, but that you’re perceived to have done so. They [Hollywood] are always looking for the next thing. But fortunately the phone hasn’t stopped ringing. I‘ve been very lucky.’

Lucky or not, far from curtailing her career success Blanchett’s Oscar win compounded it. After a brief return to Australia in 2005 to make the gritty drug drama Little Fish, the triumvirate of Babel, The Good German and Notes on a Scandal ensured Blanchett was busier than ever before. At this stage in her career one imagines the actress could have any role she wanted. But, she says, ‘I find it hard to say, “Cast me, cast me”. And audiences tire of seeing the same face on the big screen.’

So in what could be seen as a contrary move, Blanchett has decided to put her film career on the backburner for a while. She is in the middle of filming The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, a romantic oddity with her Babel co-star Brad Pitt, about a man who ages backwards. After that she has no plans to make another film this year.

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Cate Blanchett in Notes on a Scandal (left) and Babel (right)

Instead, she and her family are relocating to Australia. She and Upton are to become joint artistic directors of the Sydney Theatre Company, where Blanchett cut her teeth as an actress. In advance of their three-year tenure, the couple directed a double-bill of one act plays for the STC, Upton overseeing Mamet’s Reunion and Blanchett directing Harold Pinter’s A Kind of Alaska.

Blanchett is clearly excited about her new project. ‘We have a five-year-old who will be in school this year, and he’ll need to be in one place.’ she says, ‘so yes, we’ll be in Australia. Australia’s an incredibly vibrant place. And the opportunities the Sydney Theatre Company will afford us both are utterly expansive. There are a lot of latent skills I’ve been developing that will hopefully benefit the company. The fact that my husband is a writer and I’m an actor are major strengths. And we’d love the company to tour as a long-term plan. So I feel quite galvanised by the opportunity.’

As the interview comes to an end. I ask Blanchett if she is the kind of person who responds well to chance. ‘Things present themselves to you,’ she says, ‘and it’s how you choose to deal with them that reveals who you are. We all say a lot of things, don’t we, about who we are and how we think. But in the end it’s your actions, how you respond to circumstance that reveals your character.

‘Also,’ she adds, ‘I don’t understand a way to work other than bold-facedly running towards failure. I think it’s always good to take on things that at first seem bigger than you. Then you just try and surmount them.’

I Notes on a Scandal is on general release from Fri 2 Feb. See review, page XX.

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I A STAR ran ALL SEASONS

Julie Kokkalou charts the rise and

rise of Cate Blanchett

Within months of graduating from Australia’s National Institute of Dramatic Art in 1993, Cate Blanchett was winning prestigious awards for her stage roles in Timothy Daly’s Kafka Dances and David Mamet’s Oleanna. Her big screen break came in 1997 with Paradise Road alongside Glenn Close. She was nominated for an Australian Film Institute award in the same year for Best Actress for Oscar and Lucinda, in which she starred opposite Ralph Fiennes. Next came the acclaimed and sumptuous biopic Elizabeth with Ralph’s brother, Joseph, which won her a BAFTA for Best Actress. She was also nominated for a Best Supporting Actress BAFTA for Anthony Minghella’s The Talented Mr Ripley in which she played the debutante who falls for duplicitous Torn (Matt Damon).

In 2001, she scooped a coveted Golden Globe (Best Actress in a Comedy) for Bandits with Bruce Willis and Billy Bob Thornton, and portrayed the heroine of Sebastian Faulkes’ novel Charlotte Gray.

It was her role as elf queen Galadriel in the first of Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy which shot her to n ,4, international : I ' V stardom. But despite mainstream success, Blanchett continued to seek out interesting roles " in low budget films. In 2002 she starred in the little-known but highly praised Heaven, much of which is in Italian. The inspired pairing of the enigmatic Giovanni Ribisi and Blanchett was in a large part responsible for the numerous accolades heaped on the film. In Veronica Guerin, Blanchett played the real-life Irish journalist gunned down by underworld assassins (gaining her a Golden Globe nomination), and she won an Oscar and BAFTA for Best Supporting Actress for The Aviator with Leonardo DiCaprio.

Little Fish, in 2005, scooped her an AFl Best Actress award. As well as Babel and Notes on a Scandal (see opposite) she will soon appear in I’m Not There, The Golden Age, and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.

Bandfis

Veronica

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