Tilda Swinton
Birthday:
Birthplace:
London, England, UK
Known throughout Britain for her idiosyncratic performances and long-time association with the late filmmaker Derek Jarman, Tilda Swinton is nothing if not one of the more unique actresses to come along during the second half of the 20th century. Born in London on November 5, 1961, Swinton attended Cambridge University, where she received a degree in social and political sciences. While at Cambridge, she became involved in acting, performing in a number of stage productions. Following graduation, Swinton began her professional theater career, working for Edinburgh's renowned Traverse Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company.In 1985, Swinton began her long collaboration with Derek Jarman, both as a friend and fellow artist. She made her screen debut in his Caravaggio (1986) and appeared in every one of the director's films until his death from AIDS in 1994. It was for her role as the spurned queen in Jarman's anachronistic, controversial Edward II (1992) that Swinton earned her first dose of recognition, becoming a familiar face to arthouse audiences on both sides of the Atlantic and earning a Best Actress prize at the Venice Film Festival for her work in the film. The acclaim and recognition Swinton garnered was amplified the same year with her title role in Sally Potter's adaptation of Orlando, Virginia Woolf's classic tale of an Elizabethan courtier who experiences drastic changes in both gender and lifestyle over the course of 400 years.Following appearances in Jarman's Blue (1993) and in his acclaimed biopic, Wittgenstein (1994), Swinton earned some of her strongest notices to date for her lead in Female Perversions (1996), in which she played a successful lawyer trying to cope with her own insecurities and self-destructive tendencies. She then portrayed another brilliant, troubled woman in Conceiving Ada (1997), a science fiction piece that cast her as the real-life daughter of Lord Byron, a woman who was widely held to be the inventor of the first computer.Never one to choose films for their simplicity or mainstream appeal, Swinton subsequently appeared in Love Is the Devil (1998), John Maybury's controversial account of the life and times of artist Francis Bacon. She then portrayed a battered wife in The War Zone (1999), Tim Roth's hellish portrait of extreme family dysfunction. Following on a slightly lighter note with Trainspotting director Danny Boyle's The Beach in 2000, Swinton would later take the lead in The Deep End (2001). Noted for her delicately textured performance as an isolated and protective mother who makes a desperate bid to protect her son after assuming he has committed murder, many critics noted Swinton's performance as a key element to the film's success. The next year, the talented actress took on multiple roles in a complex tale of cyborg fantasy and speculative science fiction, Teknolust, and appeared in a small role in Adaptation, written by Charlie Kaufman and directed by Spike Jonze. In 2003, Swinton delivered strong performances opposite Michael Caine in the thriller The Statement and Ewan McGregor in the erotic drama Young Adam. She went on to star in the ensemble comedy Thumbsucker and appeared with Keanu Reeves in the supernatural thriller Constantine. In 2005, she would play the White Witch in the much-anticipated live-action adaptation of C.S. Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia.For her work in 2007's legal thriller Michael Clayton, Swinton earned her first Oscar. That organization was one of many to recognize her portrayal of a cold, controlling corporate achiever as one of the best of the year.She followed that up in 2008 as cold-hearted pediatrician in the Coen brothers' Burn After Reading, and garnered awards consideration for her work in David Fincher's The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. She earned rave reviews for her work in 2009's I Am Love, and built awards buzz yet again two years later for her work as the mother of a disturbed child in We Need to Talk About Kevin. In 2012 she had a
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Highest Rated Movies
Filmography
MOVIES
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | BOX OFFICE | YEAR |
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96% | The Personal History of David Copperfield |
|
— | 2020 |
56% | The Dead Don't Die |
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— | 2019 |
No Score Yet | The Garden |
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— | 2019 |
90% | The Souvenir |
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— | 2019 |
94% | Avengers: Endgame |
|
— | 2019 |
No Score Yet | Hunting for Hedonia |
|
— | 2019 |
No Score Yet | The French Dispatch |
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— | 2019 |
66% | Suspiria |
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— | 2018 |
90% | Isle of Dogs |
|
— | 2018 |
No Score Yet | Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema |
|
— | 2018 |
86% | Okja |
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— | 2017 |
83% | Letters From Baghdad |
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$0.4M | 2017 |
48% | War Machine |
|
— | 2017 |
89% | Doctor Strange |
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$232.7M | 2016 |
70% | The Seasons in Quincy: Four Portraits of John Berger |
|
— | 2016 |
90% | A Bigger Splash |
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— | 2016 |
86% | Hail, Caesar! |
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$28M | 2016 |
75% | Dreams Rewired |
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$3.7k | 2015 |
85% | Trainwreck |
|
— | 2015 |
No Score Yet | Antarctica 3D: On the Edge |
|
— | 2015 |
50% | The Zero Theorem |
|
— | 2014 |
95% | Snowpiercer |
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$2.8M | 2014 |
85% | Only Lovers Left Alive |
|
— | 2014 |
91% | The Grand Budapest Hotel |
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$57M | 2014 |
No Score Yet | Travelling at Night With Jim Jarmusch |
|
— | 2014 |
No Score Yet | Cinema Is Everywhere |
|
— | 2014 |
93% | Moonrise Kingdom |
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$45.6M | 2012 |
75% | We Need to Talk About Kevin |
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$1.8M | 2012 |
No Score Yet | Climate Of Change |
|
— | 2010 |
50% | The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader |
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$104.4M | 2010 |
82% | I Am Love |
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$5.1M | 2010 |
No Score Yet | The Invisible Frame |
|
— | 2010 |
74% | Julia |
|
— | 2009 |
43% | The Limits of Control |
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$0.4M | 2009 |
71% | The Curious Case of Benjamin Button |
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$127.5M | 2008 |
78% | Burn After Reading |
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$60.4M | 2008 |
66% | The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian |
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$141.7M | 2008 |
88% | Derek |
|
— | 2008 |
91% | Michael Clayton |
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$49M | 2007 |
91% | Strange Culture |
|
— | 2007 |
69% | The Man From London (A Londoni Férfi) |
|
— | 2007 |
No Score Yet | Caravaggio |
|
— | 2007 |
96% | Deep Water |
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— | 2006 |
90% | Stephanie Daley |
|
— | 2006 |
No Score Yet | Shakespeare: The Animated Tales |
|
— | 2005 |
76% | The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe |
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$291.7M | 2005 |
71% | Thumbsucker |
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$1.2M | 2005 |
87% | Broken Flowers |
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$13.6M | 2005 |
46% | Constantine |
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$75.5M | 2005 |
No Score Yet | Man to Man |
|
— | 2005 |
63% | Young Adam |
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$0.7M | 2004 |
No Score Yet | In the Company of Women |
|
— | 2004 |
23% | The Statement |
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$0.6M | 2003 |
91% | Adaptation |
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$22.2M | 2002 |
30% | Teknolust |
|
— | 2002 |
42% | Vanilla Sky |
|
— | 2001 |
82% | The Deep End |
|
$8.4M | 2001 |
20% | The Beach |
|
— | 2000 |
No Score Yet | The Dilapidated Dwelling |
|
— | 2000 |
60% | Possible Worlds |
|
— | 2000 |
84% | The War Zone |
|
— | 1999 |
82% | Conceiving Ada |
|
— | 1999 |
No Score Yet | The Protagonists |
|
— | 1999 |
68% | Love Is the Devil |
|
— | 1998 |
70% | Female Perversions |
|
— | 1997 |
100% | Blue |
|
— | 1993 |
83% | Wittgenstein |
|
— | 1993 |
84% | Orlando |
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$57.8k | 1993 |
100% | Edward II |
|
— | 1992 |
100% | War Requiem |
|
— | 1990 |
No Score Yet | Play Me Something |
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— | 1989 |
50% | Aria |
|
— | 1988 |
No Score Yet | Friendship's Death |
|
— | 1987 |
60% | The Last of England |
|
— | 1987 |
No Score Yet | Egomania - Insel ohne Hoffnung |
|
— | 1986 |
78% | Caravaggio |
|
— | 1986 |
No Score Yet | Derek Jarman - Glitterbox |
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— | 1985 |
No Score Yet | Phantasmagoria: The Visions of Lewis Carroll |
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TV
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | YEAR |
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No Score Yet |
Women, War and Peace
2011
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No Score Yet |
The Late Show With Stephen Colbert
2015
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No Score Yet |
Charlie Rose: The Week
2013-2017
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No Score Yet |
Jimmy Kimmel Live
2003
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|
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No Score Yet |
Variety Studio: Actors on Actors
2015
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|
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No Score Yet |
Charlie Rose
2013-2017
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No Score Yet |
Late Night With Seth Meyers
2014
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No Score Yet |
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart
1999-2015
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No Score Yet |
The Tonight Show With Jay Leno
1992-2014
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No Score Yet |
Independent Lens
1999
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Quotes from Tilda Swinton's Characters
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