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Marion Cotillard was in an older section of Paris, France, drinking Bollinger champagne, when she found out about her Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. The French actress spoke English slowly and carefully while she expressed her exhilaration and gratitude for the momentous occasion, declaring "This is a very unique thing for a French girl." She was being recognized internationally for her brilliant work in "La Vie en Rose" (2007), a remarkable biopic that followed the life of French singer Edith Piaf. Cotillard's Golden Globe- and Oscar-winning performance cemented her place as one of 2007's breakout stars, even though she had starred in over 20 films in her native France since the mid-1990s. American audiences received their first glimpse of the raven-haired beauty in Tim Burton's "Big Fish" (2003) and the popular art house import, "A Very Long Engagement" (2005). Following her powerhouse performance as Piaf, the actress was in demand by filmmakers and proved worthy of the buzz with a supporting role opposite Johnny Depp in Michael Mann's slick Chicago crime log, "Public Enemies" (2009), as well as further roles that showcased her way with complex, strong women trying to live within the confines of acceptable society.
Born on Sept. 30, 1975, Marion Cotillard grew up in a highly artistic household in Orleans, France, a town very close to her birthplace of Paris. Her father, Jean-Claude Cotillard was an actor, teacher, director, and mime, while her mother Niseema Theillaud was an actress. She had two younger identical twin brothers - Quentin, a sculptor and painter, and Guillaume, a writer. Cotillard's parents traveled frequently with their acting troupe, often bringing back exotic gifts from places like Hong Kong or Peru to their children. It all served to inspire their talented daughter to follow in their footsteps. She wanted to be an actress as early as she could remember, even appearing onstage in plays her father wrote. When Cotillard was 16, she moved to Paris and, after getting her feet wet in a few TV spots, began her acting career. In 1998, she was cast in Luc Besson's action comedy "Taxi" as Lilly Bertineau, the girlfriend of an aspiring racecar driver and a role she would reprise in the subsequent films "Taxi 2" (2000) and "Taxi 3" (2003). The following year, the newcomer was sharing the screen with veteran actress Jeanne Moreau in the drama "War in the Highlands" (1999) and taking the female lead in the sci-fi romance, "Furia" (1999) as an outlaw artist in a near future where self-expression is outlawed. Cotillard earned even more raves for her dramatic performance as twins Lucie and Marie in the 2001 film "Les Jolie Choses" ("Pretty Things"), earning her a Most Promising Actress nomination at the Cesar Awards, the French equivalent of the Oscars. Cotillard admitted that she would have been a singer had she not pursued acting. Thankfully, she had the chance to do both, co-writing and performing the song "La Fille De Joie" for the movie. It was only a matter of time until Hollywood would take more than a casual interest in the French star.

American audiences were first introduced to Cotillard in director Tim Burton's big-budgeted fantasy "Big Fish," (2003), in which she joined an impressive multi-generational cast including Ewan McGregor, Helena Bonham Carter, Jessica Lange and Albert Finney. The success of "Big Fish" kicked Cotillard's career into high gear. Before returning home, she spent a few weeks in New York to study English before heading back to France. For her femme fatale supporting role alongside Audrey Tatou - another French star who had made international waves with the exquisite film "Amelie" (2001) - in the wartime romance drama "Un long Dimanche de Fiançailles" ("A Very Long Engagement,") (2004), Cotillard earned her first Cesar Award for Best Supporting Actress. None of Cotillard's seven film performances the following year were as widely seen in the U.S. as "A Very Long Engagement," however her supporting role in Abel Ferrara's film-within-a-film "Mary" (2005) was screened internationally on the independent film festival circuit. In 2006, Cotillard filmed her second American movie, "A Good Year," in which she portrayed a small town French café owner opposite Oscar-winning Russell Crowe as a Londoner who inherits a local property in the remarkably uncharming romantic comedy directed by Ridley Scott.

But 2007 would prove to be Cotillard's own "good year," with the actress earning almost universal acclaim for capturing the volcanic essence and heartbreaking fragility of France's famed rags-to-riches hero Edith Piaf in "La Vie En Rose" (released in France under the title "La Mome"). Named after Piaf's signature song, "La Vie En Rose" ("Life in Pink"), the film had been on every actress' wish list, yet Cotillard was picked out of hundreds of candidates to portray the fallen chanteuse. Feeling the pressure of a nation placed upon her, she wasted no time capturing the volcanic essence and heartbreaking fragility of the late singer. Cotillard said the most rewarding part of playing Piaf was getting to know the woman she came to inhabit. "It took over my life," she said, "I even dreamt about Piaf - we had some night meetings. Seven months of my life for the greatest pleasure I ever had doing my job."

In effect, she delivered the performance of a lifetime, captured most effectively in such scenes as the Olympia Music Hall in which Cotillard - even though she was lip-synching to Piaf's "Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien" - was magnificent as she eerily channeled the singer. "La Vie En Rose" was also a commercial success, beating the opening week sales of "Amelie." Fellow actors were in awe of Cotillard's performance as well, including Academy Award winner Cate Blanchett: "As much as inhabiting Piaf, she was also creating a creature, and I thought that was astonishing and inspiring." Stephen Holden of The New York Times even went so far to write that the actress' take on Piaf was "the most astonishing immersion of one performer into the body and soul of another I've ever encountered in a film." For her work, Cotillard earned a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy, paving the way for an Oscar win for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role.

Unfortunately, the glow of her Academy Award win was tainted by a brush with controversy after brief interview snippets the actress had made a year prior in which she innocently expressed her opinion that that 9/11 attacks on the States might have been a conspiracy, as well as questioned how two buildings of that size could collapse. In any event, the American right-wing press and public had a field day, declaring Cotillard another ungrateful and ill-informed product of France. Cotillard went into apology overdrive, genuinely upset that her thoughts were taken out of context, making her look bad to the country which had just embraced her. Cotillard's apologies seemed to smooth things over, and she resumed her career without any permanent American backlash.
For her first post-Piaf role, Cotillard opted for a supporting role in Michael Mann's "Public Enemies" (2009), portraying the working-class love interest of real-life 1930s glamour gangster, John Dillinger (Johnny Depp). Well-cast for her strength at wrapping a fragile character in a tough, self-made exterior, Cotillard proved herself eminently appealing in the stylish affair, and while the film was not the critical darling of her prior work, reviews were mainly positive and it brought in a respectable $100 million at the box office. In her second film that year, Cotillard joined Penelope Cruz and Nicole Kidman in "Nine" (2009), a highly anticipated and star-studded musical loosely based on Italian filmmaker Federico Fellini's autobiographical "8 ½" (1963), with Daniel Day-Lewis starring as a filmmaker distracted by the many women in his life. Along with Cruz and Daniel Day-Lewis, Cotillard would earn a Golden Globe nomination for her performance in the Rob Marshall-directed picture.

    * Born:
      September 30, 1975 in Paris, FR
    * Job Titles:
      Actress, Singer

Family
    * Brother: Guillaume Cotillard. Twin of Quentin
    * Brother: Quentin Cotillard. Twin of Guillaume
    * Father: Jean-Claude Cotillard.
    * Mother: Niseema Theillaud.

Significant Others

    * Companion: Guillaume Canet.

Milestones
    * 1998 Cast in the Luc Besson production, Taxi as Lili Bertineau
    * 2000 Reprised role of Lili in Taxi 2
    * 2001 Earned rave reviews for her portrayal of twins in Les Jolies Choses ; also co-wrote and performed the song La Fille De Joie
    * 2003 Introduced to English-speaking audiences in Tim Burton s film Big Fish, as Billy Crudup s wife
    * 2003 Once again returned to play Lili for Taxi 3
    * 2003 Played Sophie Kowalski in Yann Samuell s Jeux d enfants
    * 2004 Appeared in the drama mystery Innocence
    * 2004 Portrayed the murderous Tina Lombardi in A Very Long Engagement
    * 2007 Cast as a love interest to Russell Crowe in Ridley Scott s A Good Year
    * 2007 Won several awards for her portrayal of iconic French chanteuse Édith Piaf in Olivier Dahan s biopic La Vie En Rose ; earned a SAG nomination for Best Actress
    * 2009 Nominated for the 2009 Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy ( Nine )
    * 2009 Played American bank robber John Dillinger s (played by Johnny Depp) girlfriend in Michael Mann s 1930s gangland flick Public Enemies
    * 2009 Played Daniel Day-Lewis s wife in the film adaptation of the Tony Award-winning musical Nine ; directed by Rob Marshall; earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress
    * 2010 Co-starred with Leonardo DiCaprio in the Christopher Nolan-directed sci-fi thriller Inception
    * At 16, moved to Paris and began her acting career
    * Began appearing on stage with her father a young child

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