Famke Janssen | |
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![]() Janssen at the 2008 Independent Film Festival of Boston |
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Born | Famke Beumer Janssen November 5, 1964 Amstelveen, Netherlands |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1992–present |
Spouse | Tod Williams (1995–2000) (divorced) |
Famke Beumer Janssen (Dutch pronunciation: [fɑmkə bømər jɑnsən]; English pronunciation: /ˈfɑːmkə ˈdʒænsən/; born November 5, 1964)[1] is a Dutch actress and former fashion model.
She is best-known for playing the villainess Bond girl Xenia Onatopp in GoldenEye and Dr. Jean Grey/Phoenix in the X-Men film series.
Janssen is also a UNODC Goodwill Ambassador for Integrity.[2]
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Famke Beumer Janssen was born in Amstelveen, Netherlands.[3] The first name means little girl in West Frisian, the native language of the Dutch province Friesland.[4] Besides her native Dutch, Janssen speaks English and French. She also learned German, but has not kept up with it.[5] She has two sisters, director Antoinette Beumer and actress Marjolein Beumer.[6]
Before coming to the United States, Janssen studied economics for a year at the University of Amsterdam, calling it "the stupidest idea I ever had." Janssen moved to the United States in 1984 and began her professional career as a fashion model. She signed with Elite Model Management and worked for Yves Saint Laurent, Chanel and Victoria's Secret. While with the agency, her European measurements were listed as 92-61-92 and 36 dress size.[7] Janssen is noted for being taller than average at 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 m) and her beauty has been compared to Hedy Lamarr and films stars of 1940s.[4] After retiring from modeling in the early 1990s, she enrolled at Columbia University to study creative writing and literature. She also took up acting. Several years later Janssen moved to Los Angeles to establish her acting career.[4][6]
Upon moving to Los Angeles, Janssen obtained her first parts, appearing in guest roles on TV series. She starred in a 1988 commercial for Exclamation Perfume. One of her first appearances was in 1992, when she starred in the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode "The Perfect Mate" as empathic metamorph Kamala, opposite Patrick Stewart (who would later star with her in the X-Men film series).[4]. In that same year, Janssen was offered the role of Jadzia Dax of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, but turned it down to pursue film roles. She also appeared in the film Lord of Illusions with Scott Bakula, who would later portray Capt. Jonathan Archer of the chronologically very first Starship Enterprise.
Janssen's first film role was with Jeff Goldblum in the 1992 film Fathers & Sons. In 1995, she appeared in the first Pierce Brosnan James Bond film, GoldenEye, as femme fatale Xenia Onatopp. In an attempt to fight against typecasting after her role in the film, Janssen began seeking out more intriguing support roles, appearing in Woody Allen's Celebrity, Robert Altman's The Gingerbread Man, John Irvin's City of Industry and Ted Demme's Monument Ave.[8] Denis Leary, her co-star in Monument Ave., was impressed by how easily she blended in, initially not recognizing her as she was already in character.[4]
Janssen played superheroine Dr. Jean Grey/Phoenix in X-Men, X2 and X-Men: The Last Stand. She won a Saturn Award for her role in X-Men: The Last Stand. She also starred in the movies Lord of Illusions, The Faculty, House on Haunted Hill, I Spy, Rounders, Deep Rising, Hide and Seek, Taken and Turn the River, for which she was awarded the Special Jury Best Actress Award at the 2007 Hamptons International Film Festival.[9] In addition, Janssen had a prominent role in the second season of the popular TV show, Nip/Tuck, as the seductive and manipulative life coach, Ava Moore. She reprised her role in the final two episodes of the series. She has continued to branch out into television, appearing in TV pilots for NBC and Showtime, 2007's cop drama Winters and 2009's The Farm, a pilot for a potential spinoff of The L Word set in a women's prison. Both were rejected by their respective networks.
Janssen provides the Dutch-language narration for the Studio Tram Tour at all Disney parks.[8]
In July 2010, filming began on Janssen's directorial debut Bringing Up Bobby. Janssen also wrote the screenplay to the film, which stars Milla Jovovich, Bill Pullman and Marcia Cross.[10]
On January 28, 2008, Janssen was appointed a United Nations Goodwill Ambassador for Integrity at the Second Conference of the States Parties to the United Nations Convention against Corruption, held in Nusa Dua, Bali.[11]
In 2003, Janssen was awarded the International Star of the Year. In 2004, she won the Hollywood Life Breakthrough Artist of the Year for her work on Nip/Tuck. In 2006, the Hamptons International Film Festival awarded her with the Golden Starfish Award for career achievement in acting.[12] For her performance as Jean Grey in X-Men: The Last Stand, she won a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress.[13]
Janssen lives in West Village in New York City.[5] She was married to writer and director Tod Culpan Williams, son of architect Tod Williams, from 1995 to 2000.[3]
Janssen has a brindle Boston Terrier named Licorice, with which she frequently travels.[14][15] Alongside her dog, she appeared in a 2007 PETA campaign to raise awareness for animal rights. The campaign used the slogan "Be an Angel for Animals."[16]
Year | Title | Role |
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1992 | Star Trek: The Next Generation (TV series) | Kamala |
Fathers & Sons | Kyle Christian | |
1994 | The Untouchables (TV series) | Cleo |
Melrose Place (TV series) | Diane Adamson | |
Model by Day (TV movie) | Lady X | |
Relentless IV: Ashes to Ashes | Dr. Sara Lee Jaffee | |
1995 | GoldenEye | Xenia Onatopp |
Lord of Illusions | Dorothea Swann | |
1996 | Dead Girl | Treasure |
1997 | City of Industry | Rachel Montana |
1998 | Monument Ave. | Katy |
The Gingerbread Man | Leeanne Magruder | |
Deep Rising | Trillian St. James | |
RPM | Claudia Haggs | |
Rounders | Petra | |
Celebrity | Bonnie | |
The Adventures of Sebastian Cole | Fiona | |
The Faculty | Miss Elizabeth Burke | |
1999 | House on Haunted Hill | Evelyn Stockard-Price |
2000 | Love & Sex | Kate Welles |
Circus | Lily Garfield | |
X-Men | Jean Grey | |
Ally McBeal (TV series) | Jamie | |
2001 | Made | Jessica |
Don't Say a Word | Aggie Conrad | |
2002 | I Spy | Special Agent Rachel Wright |
2003 | X2 | Jean Grey |
2004 | Nip/Tuck (TV series) | Ava Moore |
Eulogy | Judy Arnolds | |
2005 | Hide and Seek | Dr. Katherine Carson |
2006 | X-Men: The Last Stand | Jean Grey/Phoenix |
The Treatment | Allegra Marshall | |
2007 | The Ten | Gretchen Reigert |
Turn the River | Kailey Sullivan | |
Winters (TV pilot) | Christie Winters | |
2008 | The Wackness | Kristen Squires |
Taken | Lenore (Lenny) | |
100 Feet | Marnie Watson | |
Puppy Love (short film) | Maya | |
2009 | The Farm (TV pilot) | Valentina Galindo |
2010 | Nip/Tuck (TV series) | Ava Moore |
The Chameleon | Jennifer Johnson | |
The Last Kiddie Ride | Mary |