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Given that her career has, in its own right, been extraordinary, I wonder how she feels about the idea of being a muse. “I think it’s a question of age, because when you’re much younger, you could be. It can be easy to look back on Rampling’s career as a series of provocations.
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Rampling starred in Claude Lelouch's 1984 film Viva la vie (Long Live Life), before going on to star in the cult-film Max, Mon Amour (1986), and appear in the thriller Angel Heart (1987). For a decade she withdrew from the public eye due to depression. In the late 1990s, she appeared in The Wings of the Dove (1997), played Miss Havisham in a BBC television adaptation of Great Expectations (1998), and starred in the film adaptation of Anton Chekov’s The Cherry Orchard (1999), directed by Michael Cacoyannis.[citation needed]. In 1997, she was a jury member at the 54th Venice International Film Festival. Her private life attracted as many headlines as her films. In the 60s she lived with her agent and partner, Bryan Southcombe, and their friend, the model Randall Laurence; there were rumours of a menage a trois, but she always denied it.
Personal life
So I just encouraged him to forget that and just be himself. It was really lovely to see that because I think it was a real help for him. He was more than capable of doing it because he’s just a natural actor.
Dune: Part Two
It was a little too almost like caricature, and I said, I think we can still make some fun with somebody who’s still got it in her, who thinks she can have more great love affairs, which I think his grandmother sort of did too. So we played with the feelings, the alive feelings of this woman, knowing she was going to die, but her alive feelings. Rampling continued to work in both English and French language projects, playing the Countess Spencer in The Duchess (2008), and later reunited with co-star Keira Knightley for Never Let Me Go (2010). In 2011, she appeared in Lars von Trier's Melancholia; the following year, she earned an Emmy nomination for her work in the BBC miniseries Restless. In 2015, she nabbed her first Academy Award nomination for her work in 45 Years. English actress Charlotte Rampling began her acting career in 1965.
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Quite a lot of things were experimental, I suppose. I don’t know whether I’ve got it now, but never mind – I had it! ” Randall went his own way after she married Southcombe, and they lost touch. There’s an effortlessness about all your performances.
Her Anne Boleyn in "The Six Wives of Henry VIII" (1972) also trod a delicate line between seductiveness and sadness as she attempted to bend the will of Henry (Keith Michell) to hers before meeting her fabled end. The film was condemned and celebrated with equal fervor during its release, but all parties agreed that Rampling's performance, which featured her in feverish scenes of morbid fetishism, was the film's highlight. The picture did much to cement Rampling as the thinking man's sex symbol, as did a 1973 layout for Playboy shot by Helmut Newton and a widespread rumor that she lived in a ménage-a-trois with her then-husband, publicist Bryan Southcombe, and male model Randall Laurence.
Cast (Special)

I’m a pretty sort of expansive person, because I don’t have to get uptight about a lot of stuff, but there’s certain things that I wouldn’t do. And if the subject was something I really didn’t agree with, then I wouldn’t do it. It wasn’t what I was expecting to do, but it happened when I was young. I’ve never felt that — I’ve always preferred somebody [coming to me], so it has usually happened that way.
We watch as her life begins to crack around her, but largely, that is it. It is so sparse that it makes the gorgeous 45 Years, for which she received her only Oscar nomination in 2016, look as action-packed as an Avengers movie. Rampling went to prestigious private girls’ schools in France and in England, and at the age of 16 left for a secretarial college in London.
In 2008, she portrayed Countess Spencer, the mother of Keira Knightley's title character, in The Duchess and played the High Priestess in post-apocalyptic thriller Babylon A.D. In 2002, she recorded an album titled Comme Une Femme, or As A Woman. It is in both French and English, and includes passages that are spoken word as well as selections which Rampling sang.[citation needed]. In February 2006, Rampling was named as the jury president at the 56th Berlin International Film Festival.

After this, her acting career blossomed in both English and French cinema. “Because there’ll be a contradiction that comes in.” She is, though, still busy, still working. She is about to go back to Budapest to film a small part in Denis Villeneuve’s take on Dune (“I’m Reverend Mother Mohiam, who initiates Timothee Chalamet”) and then a Danish TV series, about which she can tell me absolutely nothing, other than that it’s in four languages. “It’s a very different story, I mean really chilling.” It sounds very Charlotte Rampling. “You know, I need the thrill of difference,” she says. She arrived at Gare du Nord in time to catch her train from Paris to London, but when she got there, she realised she had left her passport at home.
Julita visits Rolf in Denmark, in search of the truth about her daughter Hania. Claire finds a connection between a travel agency and a Danish organization. Emma Darwin receives an unexpected visitor when she discovers her late husband's autobiography. She has been seen on the covers of Vogue, Interview and Elle magazines and CRUSHfanzine. In 2009, she posed nude in front of the Mona Lisa for Juergen Teller.[24] In 2009, Rampling appeared in Todd Solondz's Life During Wartime.
It’s the kind of role we’re used to seeing from the great Rampling, who received her first and only Oscar nomination stateside for the British “45 Years” but has a trove of César and European Film awards on her mantle. She’s remained defiant of mainstream studio productions — other than dipping into IP territory with “Assassin’s Creed” and “Dune” — preferring outside-the-box European work. I came here into the movies almost by chance,” said Rampling, who began as a model before being cast as a Swinging ’60s ingenue in 1966’s “Georgy Girl” opposite Alan Bates and Lynn Redgrave. It’s really just what comes up that affects me.
I said, “There’s something happening here that’s working,” because it wasn’t just going into a big-budget film. That’s really what I wanted to speak to Matthew about. Because he had based it on his childhood, and the role was a loose portrayal of his grandmother—just in certain character traits and the fact she was in her 80s. When I read it, she was more of this cranky older woman, and I said to him, “I really would like her to be around my age. Maybe I could play this character in a few years, but I don’t really want to go there now.” [Laughs.] And he was fine with that.
Rampling also shone in a pivotal role in Sidney Lumet's "The Verdict" (1982) as lawyer Paul Newman's lover, whom defense attorney James Mason hired to keep track of him. Rampling's smoldering intensity was best served in roles that required her to plumb the depths of the human experience. In Luchino Visconti's "The Damned" (1969), she was the wife of a German company's vice president, who paid for his opposition to the Nazi regime by being sent to the Dachau concentration camp with her children.
Critics raved over the complexity of her performance, which explored unsettling depths of denial in its attempt to make sense of the tragedy, and for her work, Rampling received her second Cesar nomination. Her sophomore project with Ozon, 2003's "Swimming Pool," was a deeply personal project for the actress, as it allowed her to finally come to terms with her sister's suicide. Another critical success, the film brought Rampling a third Cesar and a European Film Award for Best Actress.
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