Katrin Cartlidge, 41, Actress Known for Offbeat Roles, Is Dead


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By 99 on Thursday, September 12, 2002 - 08:28 am:

    "Sad. Saw her in 'Naked' and 'Breaking the Waves.'"


    Katrin Cartlidge, 41, Actress Known for Offbeat Roles, Is Dead

    September 11, 2002
    By MEL GUSSOW


    Katrin Cartlidge, a British actress celebrated for the
    boldness of her performances in films by Mike Leigh and
    other independent directors, died on Saturday in London.
    She was 41 and lived in London.

    The Associated Press reported that she died of septicemia
    resulting from pneumonia. But that cause was not confirmed.
    Ms. Cartlidge had entered a hospital with "flulike
    symptoms," said a representative of the actress's agent.

    Ms. Cartlidge also had a flourishing stage career, and
    played a leading role in "Mnemonic," Simon McBurney's
    production for the Theatre de Complicite, which had a long
    run off Broadway last year. In that ensemble play, she
    acted opposite Mr. McBurney as a woman searching the world
    for a father she never knew.

    Writing in The Guardian this week, Mr. McBurney said that
    Ms. Cartlidge was "the play's motor and its energizer" and
    added that she was "one of the brightest, innovative,
    fearless and most passionately committed performers on
    screen and stage to have emerged from Britain for many
    years."

    Her breakthrough came in films, beginning in 1993 with Mr.
    Leigh's "Naked," in which she played the druggie Sophie
    opposite David Thewlis's drifter. In 1997 she starred as
    Hannah, a cheeky hell-raiser, in Mr. Leigh's "Career Girls"
    (about two college roommates who renew their relationship
    many years later). For "Career Girls," she won an Evening
    Standard award as best actress.

    Through her work with Mr. Leigh and others, by 2000 she had
    become internationally prominent. She specialized in
    playing offbeat, unglamorous roles and never seemed daunted
    even when they bordered on the outrageous. She had featured
    roles in Milcho Manchevski's "Before the Rain," Lars von
    Trier's "Breaking the Waves" (as Emily Watson's
    sister-in-law) and Lodge Kerrigan's "Claire Dolan" (as an
    Irish immigrant who becomes a prostitute in New York). In
    Danis Tanovic's "No Man's Land," which won an Academy Award
    this year as best foreign film, she played a cold,
    ambitious battlefield journalist.

    "I think it's wonderful that women can start playing
    characters with more than a couple of sides, some of them
    not pleasant," she said. "Audiences are not used to seeing
    characters like Hannah or Sophie, who are not trying to get
    us to fall in love with them. But why do we always have to
    fall in love with our leading ladies? Why can't we be just
    intrigued or puzzled or horrified or amused?"

    Ms. Cartlidge was born in London. She began her stage
    career in fringe theaters, but soon moved on to the Royal
    National Theater and other major companies, and continued
    to act onstage after her film career took flight. After
    "Mnemonic," she starred in London in the Royal Court
    production of Rebecca Gilman's "Boy Gets Girl," as a woman
    pursued by a stalker.

    She is survived by her parents, Bobbi and Derek, of London;
    a brother, Tony, of California; a sister, Michele, of
    Cornwall; and her partner, Peter Gevisser.

    In an interview in The New York Times in 1997 she spoke
    about her character in "Career Girls," a film "about a
    couple of women who get older." She said: "I actually love
    getting older. I hated my 20's; I couldn't wait to be 30.
    I'm really looking forward to turning 40, if I get there.
    And not just because things are more successful now, but
    because I think the older you get, the more you find life
    interesting apart from your own problems." And, with a wave
    of her hand, she added: "So roll on. I can't wait."

    http://www.nytimes.com/2002/09/11/obituaries/11CART.html?ex=1032801842&ei=1&en=8d28be5f09f01d5d


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