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Julie Frances Christie (born 14 April 1940) [1] is a British actress. Christie's accolades include an Academy Award , a BAFTA Award , a Golden Globe , and a Screen Actors Guild Award . She has appeared in six films ranked in the British Film Institute 's BFI Top 100 British films of the 20th century, and in 1997, she received the BAFTA ...
In the 1960s, British actress Julie Christie rose to fame as one of the world's most lusted-after bombshells. The leading lady of "Doctor Zhivago" and "Fahrenheit 451," Christie was not only a ...
Julie Christie, an iconic knockout of the 1960s, is now 79 -- and if you don't know the name, you'll recognize her from 'Harry Potter.'
Sutherland and Julie Christie played a couple whose young daughter had drowned in an accident (but she was still there, all around them), and were spending time in Venice because Sutherland’s ...
Snapshots is a 2002 Anglo-American-Dutch film directed by Rudolf van den Berg starring Burt Reynolds and Julie Christie. [1] [2] Reynolds and Christie, though top-billed, have less screen time than does Carmen Chaplin, as a young woman on a journey of discovery. Chaplin's story mirrors the relationship between Reynolds and Christie characters ...
McCabe & Mrs. Miller is a 1971 American revisionist Western film directed by Robert Altman and starring Warren Beatty and Julie Christie. The screenplay by Altman and Brian McKay is based on the 1959 novel McCabe by Edmund Naughton. [3] Altman referred to it as an "anti-Western" film because it ignores or subverts a number of Western ...
Darling is a 1965 British romantic drama film directed by John Schlesinger from a screenplay written by Frederic Raphael. [5] It stars Julie Christie as Diana Scott, a young successful model and actress in Swinging London, toying with the affections of two older men, played by Dirk Bogarde and Laurence Harvey.
Far from the Madding Crowd is a 1967 British epic period drama film directed by John Schlesinger and starring Julie Christie, Alan Bates, Terence Stamp and Peter Finch. [4] The screenplay was by Frederic Raphael adapted from Thomas Hardy's 1874 novel Far from the Madding Crowd. It was Schlesinger's fourth film (and his third collaboration with ...