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Gaier scored her first acting role voicing Edith, one of villain-turned-hero Gru’s (Steve Carell) three adoptive daughters, in the original Despicable Me film in 2010, going to reprise the role ...
The franchise began with the 2010 film of the same name, which was followed by three sequels, Despicable Me 2 (2013), Despicable Me 3 (2017), and Despicable Me 4 (2024) and by two spin-off prequels, Minions (2015) and Minions: The Rise of Gru (2022). The franchise also includes many short films, a television special, several video games, and a ...
Development of Despicable Me 4 began in September 2017, with longtime Despicable Me and Illumination writers Cinco Paul and Ken Daurio writing early drafts of the script. [11] The film was officially confirmed in February 2022, with veteran Despicable Me director Chris Renaud , Patrick Delage, and Mike White attached as director, co-director ...
Édith Vesperini (born 24 March 1945 in Paris) is a French costume designer for cinema, television and theater. [1] She won the César Award for Best Costume Design for The King's Daughters . [ 2 ] [ 3 ]
[1] [2] She got into acting after accompanying her older sister to an audition after her mother could not find a babysitter and brought her along. [2] Gaier moved to Burbank, California around 2013 and has been a student at the University of California, Los Angeles .
Despicable Me 2 completed its theatrical run in the United States and Canada on January 16, 2014. [73] Worldwide, on its first weekend, Despicable Me 2 opened only in Australia with $6.66 million, [74] ahead of Monsters University (2013) which opened on the same weekend. [75] The film set an opening-day record in Latvia. [76]
Despicable Me is a 2010 American animated comedy film produced by Universal Pictures and Illumination Entertainment, and distributed by Universal.The first feature film from Illumination, it was directed by Chris Renaud and Pierre Coffin and produced by Chris Meledandri, Janet Healy, and John Cohen, from a screenplay by Cinco Paul and Ken Daurio based on a story by Sergio Pablos.
In conjunction with the exhibit, the museum's Noble Theater is continuing its "Edith Head Film Series" with two Audrey Hepburn classics: 1957's "Funny Face," directed by Stanley Donen and co ...