Cate Blanchett

Catherine Elise "Cate" Blanchett, AC (born 14 May 1969) is an Australian actress and theatre director. She has received international acclaim and many accolades for her work, including two Academy Awards, three Golden Globe Awards, three BAFTA Awards, six AACTA Awards, and three Screen Actors Guild Awards. Blanchett came to international attention for her role as Elizabeth I of England in Elizabeth (1998), for which she won the BAFTA Award for Best Actress, the Golden Globe Award, and earned her first Academy Award for Best Actress nomination. Her portrayal of Katharine Hepburn in The Aviator (2004) brought her critical acclaim and many accolades, including the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role, making her the only actor to win an Oscar for portraying another Oscar-winning actor. In 2013, she starred in Blue Jasmine, for which she won many accolades, including the Academy Award for Best Actress.

Blanchett is one of only six actors, and the only female actor, to receive Academy Award nominations for portraying the same role in two films, accomplished with her performance as Queen Elizabeth I. She is additionally the only Australian to win two acting Oscars. A seven-time Oscar nominee, she has also received nominations for Notes on a Scandal (2006), Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007), I'm Not There (2007), and Carol (2015). Her other notable films include The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings trilogy (2001–2003) and The Hobbit trilogy (2012–2014), Babel (2006), The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008), Cinderella (2015), Thor: Ragnarok (2017), and Ocean's 8 (2018).

Blanchett has also had an extensive career on stage; she is a four-time Helpmann Award winner for Best Female Actor in a Play. Her earlier roles include the title role in Electra at the National Institute of Dramatic Art in 1992, Ophelia in Hamlet at the Belvoir St Theatre in Sydney in 1994, Susan in Plenty in the West End in 1999, and the title role in Hedda Gabler with the Sydney Theatre Company in 2004. From 2008 to 2013, she and her husband Andrew Upton were co-CEOs and artistic directors of the Sydney Theatre Company. Her other roles on stage include Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire in Sydney, New York at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and Washington D.C. at the Kennedy Center in 2009; Yelena in Uncle Vanya in Sydney, Washington D.C. at the Kennedy Center and New York at Lincoln Center in 2011; and Claire in The Maids in Sydney in 2013 and New York at Lincoln Center in 2014. Blanchett made her Broadway debut in 2017 with The Present, and received Tony Award, Drama Desk Award, and Drama League Award nominations for her performance in the play.

Blanchett has been awarded the Centenary Medal for Service to Australian Society by the Australian government. She was appointed Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French government in 2012. She has been presented with a Doctor of Letters from University of New South Wales, University of Sydney, and Macquarie University in recognition of her extraordinary contribution to the arts, philanthropy and the community. In 2015, she was honoured by the Museum of Modern Art and received the British Film Institute Fellowship in recognition of her outstanding contribution to the industry. In 2017, Blanchett was made a Companion of the Order of Australia for "eminent service to the performing arts as an international stage and screen actor, through seminal contributions as director of artistic organisations, as a role model for women and young performers, and as a supporter of humanitarian and environmental causes."

Early life
Blanchett was born on 14 May 1969 in the Melbourne suburb of Ivanhoe. Her Australian mother, June Blanchett (born Gamble),  worked as a property developer and teacher, and her American father, Robert DeWitt Blanchett, Jr., a Texas native, was a United States Navy Chief Petty Officer who later worked as an advertising executive. The two met when Blanchett's father's ship broke down in Melbourne. When Blanchett was 10, her father died of a heart attack, leaving her mother to raise the family on her own. Blanchett is the middle of three children, she has an older brother Bob Blanchett (born 1968), and a younger sister Genevieve Blanchett (born 1971). Her ancestry includes English, some Scottish, and remote French roots.

Blanchett has described herself as being "part extrovert, part wallflower" during childhood. She had a penchant for dressing in traditionally masculine clothing, and went through goth and punk phases during her teenage years, and shaved her head at one point. She attended primary school in Melbourne at Ivanhoe East Primary School; for her secondary education, she attended Ivanhoe Girls' Grammar School and then Methodist Ladies' College, where she explored her passion for the performing arts. In her late teens and early twenties, she worked at a nursing home in Victoria. She studied economics and fine arts at the University of Melbourne but dropped out after one year to travel overseas. While in Egypt, Blanchett was asked to play an American cheerleader, as an extra in the Egyptian boxing movie, Kaboria; in need of money, she accepted. Upon her return to Australia, she moved to Sydney and enrolled in the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA) to pursue an acting career. She graduated from NIDA in 1992 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts.

Career
Blanchett's first major stage role was opposite Geoffrey Rush, in the 1992 David Mamet play Oleanna for the Sydney Theatre Company. That year, she was also cast as Clytemnestra in a production of Sophocles' Electra. A couple of weeks after rehearsals, the actress playing the title role pulled out, and director Lindy Davies cast Blanchett in the role. Her performance as Electra became one of her most acclaimed at NIDA.[9]  In 1993, Blanchett was awarded the Sydney Theatre Critics' Best Newcomer Award for her performance in Timothy Daly's Kafka Dances and won Best Actress for her performance in Mamet's Oleanna, making her the first actor to win both categories in the same year.[9]  Blanchett played the role of Ophelia in an acclaimed 1994–1995 Company B production of Hamlet directed by Neil Armfield, starring Rush and Richard Roxburgh, and was nominated for a Green Room Award.[17]  She appeared in the 1994 TV miniseries Heartland opposite Ernie Dingo, the miniseries Bordertown (1995) with Hugo Weaving, and in an episode of Police Rescue entitled "The Loaded Boy".[18] [19]  She also appeared in the 50-minute drama short Parklands(1996), which received an Australian Film Institute (AFI) nomination for Best Original Screenplay.[20] [21]

Blanchett made her feature film debut with a supporting role as an Australian nurse captured by the Japanese Army during World War II, in Bruce Beresford's film Paradise Road (1997), which co-starred Glenn Close and Frances McDormand.[11]  Her first leading role was as Lucinda Leplastrier in Gillian Armstrong's romantic drama Oscar and Lucinda (1997), opposite Ralph Fiennes.[11]  Blanchett received wide acclaim for her performance,[16]  and earned her first AFI Award nomination as Best Leading Actress; she lost to Deborah Mailman in Radiance (1998).[22]  She won the AFI Best Actress Award in the same year for her role as Lizzie in the romantic comedy Thank God He Met Lizzie (1997), co-starring Richard Roxburgh and Frances O'Connor.[16]  By 1997, Blanchett had accrued significant praise and recognition in her native Australia.[16]

Her first high-profile international role was as Elizabeth I of England in the critically acclaimed film Elizabeth (1998), directed by Shekhar Kapur. The film catapulted her to stardom, and her performance garnered wide recognition, earning her the Golden Globe Award and British Academy Award (BAFTA), and her first Screen Actors Guild(SAG) and Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.[9] [17]  The following year, Blanchett appeared in Bangers (1999), an Australian short film part of Stories of Lost Souls, a compilation of thematically-related short stories. The short was written and directed by her husband, Andrew Upton, and produced by Blanchett and Upton.[23] <sup id="cite_ref-24">[24] She also appeared in the Mike Newell comedy Pushing Tin (1999), costarring Billy Bob Thornton and Angelina Jolie (critics singled out Blanchett's performance),<sup id="cite_ref-NYT_16-5">[16]  and the critically acclaimed Anthony Minghella film The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), alongside Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jude Law, and Philip Seymour Hoffman. She received her second BAFTA nomination for her performance in The Talented Mr. Ripley.<sup id="cite_ref-tca_11-4">[11]

Already an acclaimed actress, Blanchett received a host of new fans when she appeared in Peter Jackson's Oscar-winning blockbuster trilogy, The Lord of the Rings, playing the role of Galadriel in all three films.<sup id="cite_ref-tca_11-5">[11]  The trilogy holds the record as the highest-grossing film trilogy of all time.<sup id="cite_ref-25">[25]  In addition to The Lord of the Rings, 2001 also saw Blanchett diversify her portfolio with a range of roles in the dramas Charlotte Gray and The Shipping News and the American crime-comedy Bandits, for which she earned a second Golden Globe and SAG Award nomination.<sup id="cite_ref-26">[26]

In 2002, Blanchett appeared, opposite Giovanni Ribisi, in Tom Tykwer-directed Heaven, the first film in an unfinished trilogy by acclaimed writer-director Krzysztof Kieślowski.<sup id="cite_ref-walk_17-2">[17] <sup id="cite_ref-27">[27]  2003 saw Blanchett again playing a wide range of roles: Galadriel in the third and final installment of the Lord of the Rings film trilogy (which won the Academy Award for Best Picture); the Ron Howard-directed western-thriller The Missing; Jim Jarmusch's Coffee and Cigarettes – playing two roles (both against herself) – for which she received an Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Female nomination; and the biographical film Veronica Guerin, which earned her a Golden Globe Best Actress Drama nomination.<sup id="cite_ref-walk_17-3">[17]

In 2005, she won her first Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her acclaimed portrayal of Katharine Hepburn in Martin Scorsese's The Aviator.<sup id="cite_ref-28">[28]  This made Blanchett the first actor to garner an Academy Award for playing an Oscar-winning actor.<sup id="cite_ref-29">[29]  She lent her Oscar statue to The Australian Centre for the Moving Image.<sup id="cite_ref-30">[30]  That year, Blanchett won the Australian Film Institute Best Actress Award for her role as Tracy Heart, a former heroin addict, in the Australian film Little Fish, co-produced by her and her husband's production company, Dirty Films.<sup id="cite_ref-Dirty_23-1">[23]  Though lesser known globally than some of her other films, Little Fish received great critical acclaim in Blanchett's native Australia and was nominated for 13 Australian Film Institute awards.<sup id="cite_ref-31">[31] <sup id="cite_ref-32">[32]

In 2006, she starred opposite Brad Pitt in the multi-lingual, multi-narrative ensemble drama Babel, directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu, which received seven Academy Award nominations; the Steven Soderbergh-directed drama The Good German with George Clooney, and the acclaimed psychological thriller Notes on a Scandal opposite Dame Judi Dench.<sup id="cite_ref-NYT_16-6">[16] <sup id="cite_ref-walk_17-4">[17]  Blanchett received a third Academy Award nomination for her performance in the latter film.<sup id="cite_ref-33">[33]

In 2007, Blanchett was named as one of Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People in the World and also one of the most successful actresses by Forbes magazine.<sup id="cite_ref-34">[34] Blanchett had a cameo as Janine, forensic scientist and ex-girlfriend of Simon Pegg's character in Edgar Wright's Hot Fuzz (2007). The cameo was uncredited and she gave her fee to charity.<sup id="cite_ref-35">[35] <sup id="cite_ref-36">[36]  She reprised her role as Queen Elizabeth I in the 2007 sequel Elizabeth: The Golden Age, and portrayed Jude Quinn, one of six incarnations of Bob Dylan in Todd Haynes' experimental film I'm Not There. She won the Volpi Cup Best Actress Award at the Venice Film Festival (accepted by fellow Australian actor and I'm Not There co-star Heath Ledger), the Independent Spirit and Golden Globe Best Supporting Actress Award for her portrayal of Jude Quinn.<sup id="cite_ref-37">[37]  At the 80th Academy Awards, Blanchett received two Academy Award nominations – Best Actress for Elizabeth: the Golden Age and Best Supporting Actress for I'm Not There – becoming the eleventh actor to receive two acting nominations in the same year, and the first female actor to receive another nomination for the reprisal of a role.<sup id="cite_ref-double_nod_38-0">[38]  Of her achievement that year, critic Roger Ebert said, "That Blanchett could appear in the same Toronto International Film Festival playing Elizabeth and Bob Dylan, both splendidly, is a wonder of acting".<sup id="cite_ref-39">[39]

She next appeared in Steven Spielberg's Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, as the villainous KGB agent Col. Dr. Irina Spalko, Spielberg's favorite villain from the entire series,<sup id="cite_ref-40">[40]  and in David Fincher's Oscar-nominated The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, co-starring with Brad Pitt for a second time. Blanchett voiced the character of Granmamare for the English version of the film Ponyo, released July 2008.<sup id="cite_ref-41">[41]  On 5 December 2008, Blanchett was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame with a motion pictures star at 6712 Hollywood Boulevard in front of Grauman's Egyptian Theatre.<sup id="cite_ref-42">[42]

In 2008, Blanchett and her husband became co-CEOs and artistic directors of the Sydney Theatre Company (STC).<sup id="cite_ref-brw_43-0">[43] <sup id="cite_ref-44">[44]  Blanchett returned to acting in the theatre in 2009 with the Sydney Theatre Company production of Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire, directed by Liv Ullmann. She starred as Blanche DuBois alongside Joel Edgerton as Stanley Kowalski. Ullmann and Blanchett had been meaning to collaborate on a project since Ullman's intended film adaption of A Doll's House fell by the wayside. Blanchett proposed embarking on Streetcar to Ullmann, who jumped at the opportunity after initial discussion.<sup id="cite_ref-45">[45] <sup id="cite_ref-46">[46]

A Streetcar Named Desire production traveled from Sydney to the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York, and the Kennedy Centerin Washington D.C.<sup id="cite_ref-47">[47] <sup id="cite_ref-48">[48]  It was critically and commercially successful and Blanchett received critical acclaim for her performance as Blanche DuBois.<sup id="cite_ref-MIL_8-1">[8] <sup id="cite_ref-49">[49] <sup id="cite_ref-50">[50] <sup id="cite_ref-51">[51]  The New York Times critic Ben Brantley said, "DuBois has been pulled gently and firmly down to earth by Ms. Blanchett and Ms. Ullmann ... What Ms. Blanchett brings to the character is life itself, a primal survival instinct ... Ms. Ullmann and Ms. Blanchett have performed the play as if it had never been staged before, with the result that, as a friend of mine put it, "you feel like you're hearing words you thought you knew pronounced correctly for the first time.""<sup id="cite_ref-52">[52]  The Washington Post's Peter Marks proclaimed, "What Blanchett achieves in the Sydney Theatre Company's revelatory revival of "A Streetcar Named Desire" amounts to a truly great portrayal – certainly the most heartbreaking Blanche I've ever experienced."<sup id="cite_ref-53">[53]  John Lahr of The New Yorker said of her portrayal, "Blanchett, with her alert mind, her informed heart, and her lithe, patrician silhouette, gets it right from the first beat ... Blanchett doesn't make the usual mistake of foreshadowing Blanche's end at the play's beginning; she allows Blanche a slow, fascinating decline ... I don't expect to see a better performance of this role in my lifetime."<sup id="cite_ref-54">[54]  Jane Fonda, who attended a New York show, deemed it "perhaps the greatest stage performance I have ever seen",<sup id="cite_ref-55">[55]  and Meryl Streep declared, "That performance was as naked, as raw and extraordinary and astonishing and surprising and scary as anything I've ever seen ... She took the layers of a person and just peeled them away. I thought I'd seen that play, I thought I knew all the lines by heart, because I've seen it so many times, but I'd never seen the play until I saw that performance."<sup id="cite_ref-56">[56]  Blanchett won the Sydney Theatre Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role.<sup id="cite_ref-57">[57]  The production and Blanchett received Helen Hayes Awards, for Outstanding Non-Resident Production and Outstanding Lead Actress in a Non-Resident Production award, respectively.<sup id="cite_ref-58">[58]

In 2010, Blanchett appeared opposite Russell Crowe in Ridley Scott's epic war film Robin Hood. In 2011, she played the antagonist CIA agent Marissa Wiegler in Joe Wright's action thriller film Hanna.

In 2011, Blanchett took part in two Sydney Theatre Company productions. She played Lotte Kotte in a new translation of Botho Strauß's 1978 play Groß und klein (Big and Small) from Martin Crimp, directed by Benedict Andrews.<sup id="cite_ref-59">[59]  After its Sydney run, the production traveled to London, Paris, the Vienna Festival and Ruhrfestspiele.<sup id="cite_ref-MIL_8-2">[8] Blanchett and the production received wide acclaim.<sup id="cite_ref-60">[60] <sup id="cite_ref-61">[61] <sup id="cite_ref-62">[62] <sup id="cite_ref-63">[63] <sup id="cite_ref-64">[64]  Blanchett was nominated for the London Evening Standard Award for Best Actress,<sup id="cite_ref-65">[65]  and won the Sydney Theatre Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role<sup id="cite_ref-66">[66]  and the Helpmann Award for Best Actress.<sup id="cite_ref-Helpmann_67-0">[67]  She then played Yelena, opposite Hugo Weaving and Richard Roxburgh, in Andrew Upton's adaptation of Anton Chekhov's Uncle Vanya, which traveled to the Kennedy Center and the New York City Center as part of the Lincoln Center Festival.<sup id="cite_ref-68">[68]  The production and Blanchett received critical acclaim,<sup id="cite_ref-Haun_5-1">[5] <sup id="cite_ref-69">[69] <sup id="cite_ref-70">[70]  with The New York Times' Ben Brantley declaring, "I consider the three hours I spent on Saturday night watching [the characters] complain about how bored they are among the happiest of my theatregoing life ... This Uncle Vanya gets under your skin like no other I have seen ... [Blanchett] confirms her status as one of the best and bravest actresses on the planet."<sup id="cite_ref-71">[71]  The Washington Post's Peter Marks dubbed the production Washington D.C's top theatrical event of 2011.<sup id="cite_ref-Haun_5-2">[5]  Blanchett received the Helen Hayes Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Non-Resident Production, and the Helpmann Award for Best Actress.<sup id="cite_ref-Helpmann_67-1">[67] <sup id="cite_ref-72">[72]

Blanchett reprised her role as Galadriel in Peter Jackson's adaptations of The Hobbit (2012–2014), prequel to The Lord of the Ringsseries, filmed in New Zealand.<sup id="cite_ref-73">[73]  She voiced the role of "Penelope" in the Family Guy episode "Mr. and Mrs. Stewie", which aired on 29 April 2012, and Queen Elizabeth II in the episode "Family Guy Viewer Mail 2".<sup id="cite_ref-74">[74] <sup id="cite_ref-75">[75]  Blanchett returned to Australian film with her appearance in The Turning (2013), an anthology film based on a collection of short stories by Tim Winton.<sup id="cite_ref-76">[76]  She was head of jury of the 2012 and 2013 Dubai International Film Festival.<sup id="cite_ref-77">[77]  The Sydney Theatre Company's 2013 season was Blanchett's final one as co-CEO and artistic director.<sup id="cite_ref-brw_43-1">[43] <sup id="cite_ref-78">[78]

In 2013, Blanchett played Jasmine French, the lead role in Woody Allen's Blue Jasmine, co-starring Alec Baldwin and Sally Hawkins. She received rave reviews for her performance, with some critics calling it the best role of her career (surpassing her acclaimed starring role in Elizabeth).<sup id="cite_ref-79">[79]  The performance earned her more than 40 industry and critics awards, including LAFCA Award, NYFCC Award, NSFC Award, Critics' Choice Award, Santa Barbara International Film Festival Outstanding Performance of the Year Award, Australian Academy Award (AACTA), SAG award, Golden Globe award, BAFTA award, Independent Film Spirit Award and the Academy Award for Best Actress.<sup id="cite_ref-80">[80]  Blanchett's win made her just the sixth actress to win an Oscar in both of the acting categories, the third to win Best Actress after Best Supporting Actress, and the first Australian to win more than one acting Oscar.<sup id="cite_ref-81">[81] <sup id="cite_ref-GD_82-0">[82] <sup id="cite_ref-83">[83]  Blanchett was criticized for working with Allen despite an allegation of child sexual abuse against him.<sup id="cite_ref-84">[84]  At the time, she stated, "It's obviously been a long and painful situation for the family and I hope they find some resolution and peace."<sup id="cite_ref-85">[85]  Because of the Me Too movement, Blanchett was forced to readdress the issue in 2018; she claimed that she had no knowledge of the allegation at the time she worked with Allen, and expressed her belief in the justice system.<sup id="cite_ref-86">[86]

In 2014, Blanchett co-starred with Matt Damon and George Clooney in the latter's film, The Monuments Men, based on the true story of a crew of art historians and museum curators who recover renowned works of art stolen by Nazis.<sup id="cite_ref-87">[87]  The film featured an ensemble cast, including John Goodman, Bill Murray, Hugh Bonneville, and Jean Dujardin. She voiced the part of Valka in 2014's How to Train Your Dragon 2.<sup id="cite_ref-88">[88]  The animated film was a critically acclaimed, box-office success,<sup id="cite_ref-89">[89]  won the Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film and received an Academy Award nomination.<sup id="cite_ref-90">[90] <sup id="cite_ref-91">[91]  Blanchett guest starred on the Australian show Rake, as the onscreen female version of Richard Roxburgh's rogue protagonist, Cleaver.<sup id="cite_ref-92">[92]  On 29 January 2015, she co-hosted the 4th AACTA Awards with Deborah Mailman.<sup id="cite_ref-93">[93]

In 2015, Blanchett starred in five films. She portrayed Nancy in Terrence Malick's Knight Of Cups, which premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival.<sup id="cite_ref-94">[94]  Indiewirenamed Blanchett's performance in Knight of Cups one of the 15 best performances in Terrence Malick films.<sup id="cite_ref-95">[95]  She then portrayed Lady Tremaine, Cinderella's evil stepmother, in Disney's live-action re-imagining of Charles Perrault's Cinderella and the 1950 animated film, to critical acclaim.<sup id="cite_ref-96">[96] <sup id="cite_ref-97">[97]  She starred opposite Rooney Mara in Carol, the film adaption of Patricia Highsmith's The Price of Salt, reuniting her with director Todd Haynes. Blanchett is an executive producer on the film.<sup id="cite_ref-98">[98]  She received Academy Award, Golden Globe Award, and BAFTA Award nominations for her performance in Carol.<sup id="cite_ref-99">[99] <sup id="cite_ref-100">[100] <sup id="cite_ref-101">[101]  She also portrayed Mary Mapes opposite Robert Redford's Dan Rather in Truth, a film about the Killian documents controversy. Blanchett's production company was a producing partner for the film.<sup id="cite_ref-102">[102]  Blanchett also appeared in Manifesto, Julian Rosefeldt's multi-screen video installation, in which 12 artist manifestos are depicted by 13 different characters played by Blanchett.<sup id="cite_ref-103">[103]  In 2016, Blanchett narrated one of two versions of Terence Malick's documentary on Earth and the universe, Voyage of Time, which had its world premiere at the 73rd Venice Film Festival.<sup id="cite_ref-104">[104] <sup id="cite_ref-105">[105] <sup id="cite_ref-106">[106]

In 2017, Blanchett starred in the Sydney Theater Company play The Present, Andrew Upton's adaption of Anton Chekhov's play Platonov, directed by John Crowley.<sup id="cite_ref-107">[107]  The production debuted in Sydney in 2015, to critical acclaim, and transferred to Broadway in 2017,<sup id="cite_ref-108">[108] <sup id="cite_ref-109">[109]  marking Blanchett's Broadway debut.<sup id="cite_ref-110">[110]  Blanchett's performance during the play's Broadway run also received critical acclaim.<sup id="cite_ref-111">[111] <sup id="cite_ref-112">[112]  She received a Tony Award nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play,<sup id="cite_ref-113">[113]  a Drama Desk Award nomination,<sup id="cite_ref-114">[114]  and a Drama League Award nomination for the Distinguished Performance Award.<sup id="cite_ref-115">[115]  In 2017, Blanchett also appeared in Malick's Song to Song, shot back-to-back with Knight of Cups in 2012.<sup id="cite_ref-116">[116]  She portrayed the villain Hela in the 2017 Marvel Comics superhero film Thor: Ragnarok, directed by Taika Waititi.<sup id="cite_ref-117">[117]

In 2018, Blanchett starred in Ocean's 8, the all-female spin-off of the Ocean's Eleven franchise, directed by Gary Ross, opposite Sandra Bullock, Anne Hathaway, Sarah Paulson, Mindy Kaling, Helena Bonham Carter and Rihanna.<sup id="cite_ref-118">[118] <sup id="cite_ref-119">[119] <sup id="cite_ref-120">[120]  She also portrayed Florence Zimmerman in the film adaptation of The House with a Clock in Its Walls.<sup id="cite_ref-121">[121]  Blanchett was President of the Jury of the 71st Cannes Film Festival, which took place in May 2018.<sup id="cite_ref-122">[122]

Blanchett will voice the sinister python Kaa in Andy Serkis' adaptation of The Jungle Book titled Mowgli, in which he will mix motion capture, CG animation, and live-action.<sup id="cite_ref-123">[123]  It was reported in 2015 that she will develop and direct Australian drama series Stateless based on the life and controversial mandatory detention case of Cornelia Rau. The project is funded by Screen Australia, and co-produced by Blanchett and Andrew Upton's production company.<sup id="cite_ref-stateless_18-1">[18] <sup id="cite_ref-124">[124]  In September 2015, it was announced that Blanchett would portray Lucille Ball in Lucy and Desi, written by Aaron Sorkin and produced by Ball's two children.<sup id="cite_ref-125">[125] Amazon Studios acquired the rights to the film in August 2017.<sup id="cite_ref-126">[126]  In November 2015, it was reported that Blanchett was in talks to appear in the film adaptation of the best-selling book Where'd You Go, Bernadette, which will be directed by Richard Linklater.<sup id="cite_ref-127">[127]