There is a strong case to be made
that Meryl Streep, who picks up a lifetime achievement award at the Cannes
Film Festival on Tuesday, is the most respected actor of her generation.
Streep, 74, has amassed a record haul of awards and built a filmography of
modern classics that stretches across six decades, from dramas such as “The
Deer Hunter”, “The French Lieutenant’s Woman” and “Kramer vs. Kramer”, to
family favourites like “Mamma Mia!” and “The Devil Wears Prada”.
It is her vocal skills that have often set her apart — from the Danish drawl
in “Out of Africa” to her note-perfect impersonation of Margaret Thatcher in
“The Iron Lady”, to learning Polish so well for “Sophie’s Choice” that locals
believed she was one of them.
She has picked up other skills along the way, practising six hours a day for
eight weeks to learn the violin for “Music of the Heart”.
Streep has admitted her efforts could sometimes go too far.
She took a method acting approach to her turn as a fashion magazine boss in
“The Devil Wears Prada”, maintaining her icy facade even off-camera, but
later said that it was a “horrible” experience and vowed never to do it
again.
But her dedication has paid off time and again.
She has a record 21 Oscar nominations and three wins, a record eight Golden
Globes, two BAFTAs and many other prizes.
And unlike many of her contemporaries, she has remarkably few duds among her
60-plus appearances, still scoring regular critical acclaim with recent films
such as “The Post”, “The Laundromat” and “Don’t Look Up”.
Surprisingly, she has been at Cannes only once before — though she did
manage to win best actress that year — for 1989’s “A Cry in the Dark”.
“Because she has spanned almost 50 years of cinema and embodied countless
masterpieces, Meryl Streep is part of our collective imagination, our shared
love of cinema,” the festival organisers said in a statement.
Streep said in a statement that she was “immeasurably honoured” to be
receiving the honorary Palme d’Or award at the festival’s opening ceremony.
“To stand in the shadow of those who have previously been honoured is
humbling and thrilling in equal part,” she said in a statement.
– ‘Family comes first’ –
Streep has never been one to get carried away by the trappings of fame,
preferring to live as anonymously as possible at her home, where she has
raised her four children.
“Being famous gets in the way of a lot of things,” she once said. “My family
really does come first. It always did and always will.”
Born Mary Louise Streep in June 1949 to a New Jersey pharmaceutical executive
and a commercial artist mother, Streep went to an exclusive school where she
became a cheerleader and began acting in plays.
She continued acting at the historic Vassar liberal arts collge, where she
studied English and drama, before winning a drama scholarship to Yale, where
she graduated in 1975.
Her Broadway debut came the same year with “Trelawny of the Wells,” for which
she won rave reviews, making her film debut two years later with World War II
drama “Julia”.
Her career went stellar with three lauded films over the next two years, “The
Deer Hunter”, “Kramer vs. Kramer” and Woody Allen’s “Manhattan”. (BSS/AFP)