American actress (born 1973)
Vera Farmiga
Farmiga in 2018
Born Vera Ann Farmiga
(1973-08-06 ) August 6, 1973 (age 50) Alma mater
Syracuse University (
BFA ) Occupation Actress
Years active 1996–present Works
Full list Spouses
(
m. 1997;
div. 2004)
Children 2 Relatives Awards
Full list
Vera Ann Farmiga
[1] (
far-MEE -gə ; born August 6, 1973) is an American actress. Farmiga began her professional acting career on stage in the original
Broadway production of
Taking Sides (1996). After expanding to television and film, Farmiga's breakthrough came in 2004 with her starring role as a drug addict in the drama
Down to the Bone . She received praise for starring in the 2009 comedy-drama
Up in the Air , for which she was nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress .
Farmiga made her directorial debut in 2011 with the drama film
Higher Ground , in which she also had the leading role. She had starring roles in the political thriller
The Manchurian Candidate (2004), the crime drama
The Departed (2006), the historical drama
The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas (2008), the thrillers
Source Code (2011) and
Safe House (2012), the legal drama
The Judge (2014), the biographical drama
The Front Runner (2018), the monster film
Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019), and the crime drama
The Many Saints of Newark (2021). She also starred in the
Netflix miniseries
When They See Us (2019), for which she received a
Primetime Emmy Award nomination, the
Disney+ miniseries
Hawkeye (2021), which is set in the
Marvel Cinematic Universe , and the
Apple TV+ miniseries
Five Days at Memorial (2022).
Farmiga portrayed paranormal investigator
Lorraine Warren in
the Conjuring Universe films
The Conjuring (2013),
The Conjuring 2 (2016),
Annabelle Comes Home (2019), and
The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (2021). From 2013 to 2017, she starred as
Norma Louise Bates in the
A&E drama horror series
Bates Motel , which earned her a
Primetime Emmy Award nomination. These performances, along with her lead roles in the films
Joshua (2007) and
Orphan (2009), established her as a
scream queen .
[2]
[3]
Early life
Farmiga was born on August 6, 1973,
[1] in
Clifton, New Jersey .
[4] Her parents are
Ukrainians : Mykhailo Farmiga, a
systems analyst -turned-landscaper, and his wife Lubomyra "Luba" (née Spas), a schoolteacher.
[5] She has an older brother, Victor,
[6] and five younger siblings: Stephan, Nadia, Alexander, Laryssa (who was born with
spina bifida ),
[7] and
Taissa .
[8] Her maternal grandparents, Nadia (née Pletenciw; 1925–2014) and Theodor Spas (1921–1990), met at a displaced persons camp in
Karlsfeld during
World War II .
[9] As a child, Farmiga converted with her family from the
Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church to
Pentecostalism .
[10]
Farmiga considers herself to be "100%
Ukrainian American ".
[11] She was raised in an insular Ukrainian American community in
Irvington, New Jersey , with
Ukrainian being her first language.
[4] She did not learn English until she started kindergarten at age six.
[12] When she was 12, the family moved from Irvington to
Whitehouse Station, New Jersey .
[13] She attended St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic School in
Newark, New Jersey , and toured with a
Ukrainian folk-dancing ensemble , Syzokryli, during her teen years.
[14]
[15] In addition to being a semi-professional folk dancer, she is also a classically trained pianist.
[16]
[17] Farmiga was a member of
Plast .
[18]
In 1991, she graduated from
Hunterdon Central Regional High School .
[19] During her
junior year there, she found acting after being benched during a varsity soccer game; her friend convinced her to audition for the school production of
The Vampire , and she won the lead role of Lady Margaret.
[20] Farmiga went on to study
Theatre at
Syracuse University , and graduated with a
Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1995.
[21] In her final year at Syracuse, she portrayed Nina Zarechnaya in
The Seagull at the
Kennedy Center American College Theater Festival , and the production won the top prize. Her drama professor, Gerardine Clark, stated: "We'd never have won had she not nailed the fourth act. A number of the judges told me that."
[7]
Career
1990s
In February 1996, Farmiga starred as
Miranda in the
American Conservatory Theater 's production of
The Tempest .
[22] That same year, she portrayed Anne Hartman in a production of
Good at
The Barrow Group .
[23] Farmiga made her
Broadway debut alongside
Ed Harris and
Daniel Massey in October 1996,
understudying the role of Emmi Straube in
Ronald Harwood 's play
Taking Sides .
[26] Following these stage roles, she co-starred in the
Hallmark Hall of Fame
western television film
Rose Hill in April 1997, portraying Emily Elliot.
[27]
Farmiga had a main role in
Fox 's short-lived fantasy adventure series
Roar (1997), alongside
Heath Ledger and
Sebastian Roché .
[28] The following year, she guest-starred in an episode of
NBC 's procedural drama series
Law & Order , portraying Lindsay Carson, the daughter of a convicted murderer who goes on her own killing spree.
[29] She made her feature film debut playing a supporting role alongside
Vince Vaughn and
Joaquin Phoenix in the drama-thriller
Return to Paradise (1998).
[30] Also that year, she had a guest appearance in the NBC drama series
Trinity , portraying Allison.
2000s
Farmiga's next film was the crime drama
The Opportunists (2000), in which she co-starred as Miriam Kelly, the daughter of
Christopher Walken 's character.
[31] She also had a supporting role as Lisa Tyler in the romantic drama
Autumn in New York (2000).
[32] The following year, Farmiga had a supporting role as Daphne Handlova in the action thriller
15 Minutes , alongside
Robert De Niro ,
[33] and co-starred in the drama film
Dust ,
[33] which premiered at the
2001 Venice Film Festival .
[34] Farmiga subsequently joined the main cast of NBC's short-lived procedural drama series
UC: Undercover , as Alex Cross. The series premiered in September 2001, and was cancelled after one season.
[35] She then appeared in the Hallmark fantasy television film
Snow White: The Fairest of Them All .
[33]
Farmiga had her first starring role in the romantic drama
Love in the Time of Money , which premiered at the 2002
Sundance Film Festival .
[36] In June 2002, she starred in
David Eldridge 's
Under the Blue Sky at the
Williamstown Theatre Festival .
[37] Farmiga next appeared as Lorena Fanchetti in the comedy-drama
Dummy (2003), alongside
Adrien Brody .
[38]
Farmiga at a screening of
The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas in November 2008
The following year, Farmiga had her breakthrough role as a drug-addicted mother, Irene Morrison, in the
independent drama film
Down to the Bone ,
[39] which premiered at Sundance in January 2004.
[40] Praising her performance,
Peter Travers of
Rolling Stone wrote: "If there were an ounce of taste left in Hollywood, the magnificent Vera Farmiga would be a front-runner for the Best Actress Oscar".
[41] She won the
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Actress , and earned a nomination for the
Independent Spirit Award for Best Female Lead .
[42]
Farmiga next appeared alongside
Hilary Swank and
Anjelica Huston in the
HBO drama film
Iron Jawed Angels (2004), as the Polish-American
suffragette
Ruza Wenclawska .
[43] Soon after, she had a supporting role in the 2004 film
Mind The Gap , in which she portrayed a woman who left her fiancé at the altar. She then starred as Detective Susan Branca in the short-lived
USA Network adaptation of the British crime drama series
Touching Evil .
[44]
[45]
Also in 2004, she had a supporting role as Jocelyne Jordan in the political thriller
The Manchurian Candidate , which also starred
Denzel Washington and
Meryl Streep .
[46] The following year, she co-starred in the fantasy drama
Neverwas with
Aaron Eckhart and
Ian McKellen , which premiered at the
2005 Toronto International Film Festival .
[47] Farmiga then appeared alongside
Leonardo DiCaprio and
Matt Damon as police psychiatrist Dr. Madolyn Madden in
Martin Scorsese 's crime drama
The Departed (2006).
[48] For her performance as Madolyn, Farmiga was nominated for the
Empire Award for Best Newcomer , and shared with her co-stars the nomination for the
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture .
[49] Soon after, she portrayed Dr. Charlie Brooks in the 2006 indie thriller,
The Hard Easy .
She next starred as Teresa Gazelle in
Wayne Kramer 's crime thriller
Running Scared ,
[50] and as the Romanian prostitute Oana in
Anthony Minghella 's romantic crime drama
Breaking and Entering (both in 2006).
[15] Farmiga subsequently landed the lead role of Sophie Lee in
Gina Kim 's romantic drama
Never Forever ,
[51] which premiered at the
2007 Sundance .
[52] G. Allen Johnson of the
San Francisco Chronicle praised her as "the best American actress you've never heard of".
[53] She next starred as Abby Cairn in the
psychological thriller film
Joshua (2007), with
Sam Rockwell ,
[54] and portrayed Fiona Ankany in the drama film
Quid Pro Quo ,
[55] which premiered at the
2008 Sundance . David Edelstein of
New York magazine stated that Farmiga's performance on the latter film was "scarily good", and added: "She's always visibly calculating, thinking better of something reckless she's about to do – then doing it anyway".
[56]
In September 2008, the historical drama
The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas , in which she portrayed Elsa Hoess, was released worldwide.
[57] Farmiga won the
British Independent Film Award for Best Actress for her performance.
[58] That same year, she starred in the war drama film
In Transit alongside
John Malkovich ,
[59] and portrayed
Central Intelligence Agency operative Erica Van Doren in the political thriller
Nothing But the Truth .
[60] The latter role earned Farmiga a nomination for the
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Supporting Actress .
[61]
In 2009, Farmiga portrayed the lead role of Kate Coleman in
Jaume Collet-Serra 's psychological thriller
Orphan .
[62] The film was co-produced by
Leonardo DiCaprio , who had starred with Farmiga in The Departed.
[48] Her performance was praised, with
Toby Young of
The Times writing that she "becomes more convincing as the story unfolds. By the end, she has you in the palm of her hand".
[63] She then appeared as Aurora de Valday in
Niki Caro 's romantic drama
The Vintner's Luck , which premiered at the
2009 Toronto International Film Festival .
[64]
[65]
Also in 2009, she co-starred as frequent flyer Alex Goran, opposite
George Clooney , in
Jason Reitman 's comedy-drama
Up in the Air .
[66]
Roger Ebert of the
Chicago Sun-Times praised Farmiga's performance, stating that she "is one of the warmest and most attractive women in the movies, or at least she plays one".
[67] She received nominations for the
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress ,
[68]
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role ,
[69]
BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role ,
[70]
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress ,
[71] and her second nomination for the
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Supporting Actress . On June 25, 2010, she was inducted into the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences .
[72]
2010s
Farmiga at the
Academy Awards in March 2010 Farmiga then starred in the
surrealist romantic comedy
Henry's Crime as stage actress Julie Ivanova,
[73] which premiered at the
2010 Toronto International Film Festival .
[74] She next played Capt. Colleen Goodwin in
Duncan Jones ' science fiction thriller film
Source Code ,
[75] which premiered at the 2011
South by Southwest .
[76] In 2010, Farmiga was offered a lead role in
Marc Forster 's action biopic
Machine Gun Preacher , but declined because she was pregnant.
[77]
During her second pregnancy, Farmiga made her
directorial debut with the micro-budget, Christian-themed drama
Higher Ground ,
[78] in which she starred as the protagonist, Corinne Walker.
[79] The film received "generally favorable reviews" on
review aggregator site
Metacritic
[80] and premiered at the
2011 Sundance .
[81] Many of her family members were involved in the production: Farmiga's sister
Taissa portrayed Corinne as a teenager, her husband
Renn Hawkey served as a producer and musical director, and her cousin
Adriana Farmiga served as an art curator. She received nominations in both acting and directing for the film, including the
Gotham Independent Film Award for Breakthrough Director ,
[82] and the
Satellite Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture .
[83] In his film review, critic Kirk Honeycutt of
The Hollywood Reporter noted: "Directing debuts by actors don't come any better than this".
[84] Of her performance,
Leonard Maltin of
IndieWire remarked that Farmiga "gives an honest, empathetic performance should come as no surprise; she is one of the most gifted and daring actresses of our time".
[85]
Her next role was the flaky New Age mother Wendy Whitman in the independent comedy-drama
Goats ,
[86] which opened at the
2012 Sundance .
[87] That same year, she portrayed CIA operative Catherine Linklater in
Daniel Espinosa 's action thriller
Safe House (2012).
[88] Farmiga starred opposite
Ryan Reynolds and, for the second time, Denzel Washington.
[89]
Farmiga's return to television came in 2013, when she began portraying
Norma Louise Bates , the mother of
Norman Bates , in A&E's drama-thriller series
Bates Motel .
[90] The series is a contemporary reboot of
Alfred Hitchcock 's classic horror film
Psycho (1960).
[91] For her performance, she won the 2013
Saturn Award for Best Actress on Television ,
[92] and the 2016
People's Choice Award for Favorite Cable TV Actress .
[93] She also received three nominations for the
Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actress in a Drama Series (2013–2015),
[94]
[95] as well as nominations for the 2013
Satellite Award for Best Actress – Television Series Drama ,
[96] the 2013
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series ,
[97] and the 2013
TCA Award for Individual Achievement in Drama .
[98] Tim Goodman of
The Hollywood Reporter called Farmiga's performance "superb" and
Mary McNamara of the
Los Angeles Times identified her as "the main reason [the series] is surprisingly good".
[99]
[100] In addition to starring, she served as a producer and later executive producer from the second season to its fifth and final season, which aired in 2017.
[101]
[102]
Farmiga at the
Paley Center for Media for
Bates Motel in May 2013
She next appeared in
James Wan 's horror film
The Conjuring (2013),
[103] which was met with critical and commercial success.
[104] The film became the second highest-grossing horror film of all time up to that date.
[105] Farmiga portrayed paranormal investigator and self-professed clairvoyant
Lorraine Warren , alongside
Patrick Wilson ,
[106] for which she was nominated for the
MTV Movie Award for Best Scared-As-Shit Performance .
[107] Sheri Linden of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that "Farmiga resonates an extraordinary sensitivity" in the role, while
Justin Chang of
Variety called her performance "moving" and highlighted her chemistry with Wilson as a "rock-solid rapport".
[108]
[109]
She reprised her role in the sequel,
The Conjuring 2 (2016), which was also directed by Wan. The film was the second released in the main series, but the third released within
The Conjuring Universe .
[110] Like its predecessor, The Conjuring 2 was met with a positive critical reception and commercial success,
[111] surpassing The Conjuring as the second highest-grossing horror film of all time.
[105]
Farmiga appeared as Edith Martin in the romantic comedy
At Middleton , with
Andy García and her sister Taissa.
[112] The film premiered at the
Seattle International Film Festival in May 2013.
[113]
[114] Also in 2013, she starred as Alice Bercovich in
Nae Caranfil 's Romanian-American comedy-drama
Closer to the Moon , based on the events of the
Ioanid Gang .
[115] Farmiga next co-starred in
David Dobkin 's drama film
The Judge (2014) as Samantha Powell, the love interest and high school girlfriend of
Robert Downey Jr. 's character.
[116]
She then starred as Eleanor Finch in
Ricky Gervais ' comedy
Special Correspondents , which premiered at the 2016
Tribeca Film Festival .
[117]
[118] She next appeared as Alise Firth in
Jordan Roberts ' adventure comedy-drama
Burn Your Maps ,
[119] which premiered at the
2016 Toronto International Film Festival . Farmiga co-starred as Dr. Nora Phillips in
Neill Blomkamp 's
BMW short film
The Escape (2016), alongside
Dakota Fanning and
Clive Owen .
[120] The following year, she executive produced the documentary film Unspoken , which premiered at the
Mill Valley Film Festival in October 2017.
[121]
Farmiga co-starred with
Liam Neeson in Jaume Collet-Serra's action thriller
The Commuter ,
[122] which was released in January 2018.
[123] Also in January 2018, she appeared as a politician in
Amazon 's sci-fi anthology series
Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams , in an episode directed by
Dee Rees .
[124]
[125] Farmiga then portrayed Laura Jaconi in
Shana Feste 's comedy-drama film
Boundaries , which premiered in March 2018 at
South by Southwest .
[126]
Next in 2018, Farmiga starred as neo-Nazi group leader Shareen Krager in Guy Nattiv's racial drama
Skin , which premiered at the
Toronto International Film Festival in September,
[127] and portrayed Oletha "Lee" Hart in Jason Reitman's
Gary Hart biopic
The Front Runner , opposite
Hugh Jackman , which was released in November 2018.
[128]
In March 2019, she starred as Jane Doe alongside
John Goodman in
Rupert Wyatt 's science fiction thriller
Captive State .
[129] In May 2019, she portrayed Dr. Emma Russell in the third installment of the
MonsterVerse film franchise,
Godzilla: King of the Monsters , directed by
Michael Dougherty .
[130] Also in May 2019, Farmiga portrayed prosecutor Elizabeth Lederer in
Ava DuVernay 's
Netflix crime drama miniseries
When They See Us , based on the
Central Park jogger case .
[131] For her performance, she was nominated for the
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Movie .
[132] In June 2019, she reprised her role as Lorraine Warren in the horror sequel film
Annabelle Comes Home .
[133]
2020s
In May 2021, Farmiga made a special guest appearance in
Netflix 's drama limited series
Halston , based on the life of the
fashion designer of the same name , opposite
Ewan McGregor in the title role.
[134] She then reprised her role as Lorraine Warren in
The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It , released in June 2021.
[135] In September 2021, Farmiga appeared as
Livia Soprano in the film prequel to
The Sopranos , titled
The Many Saints of Newark , directed by
Alan Taylor .
[136] Following this, she starred as Eleanor Bishop, the mother of
Hailee Steinfeld 's character, in the
Marvel Cinematic Universe superhero miniseries
Hawkeye , which premiered on
Disney+ in November 2021.
[137]
In August 2022, Farmiga starred in the lead role of Dr. Anna Pou in the critically acclaimed
Apple TV+ limited series
Five Days at Memorial ,
[138] an adaptation of the
book of the same name by
Sheri Fink .
[139] In 2023, she made a cameo appearance as Lorraine Warren in a
mid-credits scene of the horror sequel
The Nun II , using a scene cut from The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It .
[140] That same year, Farmiga had roles in
Ava DuVernay 's drama film
Origin , an adaptation of the non-fiction book
Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by
Isabel Wilkerson ,
[141] and the comedy-drama film
Ezra , directed by
Tony Goldwyn .
[142] She is set to star in the
Heaven's Gate Cult biopic The Leader , in which she will portray group founder
Bonnie Nettles .
[143] She will also voice a character in the upcoming animated series
Gossamer , based on the novel of the same name by
Lois Lowry .
[144]
Personal life
Farmiga in 2010, when she was pregnant
Farmiga met actor
Sebastian Roché while starring together in the fantasy adventure television series
Roar ; they
eloped to
the Bahamas after it ended in 1997,
[28] and were divorced in 2004.
[28] She began dating
Deadsy musician
Renn Hawkey , after being introduced by mutual friend
Allen Hughes on the set of Touching Evil .
[18] They married on September 13, 2008, when Farmiga was five months pregnant with their first child.
[28] She gave birth to a son, Fynn, in January 2009 in
Rhinebeck, New York
[145] and a daughter, Gytta, in November 2010.
[146] The family owns homes in
Hudson Valley ,
New York
[147] and
Vancouver ,
British Columbia .
[4]
Farmiga's sister-in-law is actress and photographer
Molly Hawkey .
[148] She is close friends with her Bates Motel co-star
Freddie Highmore , who is
godfather to her son,
[149] and with her Conjuring co-star
Patrick Wilson .
[150]
Farmiga is a
nondenominational Christian ; in a 2011 interview with
Christianity Today , Farmiga said:
I grew up in a Ukrainian Catholic-turned-Christian household, and that is my family's faith. My father instilled in me ... to define God, to define holiness for myself. That was my parents' number one lesson for us. I don't belong to any particular church, but I'm someone who will be able to walk into any place of worship, any house of worship, and have a direct correspondence.
[151]
Filmography and awards
According to the review-aggregate site
Rotten Tomatoes and the box office site
Box Office Mojo , Farmiga's highest-grossing and most critically acclaimed films include
Down to the Bone (2004),
The Manchurian Candidate (2004),
The Departed (2006),
The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas (2008),
Orphan (2009),
Up in the Air (2009),
Source Code (2011),
Safe House (2012),
The Conjuring (2013),
The Conjuring 2 (2016),
The Commuter (2018),
Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019),
Annabelle Comes Home (2019), and
The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (2021).
[152]
[153]
For her role in Up in the Air (2009) Farmiga gained nominations for an
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress , a
Golden Globe Award for
Best Supporting Actress , a
BAFTA for
Best Actress in a Supporting Role , and a
Screen Actors Guild Award for
Outstanding Female Actor in a Supporting Role .
[68]
[71]
[70]
[69] Farmiga received nominations for a
Primetime Emmy Award for
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for her role in
Bates Motel (2013–2017).
[92]
[97]
[98] For her performance in the miniseries
When They See Us (2019), Farmiga received her second Primetime Emmy Award nomination, in the category of
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or Movie .
[132]
References
^
a
b
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^
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a
b
c Rohan, Virginia (March 3, 2014).
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a
b Tucker, Reed (March 7, 2010).
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a
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^
a
b Morrison, Mark (February 12, 2014).
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^
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^
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[24]
[25]
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^
a
b
c
d Brown, Mick (August 30, 2008).
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External links
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