Alice Krige's Autograph from Pasedena Supermegafest ('97)
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Alice Krige
Alice Krige, 1 October 2006
Born
Alice Maud Krige
June 28, 1954 (1954-06-28 ) (age 56)
Upington , Cape Province , Union of South Africa
Occupation
Actress
Years active
1980–present
Spouse
Paul Schoolman (1988-present)
Alice Maud Krige (pronounced KREE-guh ; born 28 June 1954) is a South African actress . Her first feature film role was as the Gilbert and Sullivan singer Sybil Gordon in the 1981 Academy Award -winning film Chariots of Fire . Since then she has played an variety of roles in a number of genres.
Krige introduced the role of the Borg Queen in the motion picture Star Trek: First Contact , and reprised the role for multiple episodes of the television series Star Trek: Voyager . A year after the series ended she reprised her role again in Borg Invasion 4-D at the Star Trek: The Experience , located inside the Hilton, Las Vegas Nevada, of which is no longer active since September of 2008.
[edit ] Early life and family
Krige was born in Upington , Cape Province , Union of South Africa , the daughter of Pat, a psychologist , and Louis Krige, a physician .[ 1] [ 2] She left for London , England , in 1976. Initially, she had plans to become a clinical psychologist but turned to acting after an experience in an acting class at Rhodes University . She then attended the Central School of Speech and Drama in London.
Krige is married to the writer and director Paul Schoolman.[ 2]
[edit ] Career
Krige made her professional debut on British television in 1979 and appeared in the television movie A Tale of Two Cities . She went on to play Sybil Gordon in Chariots of Fire and Eva Galli/Alma Mobley in Ghost Story , both in 1981.
She received a Plays and Players Award, as well as a Laurence Olivier Award for Most Promising Newcomer, after appearing in a 1981 West End theatre production of George Bernard Shaw 's Arms and the Man .[ 2] This early theatrical success allowed her to also work with the Royal Shakespeare Company .
Krige played Bathsheba in King David (1985) and Mary Shelley in Haunted Summer (1988). She appeared on stage in plays such as Thomas Otway 's Venice Preserv'd . She appeared in what she called "tons of TV" in both the United States and the United Kingdom . This includes made for television movies from Baja Oklahoma (1988) and Ladykiller (1992), to mini-series such as Ellis Island (1984) and The Scarlet and the Black (1993).
Krige has performed in several horror feature films, including Ghost Story , Sleepwalkers , Stay Alive , and Silent Hill .
In Star Trek: First Contact , she played the Borg Queen , who attempts to assimilate Earth into the Borg collective. She won Best Supporting Actress at the 1997 Saturn Awards for that role.[ 2] Krige returned to this character in the Star Trek game Star Trek: Armada II and in the Star Trek: Voyager series finale "Endgame " in 2001. (Susanna Thompson assayed the role in 2 two-part episodes of Voyager between 1999 and 2000).
Her science fiction career has also expanded into television, with prominent roles in miniseries adaptations of Dinotopia and Frank Herbert's Children of Dune .
In April 2004 Krige was awarded an honorary Litt.D. degree from Rhodes University .[ 2]
[edit ] Filmography
[edit ] References
[edit ] External links
Categories : 1954 births | Alumni of the Central School of Speech and Drama | British film actors | B
On Mar-23-11 at 08:02:16 PDT, seller added the following information: