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Neil LaBute was director. See more ». Height: 5' 6" 1. Spouse: Daniel Craig 1 child. Children: Aronofsky, Henry Chance See more ». Relatives: Weisz, Minnie sibling. Edit Did You Know? Personal Quote: You just have to play every scene honestly and forget about a reaction and what the audience is going to think. I think the more seriously you take something, the more funny it might be. Trivia: Studying English at Cambridge University, Weisz formed the Talking Tongues theater company and at 's Edinburgh Festival won a student drama award for a play she wrote and acted in.
In fact, it's another condition of the interview that I won't ask her about Craig. Anyway, it'd be pretty hard for her to, given the circumstances: he told a magazine this month that talking about her would be "like shooting [her] in the back". Henry, on the other hand, her son, sitting in the back seat of his car with his nanny, is desperate to insert himself into the interview.
At one point when Weisz is talking about the lack of female directors in Hollywood, a small voice pipes up: "What's female? And then, "Yes, that's right. It means there's enough boys. Still, it's a vivid illustration of what's involved in being a working mother.
But then for every single working mother in the world it's complicated and difficult. I feel like I'm one of the many working mothers. And I only have one child. I know working mums who have three or four. It's definitely a challenge but it's a wonderful challenge to be able to do both. Weisz was brought UP in Hampstead Garden Suburb by her mother, a psychotherapist from Vienna, and her father, a Hungarian inventor, and I wonder if the fact that her mother was a psychotherapist has made her think about the way she's bringing up her own child.
For me, being a mum has been a really, really instinctive thing. As is acting. She's not sure, she says, where the drive to perform sprang from. I wasn't getting up on tables and singing.
It was more of a secret, really. I don't know. For me it's all about disappearing. When people think of performing they usually think of show-offs, but I think of it more that you disappear into somebody else. In fact her teenage years were fairly troubled, though she's reluctant to talk about it. Her parents divorced.
She went through three expensive private girls' schools North London Collegiate and Benenden, before settling at St Paul's. It's usually said that she was expelled from the first two, but the last time the Guardian printed that, her mother wrote in to say it wasn't true.
She had, she says, "a problem with authority", and when I point out that in women that's usually to do with an issue with their father, she says, "Goodness! I don't think there's anything wrong with a bit of healthy disrespect.
Her mother had wanted to be an actress herself in her youth: she was the one who queued for tickets for King Lear at the National on behalf of her daughter in , and seeing it "was one of the reasons I was inspired to act", says Weisz.
Seeing, that is, one actor, in particular: Bill Nighy. It was just like Mick Jagger came on stage or something. It was pretty extraordinary. And two and a half decades on, she's finally getting the chance to act with him. A proper fan. I'd go and see him in things and then go backstage and knock on the door and he's always said to me that I liked him before anyone else. And we've always said, 'Let's find something to do together. Until David [Hare] offered us Page Eight. So it's been a really long time coming.
A couple of decades. The result is a spy thriller of the sort that simply doesn't get made any more. Or at least, not as this one is, for TV. Nighy is Johnny Worricker, an old-school MI5 agent — decent, uncorrupted, increasingly cast adrift — who's being forced to deal with the realities of the post-Iraq world.
It's a big subject — the post-Blairite realpolitik of how a government deals with its own intelligence agencies. And it has a truly stellar cast. It's Hare's first directorial outing for 14 years, and when it premiered at the Edinburgh Film Festival earlier this year, the Guardian commended the "effortlessly world-weary chemistry between Nighy and Gambon". And Weisz is as magnetic on screen as she always is.
It's hard to take your eyes off her, as she inhabits the kind of character that in recent years she's made her own: a woman of passion and commitment. The Guardian , however, noted, that "the year age gap between Nighy and Weisz is the kind of thing that could draw ridicule.
Weisz bristles when I mention this. Do you know? I'm Fertility in women gradually decreases beginning at around age 32 and decreases more rapidly after age 37, according to the American College Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Another study puts the percentage of abnormal eggs as high as 90 percent, increasing the potential for miscarriages or birth defects, according to The Cut.
Westphal works with a growing number of women in the Bay Area and nationally who have opted to have their eggs frozen when they are in 20s and 30s so they will have quality eggs available when they decide to have children when they are older — usually after they have established their careers and are in relationships.
Parenting magazine said that most women who get pregnant close to age 50 do so with the help of donor eggs and in vitro fertilization. Older men face decreases in semen quality and an increase in chromosomal abnormalities.
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