Bianca Amato
Bianca Amato | |
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File:Bianca Amato -Private Lives (2012).jpg
Bianca Amato as Amanda in the Huntington Theatre Company production of Private Lives (2012)
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Born | Cape Town, South Africa |
Education | University of Cape Town |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1998-present |
Bianca Amato is a South African actress known for her work in American theatre, as a prolific audiobook performer and for her portrayal of Philippa De Villiers in the original cast of the South African soap opera Isidingo.
Contents
Career
Amato was a member of the original cast of the long running South African soap opera Isidingo, portraying Philippa De Villiers from 1998 to 2001. The role, a "feisty young Englishwoman who was romantically involved with a black mine manager", has been called "groundbreaking and big news in post apartheid South African television",[1] and the storyline cited as "the first interracial romance depicted on South African television."[2] Of the experience Amato said, "It was wonderful to be part of the slow but healthy process that shifted people's attitudes."[2] Her performance in Isidingo earned Amato an Avante for Best Actress in a Television Series.[1]
In 2002, Amato was granted a United States Permanent Resident Card as an "Alien of Extraordinary Ability" in the arts and emigrated to the United States.[2] After appearing in a 2002 episode of the HBO series Sex and the City, she played several leading roles with the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota between 2003 and 2005.[1][2] Since 2009 Amato has guest starred in several U.S. TV series.[3][4] Amato portrays Delia Alexander in the PlayStation Network series Powers, which premiered on March 10, 2015.
Amato appeared in the original Broadway production of Tom Stoppard's Tony Award-winning trio of plays The Coast of Utopia (2006-2007),[1][5] as well as the 2013-2014 Broadway revival of Shakespeare's Macbeth.[6][7] She also understudied the roles of Hannah Jarvis and Lady Croom in the 2011 Broadway revival of Stoppard's Arcadia.[8] Off-Broadway, Amato has appeared in Bill Irwin's Mr. Fox: A Rumination (2004),[9][10] and as Emma in Trumpery (2007).[11][12] She later costarred as Calantha in The Broken Heart in 2012,[13][14][15] and played the leading role of Olga Knipper in Neva in 2013.[16][17] Amato also starred as Amanda in a production of Noël Coward's Private Lives directed by Maria Aitken, first presented in 2012 at the Huntington Theatre Company in Boston,[18][19] and again in 2014 at the Shakespeare Theatre Company's Lansburgh Theatre in Washington, D. C.[20][21][22][23] In 2014 she also portrayed Regan in the Theatre for a New Audience production of King Lear in New York.[24][25][26][27][28][29]
Amato has narrated over 40 audiobooks,[3] including Philippa Gregory's entire Cousins' War series of historical novels and Charles Stross' 2008 Hugo Award-nominated science fiction novel Saturn's Children.[13][30] She also voiced the 2006 gothic novel The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield,[31] which had risen to No. 1 on The New York Times Best Seller list in its second week of publication.[2][32][33]
Television
Year | Project | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | The Adventures of Sinbad | Casendra | Episode: "The Village Vanishes" (Season 1) | [3][4] |
1997 | The Adventures of Sinbad | Shirez | Episode: "Ali Rashid and the Thieves" (Season 2) | [3] |
1998-2001 | Isidingo | Philippa De Villiers | Original cast | [1][3] |
1999 | Gegen den Wind | Jenny | Episode: "Sprung ins Risiko" (Season 4) | [3] |
2002 | Sex and the City | Julia Afton | Episode: "Critical Condition" (Season 5) | [1][3] |
2009 | The Good Wife | Ellen Whitton | Episode: "Unprepared" (Season 1) | [3][4] |
2010 | Blue Bloods | Cindy Perry | Episode: "Re-Do" (Season 1) | [3][4] |
2013 | The Big C | Susan Rand | (3) Episodes: "You Can't Take It with You", "Quality of Death", "The Finale" (Season 4) | |
2013 | Unforgettable | Alison Sonnenland | Episode: "Bigtime" (Season 2) | [4] |
2014 | Alpha House | Senator Alice Graves | (2) Episodes: "The Civility Zone", "Bugged" (Season 2) |
Theatre
Year | Production | Role | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | Top Girls | Marlene | Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis, MN | [1][2][3] |
2003 | Pride and Prejudice | Elizabeth Bennet | Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis, MN | [1][2][3] |
2004 | Pygmalion | Eliza Doolittle | Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis, MN | [1][2][3] |
2004 | Mr. Fox: A Rumination | Columbine/Mattie/Young Woman/Maffitt | Signature Theatre Company (Peter Norton Space, Off-Broadway) | [3][9][10] |
2005 | As You Like It | Rosalind | Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis, MN | [1][2][3] |
2006 | The Importance of Being Earnest | Gwendolen Fairfax | Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM Harvey Theater, Brooklyn, NY) | [22][34][35][36] |
2006-2007 | The Coast of Utopia (Part 1: Voyage) | Miss Chamberlain | Vivian Beaumont Theater (Broadway) | [1][2][5] |
2006-2007 | The Coast of Utopia (Part 2: Shipwreck) | Emma Herwegh | Vivian Beaumont Theater (Broadway) | [1][2][5] |
2007 | The Coast of Utopia (Part 3: Salvage) | Joanna Kinkel | Vivian Beaumont Theater (Broadway) | [1][2][5] |
2007 | Trumpery | Emma | Atlantic Theater Company (Linda Gross Theater, Off-Broadway) | [3][11][12] |
2010 | A Midsummer Night's Dream | Titania/Hippolyta | Pittsburgh Public Theater (O'Reilly Theater, Pittsburgh, PA) | [37] |
2010 | The Taming of the Shrew | Katharina | Chicago Shakespeare Theater (Courtyard Theater, Chicago, IL) | [38] |
2012 | The Broken Heart | Calantha | Theatre for a New Audience (The Duke on 42nd Street, Off-Broadway) | [3][13][14][15] |
2012 | Private Lives | Amanda | Huntington Theatre Company (Boston, MA); Elliot Norton Award; IRNE Award nomination | [18][19][39][40][41] |
2013 | Neva | Olga Knipper | Joseph Papp Public Theater (Anspacher Theater, Off-Broadway) | [16][17] |
2013-2014 | Macbeth | Lady Macduff | Vivian Beaumont Theater (Broadway) | [6][7] |
2014 | King Lear | Regan | Theatre for a New Audience (Polonsky Shakespeare Center, Brooklyn, NY) | [24][25][26][27][28][29] |
2014 | Private Lives | Amanda | Shakespeare Theatre Company (Lansburgh Theatre, Washington, D. C.); Emery Battis Award | [20][21][22][23][42] |
2014 | Shakespeare at Fenway | Beatrice/Much Ado About Nothing | Commonwealth Shakespeare Company (Fenway Park, Boston, MA) | [43] |
Selected audiobooks
Year | Title | Author | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | The Queen's Fool | Philippa Gregory | Novel originally printed in 2003 | [44] |
2006 | Listening for Lions | Gloria Whelan | AudioFile Earphones Award, Audie Award; Novel originally printed in 2005 | [13][45] |
2006 | The Boleyn Inheritance | Philippa Gregory | Abridged (2006) and unabridged (2011) versions | [2][46][47] |
2007 | The Thirteenth Tale | Diane Setterfield | Novel originally printed in 2006 | [2][31] |
2008 | The Other Queen | Philippa Gregory | Abridged version | [48] |
2009 | Saturn's Children | Charles Stross | Novel originally printed in 2008 | [30] |
2009 | The White Queen | Philippa Gregory | Abridged version[49] | [50] |
2009 | Her Fearful Symmetry | Audrey Niffenegger | [51] | |
2009 | The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë | Syrie James | AudioFile Earphones Award, Audie Award | [13][52] |
2010 | The Red Queen | Philippa Gregory | AudioFile Earphones Award | [53] |
2010 | Dracula in Love | Karen Essex | AudioFile Earphones Award | [13][54] |
2011 | The Lady of the Rivers | Philippa Gregory | AudioFile Earphones Award | [55] |
2011 | The Women of the Cousins' War | Philippa Gregory David Baldwin Michael Jones |
Non-fiction | [56] |
2011 | Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness | Alexandra Fuller | [13][57] | |
2012 | The Kingmaker's Daughter | Philippa Gregory | AudioFile Earphones Award | [58] |
2013 | The White Princess | Philippa Gregory | AudioFile Earphones Award | [59] |
2014 | The King's Curse | Philippa Gregory | AudioFile Earphones Award | [60] |
Acclaim
Charles Isherwood of The New York Times wrote in his review of 2012's The Broken Heart that "Amato exudes imperial grandeur as Calantha",[14] and Andy Propst of TheaterMania noted that "audiences will also find themselves intrigued by Amato's warmly imperious turn as the Spartan princess."[15] In 2013 Isherwood called the cast of Neva "terrifically good", noting Amato to be "captivating from the opening moments" and writing that she "manages to make Olga’s self-dramatizing histrionics absurdly funny, but also tinged with real pathos."[16] In 2012 The Boston Globe called Amato and her costar James Waterston "just about perfect" in their roles as Amanda and Elyot in Private Lives, praising their "style, dexterity, subtlety, and sizzling chemistry."[18] The review went on to say that "Amato cuts a regal, soignée figure — she can wring a laugh out of a single word, like 'inveterate' — but she is also skilled at physical comedy."[18] BroadwayWorld.com called Amato and Waterston "an unparalleled pair" in 2014, adding that "Amato is both grit and glamour, portraying a character that is brusque for her time, but immense fun to watch."[23] Ben Brantley of The New York Times called Amato's 2014 performance in King Lear "superb",[25] and the Brooklyn Daily Eagle called her Regan "icily alluring".[26] Joe Dziemianowicz of the New York Daily News wrote of the performance that "as second-born Regan, Bianca Amato’s clipped and exasperated speech and body language suggest a woman who’s up to her eyeballs in middle-child neglect. She’s Jan Brady in period clothes."[27]
Awards
Amato won the Vita Award for Best Newcomer for Under Milkwood and the Fleur du Cap Theatre Award for Best Supporting Actress for Greek, both performed at the Baxter Theatre in Cape Town, South Africa. Her portrayal of Philippa De Villiers on Isidingo earned her an Avante for Best Actress in a Television Series and a Duku Duku Award for South Africa’s Most Popular Actress.[1] She later won the Star Tribune Award for best performance of 2004 for playing Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[1] Her performance in Private Lives earned her an Elliot Norton Award for Outstanding Actress in 2013,[39] and the Shakespeare Theatre Company's Emery Battis Award in 2014.[42] Amato was also nominated for a 2013 Best Actress IRNE Award for Private Lives.[40][41]
Amato has received eight AudioFile Earphones Awards and two Audie Awards for her audiobook performances.[33][45][52]
Personal life
Amato was born in Cape Town, South Africa.[2] The daughter of "politically active parents", she "grew up keenly aware of the 'deep, deep troubles' of apartheid", and as a teen was a member of a left-wing organization called Pupils Awareness and Action Group.[2] Amato graduated from the University of Cape Town.[1][3]
References
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ The unabridged version of The White Queen is narrated by Susan Lyons.
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External links
- Bianca Amato at the Internet Movie Database
- Bianca Amato at the Internet Broadway DatabaseLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Bianca Amato at the Internet Off-Broadway Database