Linh Dan Pham
Linh Dan Pham | |
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File:Linh Dan Pham 2013 2.jpg
Linh Dan Pham at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival
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Born | 1974 (age 49–50) Saigon, South Vietnam |
Linh Dan Pham (born Phạm Linh Đan 1974) is a Vietnamese-French actress.
Biography
She was born in Saigon, South Vietnam, but moved with her family to France a year later, just before the fall of Saigon to North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces, and grew up in Paris. She has also lived in New York, The Hague, Singapore and Vietnam and now resides in London.[citation needed]
She is known most for her role as an orphan of the Nguyen Dynasty adopted by a French plantation owner in the 1992 Oscar-winning French epic Indochine, starring alongside Catherine Deneuve. Pham received a César nomination for most promising actress for that performance.
Despite appearing in a few other productions afterwards, Pham eventually decided to take a decade off from acting, focusing instead on her studies. She studied commerce and worked as a senior marketing manager in Vietnam after graduation.
In 2000, she married Andrew Huntley, a British investment banker whom she had met while they were both living in Ho Chi Minh City.
She began her return to film when she trained in acting at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute in New York.[citation needed]
In 2005, Pham made a return to acting with her role in the BAFTA and César winning French film The Beat That My Heart Skipped, opposite Romain Duris for which she was nominated again for the most promising actress César award (and won). Her lines are spoken in Vietnamese, and though many people believe[who?][citation needed] she plays a Chinese character because she is introduced by a Chinese musician friend who knows her from Beijing, in fact she plays a Vietnamese who studied music at the conservatoire in Beijing. In the film her friend claims that she can speak Chinese, Vietnamese, and a little English. In reality Pham speaks French, English and Vietnamese fluently.
In that same year Pham appeared on a popular Vietnamese diaspora music variety show (Trung Tam Asia) where she was honored for her work.
In 2005, Pham moved back to Europe to pursue her acting career. Since then she has appeared in lead or supporting roles mostly in films such as Dante 01, Pars vite et reviens tard (Have Mercy on Us All), Mr. Nobody, Le Bruit des Gens Autour, Le bal des actrices and Tout ce qui brille.
She starred in her first Vietnamese production when she appeared as Cam in the 2009 film Adrift ("Chơi vơi") by the director Bui Thac Chuyen, which won the FIPRESCI award at the 66th Venice International Film Festival. The film deals with social and personal issues in modern-day Vietnam, which are not often portrayed in Vietnamese cinema, such as homosexuality, and loneliness. In the film Pham speaks in Vietnamese with a fluent Northern accent.[1]
She had a cameo role in the 2010 The Wachowskis produced action thriller Ninja Assassin, playing an assassin sent to kill the film's hero played by the Korean singer Rain.
Filmography
- Indochine (1992)
- Jamila (1994)
- The Beat That My Heart Skipped (2005)
- Gamblers (2005)
- Les hommes de coeur (TV series 2006)
- Zoo Doctor: My Mom the Vet (TV series 2006)
- This Life + 10 (TV movie 2007)
- Have Mercy on Us All (2007)
- Dante 01 (2008)
- Le bruit des gens autour (2008)
- The Ball of the Actresses (2009)
- Adrift (2009)
- Mr. Nobody (2009)
- Ninja Assassin (2009)
- Pigalle, la nuit (TV series 2009)
- Tout ce qui brille (2010)
- Le Grand Méchant Loup(2013)
- Divin Enfant (2014)
- The Very Private Life of Mister Sim (2015)
References
External links
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- Commons category link from Wikidata
- 1974 births
- Actresses of Vietnamese descent
- César Award winners
- Vietnamese emigrants to France
- Living people
- People from Ho Chi Minh City
- 20th-century French actresses
- 21st-century French actresses
- French film actresses
- Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute alumni