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In 1988, Whitaker was named Best Actor at
The Cannes Film Festival for his portrayal of jazz legend
Charlie Parker in Clint Eastwoods Bird,
a role for which he also received a Golden-Globe nomination.
Whitaker earned widespread recognition for his performance
as Judy, the hostage British soldier in Neil Jordans
Academy-Award winning film The Crying Game. On
television, Whitaker garnered a CableAce Award nomination
for his performance in the Showtime original film Last
Light, directed by Kiefer Sutherland. He also starred
in the HB0 presentation Criminal Justice, for
which he earned a CableAce Award nomination, and The
Enemy Within, for which Whitaker received a Screen Actors
Guild nomination. Whitaker also executive produced Anne Rices
Feast of All Saints for Showtime. His other credits
include Witness Protection for HBO, Light
It Up, Phenomenon, opposite John Travolta,
Species, Smoke, Robert Altmans
Ready to Wear, Jasons Lyric, Platoon,
Good Morning Vietnam, Consenting Adults,
Stakeout, The Color of Money, Johnny
Handsome, Downtown, Diary of a Hit
Man, Body Snatchers, Vision Quest
and Fast Times at Ridgemont High. Whitaker made
his feature film directing debut with the critically acclaimed,
box-office hit Waiting to Exhale for Twentieth
Century Fox, starring Angela Bassett, Whitney Houston, Lela
Rochon and Loretta Devine. He first gained recognition as
a director for his debut film, the 1993 HBO original Strapped,
for which he received Best New Director honors
at the Toronto Film Festival. His last film was the Twentieth
Century Fox film Hope Floats, starring Sandra
Bullock.
Whitakers multimedia company, Spirit
Dance Entertainment, includes film, television and music production.
Spirit Dance Entertainment is both US based and UK based.
Spirit Dance in London, SD4UK, works with FilmFour mentoring
black and Asian filmmakers. Whitaker will direct and produce
feature films under the companys first-look deal with
Twentieth Century Fox. They also have a first look deal with
HBO for television films. Whitaker works closely with a number
of charitable organizations. He serves as an Honorary Board
Member for Penny Lane, an organization that provides assistance
to abused teenagers. He is also involved with 4-D All-Stars,
a motivational mentor program for teenagers as well as The
Watts Cinema Project.
KATIE HOLMES ( Pamela McFadden) was
born and raised in Toledo, Ohio. She began acting in high
school theater productions but didn't believe she had a chance
at a professional acting career living in the Midwest. Fate
intervened, and while attending a national modeling and talent
convention in New York City, she met a manager who encouraged
her to come to Los Angeles for television's pilot season.
Holmes landed the part of "Joey" on the current
WB hit "Dawson's Creek. Co- starring with James
Van Der Beek, Joshua Jackson and Michelle Williams, the show
gained much attention in its first season and was the highest
rated show on the network. Shot on location in Wilmington,
North Carolina, the show just began production on its fifth
season.
Holmes recently wrapped production for the
independent film Pieces of April starring opposite
Sean Patrick Thomas, and on the film Singing Detectives
opposite Mel Gibson and Ronert Downey Jr. She was recently
seen in Sam Raimis The Gift opposite Cate
Blanchet, Keanu Reeves, Greg Kinnear and Hillary Swank, and
in Curtis Hansons Wonder Boys opposite Michael
Douglas, Frances McDormand, Robert Downey Jr. and Tobey Maguire.
Holmes other feature films include Ang Lee's The
Ice Storm, Doug Liman's Go, Kevin Williamson's
Teaching Miss Tingle and the thriller Disturbing
Behavior. Holmes will next be seen in the thriller Abandon
in which she stars opposite Benjamin Bratt.
RADHA MITCHELL ( Kelly Shepard) is
best known for her performances in "Pitch Black,"
"High Art," "Love & Other Catastrophes"
as well as the Independent Spirit Award-winning film "Everything
Put Together." Mitchell is currently filming Miramax's
"Neverland," directed by Marc Forster ("Monster's
Ball"), in which she plays Johnny Depp's wife. The film
is the true story of author James M. Barrie's creation of
"Peter Pan." FilmColony and Key Light Entertainment
will produce. Mitchell recently completed production in Australia
on director Richard Franklin's ("Brilliant Lies")
"Visitors." In that film, Mitchell stars as Georgia
Perry, the first woman to sail around the world by herself
and due to her solitude, slowly lost her mind and believed
she encountered "visitors" during her voyage. The
film is being made by Bayside Pictures.
Her additional upcoming films include: Screen
Gems' "Shearer's Breakfast" with Barry Watson, Josh
Lukas and Kevin Anderson; the independent feature "I
Fought the Law" opposite Kiefer Sutherland and Anthony
LaPaglia; and "Nobody's Baby" with Gary Oldman and
Skeet Ulrich, which premiered at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival.
Last year, Mitchell had a starring role alongside Hank Azaria,
Leelee Sobieski and Donald Sutherland in director Jon Avnet's
four-hour miniseries about Jewish fighters in the Warsaw Ghetto,
"Uprising. Mitchell starred in the box-office hit
"Pitch Black, opposite Vin Diesel and Cole Hauser.
Her performance in "Everything Put Together," which
premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2000, garnered
her rave reviews. The film, which, Mitchell also produced
along with Sean Furst for director Marc Forster, was nominated
for a 2001 Independent Spirit Award for Best Feature Under
$500,000. Mitchell gave a memorable performance as Syd, the
young editorial assistant who falls in love with Ally Sheedy's
heroine addicted photographer character, in Lisa Choldenko's
critically acclaimed drama "High Art. Her role
in Emma-Kate Croghan's romantic comedy "Love and Other
Catastrophes" was highly praised at both Cannes and Sundance
Film Festivals. She can also be seen in "Cowboys and
Angels," which premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival,
opposite Mia Kirshner and Adam Trese.
Born and raised in Melbourne, Australia,
Mitchell began her acting career while still in high school.
She began her career working in Australian television, then
films. Her first film to appear at the Sundance Film Festival
was "The Sleeping Beauties." She currently resides
in Los Angeles.
KIEFER SUTHERLAND (The Caller) currently
stars in the critically acclaimed Fox drama, "24,"
for which he won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a
Drama Series and garnered an Emmy nomination for Best Actor
in a Drama Series. The show will premiere its second season
in October. Last year, Sutherland completed production on
the Showtime film "Red Door," directed by Matia
Karrell, and Paradise Found, directed by Mario
Andreazcchio, in which he portrays the world famous post-impressionist
artist Paul Gauguin.
Upcoming, Sutherland appears in the World
War II drama To End All Wars, based on the best-selling
book, Through the Valley of the Kwai, which is an account
of life as a POW in a Southeast Asian prison camp. The film
also stars Robert Carlyle, Ciaran McMenarrin and Mark Strong
and successfully screened at both the Toronto and Telluride
Film Festivals this year. He will also be seen in Dead
Heat, directed by Mark Malone. In 1998, Sutherland starred
in Showtimes critically-acclaimed original picture,
"A Soldier's Sweetheart" with Skeet Ulrich and Georgina
Cates, which premiered at the 1998 Toronto Film Festivals
Gala Screening. In 1997, Sutherland co-starred with William
Hurt and Rufus Sewell in "Dark City." Directed by
Alex Proyas, "Dark City" was a special presentation
at the Cannes Film Festival. Sutherland also added his second
directorial credit and starred in "Truth or Consequences"
alongside Kevin Pollak, Mykelti Williamson, Rod Steiger and
Martin Sheen. In the 1996 thriller "Eye for an Eye,"
directed by John Schlesinger, Sutherland portrayed an unremorseful,
brutal murderer opposite Sally Field and Ed Harris. Later
that summer, he co-starred with Samuel L. Jackson, Sandra
Bullock and Matthew McConaughey in the screen adaptation of
John Grisham's novel, "A Time to Kill."
In 1993, Sutherland starred in "The
Three Musketeers," based on the classic tale by Alexandre
Dumas. The same year, he made his directorial debut in the
critically acclaimed Showtime film "Last Light,"
in which he also starred opposite Forest Whitaker. "Last
Light" garnered some of the most glowing reviews that
any cable production has received in a long time, especially
for Sutherland's directing. Sutherland's first major role
was in the Canadian drama "Bad Boy," which earned
Sutherland and director Daniel Petrie, Genie award nominations
for best actor and best director, respectively. Following
his success in "The Bad Boy," Sutherland eventually
moved to Los Angeles and landed television appearances in
"The Mission," an episode of "Amazing Stories"
and in the telefilm "Trapped in Silence" with Marsha
Mason. In 1992, Sutherland starred opposite Ray Liotta and
Forest Whitaker in "Article 99," and in the military
drama "A Few Good Men," also starring Jack Nicholson
and Tom Cruise. Later, in 1994, he starred with Jeff Bridges
and Nancy Travis in the American version of "The Vanishing"
for Twentieth Century Fox.
Sutherland's other film credits include
"Flatliners," "Chicago Joe and the Showgirl,"
"1969," "Flashback," "Young Guns,"
"Young Guns 2," "Bright Lights, Big City,"
"The Lost Boys," "Promised Land," "At
Close Range," and "Stand By Me."
Released: 18 April 2003
Distributer: Fox
Running Time: 80 mins
Cert: TBC
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