Maggie Gyllenhaal

Margalit Ruth Gyllenhaal[lower-alpha 1][1][2][3] (/ˈɪlənhɔːl/;[4] born November 16, 1977), known as Maggie Gyllenhaal,[5] is an American actress and filmmaker. Part of the Gyllenhaal family, she is the daughter of filmmakers Stephen Gyllenhaal and Naomi Achs, and the older sister of actor Jake Gyllenhaal.

Maggie Gyllenhaal
Gyllenhaal at the Montclair Film Festival, 2021
Born
Margalit Ruth Gyllenhaal

(1977-11-16) November 16, 1977
EducationColumbia University (BA)
Occupation
  • Actress
  • filmmaker
Years active1992–present
Spouse
(m. 2009)
Children2
Parents
  • Stephen Gyllenhaal (father)
  • Naomi Foner Gyllenhaal (mother)
RelativesJake Gyllenhaal (brother)
FamilyGyllenhaal

She began her career as a teenager with small roles in several of her father's films, and appeared with her brother in the cult favorite Donnie Darko (2001). She then appeared in Adaptation, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (both 2002), and Mona Lisa Smile (2003). Gyllenhaal received critical acclaim for her leading performances in the erotic romantic comedy drama Secretary (2002) and the drama Sherrybaby (2006), each of which earned her a Golden Globe Award nomination. After several commercially successful films in 2006, including World Trade Center, she received wider recognition for playing Rachel Dawes in the superhero film The Dark Knight (2008).

For her performance as a single mother in Crazy Heart (2009), she received a nomination for Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. She subsequently starred in the comedies and dramas: Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang (2010), Hysteria (2011), and Won't Back Down (2012). Her other roles include a Secret Service agent in the action-thriller White House Down (2013), a musician in Frank (2014), and the title role in the drama The Kindergarten Teacher (2018). In 2021, Gyllenhaal made her writing and directing debut with the psychological drama The Lost Daughter, for which she won the Venice International Film Festival's Best Screenplay Award and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.

Gyllenhaal has also appeared in five stage productions since 2000, including making her Broadway debut in a revival of The Real Thing. She has starred in several television series, including the BBC political-thriller miniseries The Honourable Woman. For her performance, she won a Golden Globe award for Best Actress, and was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award. She also produced and starred in the HBO period drama series The Deuce (2017–19). Gyllenhaal has been married to actor Peter Sarsgaard since 2009 and they have two children together.

Early life

Gyllenhaal was born in Manhattan, the daughter of Naomi Achs and Stephen Gyllenhaal. The first name on Maggie's birth certificate is "Margalit", which she did not discover until 2013, when adopting her husband's surname.[2] Margalit (מרגלית) is a Hebrew word meaning "pearl"; some news stories have spelled it "Margolit".[3][6] She has a younger brother, actor Jake Gyllenhaal, and a half-brother, Luke, from their father's second marriage.[3]

Her father is a film director and poet, and her mother is a screenwriter and director.[7] Her father, a member of the noble Gyllenhaal family, is of Swedish and English ancestry, and was raised in the Swedenborgian religion.[8] Her last native Swedish ancestor was her great-great-grandfather Anders Leonard Gyllenhaal, a descendant of Leonard Gyllenhaal, a leading Swedenborgian who supported the printing and spreading of Swedenborg's writings.[9]

Her mother was born in New York City (growing up in Brooklyn),[10] and is Jewish,[11][12][13][14] from Ashkenazi Jewish families that emigrated from Russia and Poland. Her mother's first husband was Eric Foner, a noted historian and history professor at Columbia University.[8][15][16][17][18] Gyllenhaal has stated that she "grew up mostly Jewish, culturally", and she identifies as Jewish,[19] though she did not attend Hebrew school.[20][21][22] Her parents married in 1977, and filed for divorce in October 2008.[23]

Gyllenhaal grew up in Los Angeles and studied at the Harvard–Westlake prep school.[17] She spent four months as a student at The Mountain School, a semester school for high school juniors in Vermont.[24] In 1995, she graduated from Harvard–Westlake and moved to New York to attend Columbia University, where she studied literature and Eastern religions.[17] She also studied acting for a summer term at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London, England.[25]

Career

1992–2001: Early work

At the age of 15, she made a brief appearance in her father's film Waterland (1992). Soon, she had supporting roles in A Dangerous Woman (1993) and Homegrown (1998), which were directed by her father, which also featured her brother Jake.[17] With their mother, she and Jake appeared in two episodes of Molto Mario, an Italian cooking show on the Food Network.[26] After graduating from college, she had supporting roles in films including Cecil B. Demented (2000) and Riding in Cars with Boys (2001).[27] Gyllenhaal later achieved recognition in her own right playing her real brother's on-screen sister in the indie cult favorite Donnie Darko (2001).[28][29]

She made her theatrical debut in the Berkeley Repertory Theatre production of Patrick Marber's Closer,[30][31] for which she received favorable reviews.[32][33] Production started in May 2000 and ended in mid-July of that year.[32] Gyllenhaal has performed in several other plays, including The Tempest,[34] Antony and Cleopatra, The Butterfly Project, and No Exit.[35]

2002–2005: Film breakthrough

Gyllenhaal's breakout role was in the black comedy, Secretary (2002), a film about two people who embark on a mutually fulfilling BDSM lifestyle.[36] The New York Times critic Stephen Holden noted: "The role of Lee, which Maggie Gyllenhaal imbues with a restrained comic delicacy and sweetness, should make her a star."[36] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote: "Maggie Gyllenhaal, as the self-destructive secretary, is enigmatic and, at moments, sympathetic."[37] The film received generally favorable reviews,[38] and Gyllenhaal's performance earned her the Best Breakthrough Performance by an Actress award from the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures,[39] her first Golden Globe nomination,[40] and an Independent Spirit Award nomination.[41] Secretary was Gyllenhaal's first film role which featured full frontal nudity.[42][43] Impressed with the script, she initially had reservations about doing the film, which she believed could deliver an anti-feminist message. However, after carefully discussing the script with the film's director, Steven Shainberg, she agreed to join the project.[44] Although insisting Shainberg did not exploit her, Gyllenhaal has said she felt "scared when filming began" and that "in the wrong hands ... even in just slightly less intelligent hands, this movie could say something really weird."[28] Since then, she is guarded about discussing her role in the film, saying only that "despite myself, sometimes the dynamic that you are exploring in your work spills over into your life."[28]

Gyllenhaal at an event in Barcelona, 2008

Next, she had a supporting role in the comedy-drama Adaptation (2002), a film that tells the story of screenwriter Charlie Kaufman's struggle to adapt The Orchid Thief into a film.[45] She later appeared in the unauthorized biography Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2002), part of an ensemble cast that included Sam Rockwell, Drew Barrymore, George Clooney, and Julia Roberts.[46] The movie grossed US$33 million worldwide.[47] That same year, she had a small role in the comedy 40 Days and 40 Nights.[48] In 2003, she co-starred with Julia Roberts in Mona Lisa Smile in the role of Giselle.[49] In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, she revealed the reason for accepting the role was "to play somebody who feels confident in herself as a sexy, beautiful woman".[50] The film generated mostly mixed reviews,[51] with Manohla Dargis of the Los Angeles Times describing it as "smug and reductive".[52] Her next roles were in smaller independent films: Casa de los Babys (2003), is a story about six American women impatiently waiting out their lengthy residency requirements in a South American country before picking up their adoptive babies,[53] and Criminal (2004), a remake of the Argentinian film Nine Queens, with John C. Reilly and Diego Luna.[54] Gyllenhaal plays an honest hotel manager forced to help her crooked brother (Reilly) by seducing one of his victims.[54]

She starred in the HBO film Strip Search (2004), in which she portrayed an American student in China suspected of terrorism.[55] For her role, Gyllenhaal had to perform multiple scenes of full-frontal nudity as the film tackled issues of strip searches. In 2004, Gyllenhaal returned to theater in a Los Angeles production of Tony Kushner's Homebody/ Kabul as Priscilla, the Homebody's daughter, who spends most of the play searching for her elusive mother in Kabul, Afghanistan. Kushner gave her the role in Homebody/ Kabul on the strength of her performance in Closer.[56] Ben Brantley of The New York Times wrote: "Ms. Gyllenhaal provides the essential bridge between the parts of the play's title."[57] John Heilpern of The New York Observer noted that Gyllenhaal's performance was "compelling".[58] Finally in 2004, Gyllenhaal was invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[59] Viewed as a sex symbol, she was ranked in the "Hot 100 List" by Maxim magazine in 2004 and 2005.[60][61]

Gyllenhaal's next film role was in the 2005 comedy-drama Happy Endings, in which she played an adventuress singer who seduces a young gay musician (Jason Ritter) as well as his rich father (Tom Arnold). She recorded songs for the film's soundtrack,[49][62] calling the role the "roughest, scariest acting ever" and adding she is more natural when singing on screen than when acting.[62] Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly declared Gyllenhaal's performance "as wonderfully, naturally slouchy-sexy as her character is artificial".[63]

2006–2009: Comedies, dramas and theatre

Following Happy Endings, Gyllenhaal appeared in five films releases in 2006: Trust the Man, Stranger than Fiction, Monster House, World Trade Center, and Sherrybaby. In Trust the Man, featuring Julianne Moore, David Duchovny, and Billy Crudup, she played Elaine, who has been dating Tobey, Crudup's character, for seven years and has begun to feel that it is time for her to settle down and start a family.[64][65] The film was critically and financially unsuccessful.[66][67] Ethan Alter of Premiere felt that the performances by Gyllenhaal and Duchovny were "much more at ease" and concluded with "that's probably because they're [sic] played these characters many times before".[68] In Stranger than Fiction, Gyllenhaal played a love interest of Harold Crick, played by Will Ferrell.[69] Her performance in the film received favorable reviews; Mike Straka of Fox News wrote: "Gyllenhaal has never been sexier in any film before and her interplay with Ferrell will propel her to more A-list films, leaving her indie-darling days behind, no doubt."[70] She voiced Elizabeth "Zee" in the computer animated horror film Monster House.[71] Gyllenhaal played Allison Jimeno, the wife of Port Authority officer Will Jimeno, in Oliver Stone's World Trade Center, based on the September 11 attacks in New York City.[72] She regarded this as "one of the films she most enjoyed making".[28] The film received favorable reviews and proved to be an international success, earning US$162 million worldwide.[73][74]

In Sherrybaby, Gyllenhaal played a young drug-addicted thief trying to put her life in order after prison so she can reconcile with her daughter. During promotion of the film, she noted of her portrayal of the character: "I think she's in such dire straits that all she has are these kind of naive, fierce hopes. And while I was playing the part I was looking for pleasure and hope in everything, even in these really bleak things. And so it was really mostly after I finished the movie that I felt pain."[75] Her performance in the film was well-received; David Germain of the Associated Press wrote, "Gyllenhaal humanizes her so deeply and richly ... that Sherry elicits sympathy even in her darkest and weakest moments",[76] and Dennis Harvey of Variety magazine called her performance "naturalistic".[77] For her performance, Gyllenhaal earned a second Golden Globe Best Actress nomination[78] and won the Best Actress category award at the 2006 Stockholm International Film Festival.[79]

Gyllenhaal at the premiere of The Dark Knight in New York City, July 14, 2008

She appeared in The Dark Knight (2008), the sequel to Batman Begins (2005), in which she replaced Katie Holmes as Assistant District Attorney, Rachel Dawes.[80][81] Gyllenhaal acknowledged her character was a damsel in distress to an extent, but said director Christopher Nolan sought ways to empower her character, so "Rachel's really clear about what's important to her and unwilling to compromise her morals, which made a nice change" from the many conflicted characters she had previously portrayed.[82] The Dark Knight was a critical and commercial success, setting a new opening weekend box office record for North America. With revenue of $1 billion worldwide,[83] it became the fourth-highest-grossing film of all time,[84] and remains Gyllenhaal's most commercially successful feature to date. In a Salon magazine review of the film, Stephanie Zacharek called Gyllenhaal's character "a tough cookie in a Stanwyck-style bias-cut dress" and stated that "the movie feels smarter and more supple when she's on-screen".[85] IGN film critic Todd Gilchrist wrote, "Gyllenhaal adds real depth and energy to Rachel Dawes".[86]

In addition to film, Gyllenhaal played Yelena Andreevna in the Classic Stage Company's 2009 Off-Broadway production of Anton Chekhov's Uncle Vanya in New York City.[87] The cast also included her husband Peter Sarsgaard.[87] The production, directed by Austin Pendleton, began previews on January 17 and ended its limited run on March 1.[87] Joe Dziemianowicz of the New York Daily News was unenthusiastic about her performance, writing "Gyllenhaal, who was so dynamic as a druggie in the film Sherrybaby, plays Yelena with a slow-mo saunter and monotonous pasted-on smile that makes it seem as if she's been in Sherry's stash."[88] However, Malcolm Johnson of the Hartford Courant was complimentary, noting that she "ultimately blossoms" as the character.[89]

Gyllenhaal agreed to star in the comedy Away We Go (2009), in which she plays a bohemian college professor who is an old friend of John Krasinski's character.[90][91] The film generated broadly mixed reviews,[92] with Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly describing Gyllenhaal's subplot as "over-the-top".[93] However, A. O. Scott of The New York Times praised Gyllenhaal and co-star Allison Janney for their performances, writing that "both [are] quite funny".[94] Scott concluded with, "Ms. Gyllenhaal's line about sex roles in 'the seahorse community' is the screenplay's one clean satirical bull's-eye".[94] Her next role came in the musical-drama Crazy Heart, in which she played journalist Jean Craddock, who falls for musician Bad Blake, played by Jeff Bridges.[95] The film received an acclaimed response,[96] with praise for Gyllenhaal's performance too. Peter Travers of Rolling Stone observed that Gyllenhaal was "funny, touching and vital as Jean" and that her part was "conventionally conceived, but Gyllenhaal plays it with a tough core of intelligence and feeling."[97] Her performance earned her an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress.[98]

2010–2020: The Deuce and other work

Gyllenhaal at the 66th Golden Globe Awards, 2009

In addition to acting, she presented 13 episodes of the PBS television series Independent Lens between 2009–10.[99] The program presents documentary films made by independent filmmakers. In 2010, Gyllenhaal appeared in Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang with co-star Emma Thompson, the sequel to the 2005's Nanny McPhee.[100] She played Isabel Green, which required her to speak with an English accent.[101] The feature received generally positive reviews; review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gave the film an approval rating of 76% based on 119 critics.[102] The Sydney Morning Herald complimented Gyllenhaal's realistic accent and ability to capture her English character with ease.[103] It was a reasonable success at the box office, earning $93 million worldwide.[104][105]

For her next film, Gyllenhaal starred in the biographical romance Hysteria (2011), which focuses on the events that led to the creation of the vibrator during the Victorian era.[106] The film received a mixed reception; writing for The Guardian, David Cox noted the film's stereotypes and "yelps of delight", and praised Gyllenhaal's English accent.[107] In February 2011, Gyllenhaal starred in another Anton Chekhov Off-Broadway production as the character Masha in Austin Pendleton's Three Sisters at the Classic Stage Company.[108] The play focused on the Prozorov sisters (Gyllenhaal, Jessica Hecht, and Juliet Rylance), who are "unlucky in love, unhappy in the provinces and longing to return to Moscow", as summarized by Bloomberg's Jeremy Gerard.[109] The production began preview performances on January 12, with a limited engagement through March 6.[110]

In 2012, she played mother Jaime Fitzpatrick in the drama Won't Back Down, about a group of parents involved in a parent trigger takeover of a failing school. Next, she appeared alongside Channing Tatum and Jamie Foxx, as a Secret Service agent in the action-thriller White House Down (2013).[111] The film was met with mixed reviews and under-performed at the box office.[112] A year later, she starred in the musical comedy Frank, about a man who joins an odd band with a group of bizarre musicians. Gyllenhaal, who also plays a musician, said she initially turned down the role because she did not understand it. However, she changed her mind after the story "stuck with her".[113] The film premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival to favorable opinions; Slant magazine's critic opined that Gyllenhaal has "passive and palpable screen presence".[114] Also that year, she played Hathfertiti in Matthew Barney and Jonathan Bepler's River of Fundament, loosely based on the 1983 novel Ancient Evenings by Norman Mailer.[115][116]

Gyllenhaal played the lead role as Baroness Nessa Stein, a British-Israeli businesswoman heiress in the BBC political spy thriller television miniseries, The Honourable Woman.[117][118] The series was well received; Kevin Fallon wrote in the Daily Beast: "Gyllenhaal delivers what might be the most towering, complex, best performance of her career in the miniseries."[119] Time magazine praised the series' pacing, themes, settings, and called Gyllenhaal's performance "remarkable".[120] At the 72nd Golden Globe Awards, she won Best Actress in a Miniseries or Television Film for her performance.[121] The Honourable Woman appeared in a list of The Guardian critics' 30 best television shows of 2014.[122]

In 2016, Gyllenhaal narrated Leo Tolstoy's novel Anna Karenina; it was made available for purchase on Amazon's Audible store. In an interview, Gyllenhaal said "Making this, doing this, I feel like it's one of the major accomplishments of my work life."[123] In February 2017, she served as a member of the jury for the 2017 Berlin Film Festival.[124] Returning to film in 2018, Gyllenhaal starred in The Kindergarten Teacher, a drama in which her character becomes obsessed with a student whom she believes is a child prodigy. The film premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, and was distributed via Netflix. It is a remake of the 2014 Israeli film of the same name. The feature opened to mainly popular reviews; The Daily Telegraph critic gave the film 4 out of 5 stars, and thought Gyllenhaal was well-cast, writing "[her] earnest intensity as an actress, gift for fatigue and slightly holier-than-thou authority are key assets here."[125] Although Dennis Harvey of Variety magazine praised her performance, he thought the film lacked "psychological insight".[126]

She served as a producer and starred in the HBO drama series The Deuce, which aired between 2017–19;[127] she played Eileen "Candy" Merrell, a sex worker during the Golden Age of Porn. The Deuce earned Gyllenhaal a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress.[128]

2021–present

In 2021, Gyllenhaal made her feature directorial debut with the psychological drama The Lost Daughter, which she also produced and wrote.[129] The film received critical acclaim,[130] and had its premiere at the 78th Venice International Film Festival, where Gyllenhaal won the Best Screenplay Award.[131] It received four awards, including Best Feature and Breakthrough Director, as well as one further nomination at the 2021 Gotham Awards.[132] At the 79th Golden Globe Awards, Gyllenhaal received a nomination for Best Director.[133] She then received a Best Adapted Screenplay nomination at the 75th British Academy Film Awards,[134] and the second Academy Award nomination of her career also for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 94th Academy Awards.[135]

Personal life

Sarsgaard and Gyllenhaal at the New York premiere of An Education, 2009

In 2002, Gyllenhaal began a relationship with actor Peter Sarsgaard.[136][49] The couple became engaged in April 2006,[137][138] and married on May 2, 2009, in a small chapel in Brindisi, Italy.[139][140] They have two daughters, Ramona (born 2006) and Gloria Ray (born 2012).[141][142][143]

Political views

At the 18th Independent Spirit Awards in 2003, she spoke out against the Iraq war, stating the reason for the invasion was "oil and imperialism".[144][145] In 2005, Gyllenhaal drew controversy for her statement that the September 11 attacks were "an occasion to be brave enough to ask some serious questions about America's role in the world  ... It is always useful as individuals or nations to ask how we may have knowingly or unknowingly contributed to this conflict."[146] Gyllenhaal took part in Artists United to Win Without War, a campaign started by Robert Greenwald that aimed to advance progressive causes and voicing opposition to the Iraq War.[147][148]

She and her brother Jake filmed a commercial for Rock the Vote, and visited the University of Southern California to encourage students to vote in the 2004 U.S. presidential election,[149] in which she supported John Kerry.[150][151] Gyllenhaal supported Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential election.[152][153] She has campaigned on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), an organization her family strongly supports.[154][155] In June 2013, Gyllenhaal and numerous other celebrities appeared in a video showing support for whistleblower Chelsea Manning.[156][157]

Charity work

Gyllenhaal is a supporter of Witness, a non-profit organization that uses video and online technologies to expose human rights violations.[158][159] She co-hosted a benefit dinner with founder Peter Gabriel in November 2007.[160][161] Gyllenhaal helped raise funds for TrickleUp.org, another non-profit that helps people in poverty to start a micro-enterprise.[162] For one of the fundraisers, Gyllenhaal helped design and promote a necklace that sold for US$100; all proceeds from sales went to the charity.[163] Since 2008, Gyllenhaal has been supporting the Hear the World Foundation as ambassador. In her role, she advocates for equal opportunities and better quality of life for people with hearing loss.[164] In October 2008, she hosted a fashion show called "Fashionably Natural", which was presented by Gen Art and SoyJoy in Los Angeles.[165][166] The show featured new designers who worked only with natural and eco-friendly fabrics and materials.[165][166] Gyllenhaal is an advocate of Planned Parenthood; in 2012 she said, "Women's health is very important to me. It has become such a politicized issue and so I will make every effort to elect officials who believe as strongly as I do that all women [...] have access to quality health care and information."[167][168]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes Ref(s)
1992 Waterland Maggie Ruth [169]
1993 A Dangerous Woman Patsy [17]
1998 Homegrown Christina [170]
2000 The Photographer Mira [171]
Cecil B. Demented Raven [27]
2001 Donnie Darko Elizabeth Darko [28]
Riding in Cars with Boys Amelia Forrester [170]
2002 Secretary Lee Holloway [36]
40 Days and 40 Nights Sam [48]
Adaptation Caroline Cunningham [45]
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind Debbie [46]
2003 Casa de los Babys Jennifer [53]
Mona Lisa Smile Giselle Levy [49]
2004 The Pornographer: A Love Story Sidney [170]
Criminal Valerie [54]
2005 Happy Endings Jude [63]
The Great New Wonderful Emme Segment: "Emme's Story" [172]
Trust the Man Elaine [64]
2006 Sherrybaby Sherry Swanson [75]
Paris, je t'aime Liz Segment: "Quartier des Enfants Rouges" [173]
Monster House Elizabeth "Zee" Voice role [71]
World Trade Center Allison Jimeno [28]
Stranger than Fiction Ana Pascal [69]
2007 High Falls April Short film [170]
2008 The Dark Knight Rachel Dawes Replacing Katie Holmes [85]
2009 Away We Go Ellen "LN" [93]
Crazy Heart Jean Craddock [97]
2010 Nanny McPhee and the Big Bang Isabel Green [100]
2011 Hysteria Charlotte Dalrymple [106]
2012 Won't Back Down Jamie [174]
2013 White House Down Carol Finnerty [111]
2014 Frank Clara [175]
River of Fundament Hathfertiti [115]
2018 The Kindergarten Teacher Lisa Spinelli Also producer [176]
2020 Best Summer Ever TV Reporter Also executive producer [177]
2021 The Lost Daughter Director, writer, producer [178]

Television

Year Title Role Notes Ref(s)
1996 Shattered Mind Clothes clerk TV Movie [170]
1998 The Patron Saint of Liars Lorraine Thomas TV Movie [170]
1999 Resurrection Mary TV Movie [170]
Shake, Rattle, and Roll: An American Love Story Noreen Bixler TV Movie [170]
2004 Strip Search Linda Sykes TV Movie [170]
2012 Discovery's "Curiosity" Host Documentary. Episode: "Why is Sex Fun?" [179]
The Corrections Denise Unaired pilot [180]
2014 The Honourable Woman Nessa Stein, Baroness Stein of Tilbury Miniseries; 8 episodes [181]
2016 Inside Amy Schumer Herself Episode: "Brave"
Truth and Power Narrator Documentary [182]
2017–19 The Deuce Eileen "Candy" Merrell 25 episodes; also producer [183]

Theatre

Year Title Role Notes Ref(s)
2000 Closer Alice Berkeley Repertory Theatre
Mark Taper Forum
[184]
2003 Homebody/Kabul Priscilla Ceiling Mark Taper Forum
Brooklyn Academy of Music
[185]
2009 Uncle Vanya Yelena Andreevna Classic Stage Company [186]
2011 Three Sisters Masha Kulygina Classic Stage Company [187]
2014 The Real Thing Annie American Airlines Theatre [188]

Awards and nominations

Year Award / Organization Category Nominated work Result Ref(s)
2003 Boston Society of Film Critics Best Actress Secretary Won [189]
Empire Awards Best Actress Nominated [190]
Golden Globe Awards Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical Nominated [121]
Independent Spirit Awards Best Female Lead Nominated [191]
MTV Movie Awards Best Breakthrough Performance Nominated [192]
National Board of Review Best Breakthrough Performance Won [191]
National Society of Film Critics Best Actress Nominated [193]
Online Film Critics Society Best Breakthrough Performance Won [194]
Best Actress Nominated [195]
Chicago Film Critics Association Most Promising Performer Won [196]
Satellite Awards Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy Nominated
Toronto Film Critics Association Best Actress Nominated [197]
Vancouver Film Critics Circle Best Actress Nominated
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Best Actress Nominated [198]
2005 Independent Spirit Awards Best Supporting Female Happy Endings Nominated [191]
2006 Chicago Film Critics Association Best Actress Sherrybaby Nominated
Golden Globe Awards Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama Nominated [121]
London Film Critics' Circle Actress of the Year Nominated [199]
Satellite Awards Best Actress – Motion Picture Nominated [200]
Saturn Awards Best Actress Stranger than Fiction Nominated
2007 Annie Awards Outstanding Voice Acting in a Feature Production Monster House Nominated [201]
2008 Critics' Choice Movie Awards Best Acting Ensemble The Dark Knight Nominated [202]
Saturn Awards Best Actress Nominated
2009 Academy Awards Best Supporting Actress Crazy Heart Nominated [203]
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association Best Supporting Actress Nominated [204]
2014 British Independent Film Awards Best Supporting Actress Frank Nominated [205]
Golden Globe Awards Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film The Honourable Woman Won [121]
Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie Nominated [206]
Satellite Awards Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film Nominated [207]
2015 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or Movie Nominated [208]
Critics' Choice Television Awards Best Actress in a Movie/Miniseries Nominated [209]
2018 Golden Globe Awards Best Actress – Television Series Drama The Deuce Nominated [210][211]
2021 Venice Film Festival Best Screenplay The Lost Daughter Won [131]
SCAD Savannah Film Festival Rising Star Director Award Won [212]
Gotham Awards Best Feature Won [132]
Breakthrough Director Won
Best Screenplay Won
New York Film Critics Circle Best First Film Won [213]
Boston Society of Film Critics Best New Filmmaker Won [214]
Chicago Film Critics Association Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated [215]
Breakthrough Filmmaker Nominated
Florida Film Critics Circle Best First Film Nominated [216]
2022 Golden Globe Awards Best Director Nominated [133]
San Diego Film Critics Society Best Director Nominated [217]
San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle Best Director Nominated [218]
Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated
Austin Film Critics Association Best First Film Nominated [219]
Toronto Film Critics Association Best First Feature Won [220]
Online Film Critics Society Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated [221]
Best Debut Feature Won
Alliance of Women Film Journalists Best Film Nominated [222]
Best Director Nominated
Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated
Best Woman Director Nominated
Best Woman Screenwriter Nominated
International Cinephile Society Best Debut Feature Nominated [223]
London Film Critics Circle Film of the Year Nominated [224]
Screenwriter of the Year Nominated
USC Scripter Awards Won [225]
Hollywood Critics Association Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated [226]
Best First Feature Nominated
Independent Spirit Awards Best Feature Won [227]
Best Director Won
Best Screenplay Won
Vancouver Film Critics Circle Best Screenplay Nominated [228]
Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directing – First-Time Feature Film Won [229]
British Academy Film Awards Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated [134]
Critics' Choice Movie Awards Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated [230]
Satellite Awards Best Motion Picture – Drama Nominated [231]
Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated
Academy Awards Best Adapted Screenplay Nominated [135]

References

  1. Shaitly, Shahesta (July 12, 2014). "Maggie Gyllenhaal: 'I'm claustrophobic, it's taken years to be OK on the subway'". The Guardian. Archived from the original on October 29, 2014. Retrieved December 6, 2014.
  2. Elissa Golstein (August 8, 2014). "Maggie Gyllenhaal Just Learned Her Real First Name – And It's Super-Jewish". Jewcy. Archived from the original on August 11, 2014. Retrieved August 8, 2014.
  3. Ghert-Zand, Renee (August 8, 2014). "Maggie Gyllenhaal is really Margalit". The Times of Israel. Archived from the original on June 24, 2018. Retrieved June 24, 2018.
  4. "NLS Other Writings > Say How". National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped. Archived from the original on November 6, 2018. Retrieved March 31, 2011.
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  1. Maggie Gyllenhaal was born with the name Margalit but by her own admission never uses it officially.

Book sources

  • Thomson, David (2010). The New Biographical Dictionary Of Film. Hachette. ISBN 9780748108503.

Further reading

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