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IMDbPro
Melanie Lynskey at an event for Escrocs en herbe (2009)

Biography

Melanie Lynskey

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Overview

  • Born
    May 16, 1977 · New Plymouth, New Zealand
  • Birth name
    Melanie Jayne Lynskey
  • Nickname
    • Mel
  • Height
    1.70 m

Biography

    • While still in high school, Melanie Lynskey dazzled the film industry with an eruptive star turn in Peter Jackson's revered true crime masterpiece, Créatures célestes (1994). Her ferocious embodiment of teenage misfit Pauline Parker - whose impassioned rapport with her only friend (a pre-fame Kate Winslet) spiralled perilously out of control in 1950s Christchurch - was deemed "perfect" by TIME's Richard Corliss and won the debuting New Zealander a Best Actress trophy in her motherland.

      In the wake of a prolonged sabbatical - spent studying at university and relocating to Los Angeles - Lynskey resurfaced on the silver screen when she was cast as the refreshingly kind stepsister of Drew Barrymore in À tout jamais: Une histoire de Cendrillon (1998), a girl-power twist on the Brothers Grimm fairy tale. A steady mixture of teen movies and romcoms - Detroit Rock City (1999), But I'm a Cheerleader (1999), Coyote Girls (2000), Abandon (2002), Fashion victime (2002) - came next, as did more serious fare such as Snakeskin (2001), Le mystificateur (2003), and the Clint Eastwood war epic Mémoires de nos pères (2006).

      Starting with an esteemed quartet of supporting parts in the late 2000s - Sam Mendes's Away We Go (2009), Jason Reitman's In the Air (2009), Steven Soderbergh's The Informant! (2009), Tim Blake Nelson's Escrocs en herbe (2009) - and continuing with vital appearances in Les Winners (2011), Le monde de Charlie (2012), and Adam McKay's Don't Look Up : Déni cosmique (2021), Lynskey has emerged as one of the most distinctive and lauded actresses of her generation; a niche that was solidified by top-billed roles in a slew of exemplary indies: Hello I Must Be Going (2012), Happy Christmas (2014), The Intervention (2016) - for which she scored a Special Jury Prize at Sundance - and the genre-bending pulp jewel, I Don't Feel at Home in This World Anymore. (2017).

      Since entering the annals of 21st century pop culture with her riotous portrait of Rose - on the toweringly successful Mon oncle Charlie (2003), where she appeared for over a decade as Charlie Sheen's duplicitous admirer - Lynskey has injected her scene-stealing prowess into a multitude of small-screen gigs: among them, HBO's exalted tragicomedy Togetherness (2015), which showcased her "sublime, deeply felt" (Vanity Fair) depiction of a dissatisfied stay-at-home mom; macabre Stephen King spookfest Castle Rock (2018), where she headlined as pill-popping psychic Molly Strand; and the all-star political period piece Mrs. America (2020), in which she joined forces with Cate Blanchett.

      For her valiant work on Showtime's Yellowjackets (2021) - where she's front-and-centre as Shauna, a crazed housewife consumed by horrific secrets - Lynskey collected the coveted Critics' Choice Award for Best Actress in a Drama Series (2022), with Rolling Stone's Alan Sepinwall describing her performance in the runaway cult smash as the "dark, messy, charismatic part she's been waiting her whole career to play". Further still, her innate flair for dismantling surface-level sweetness was brought thrillingly to the fore by acclaimed turns in Hulu's Candy (2022) - as troubled real-life murder victim Betty Gore - and mega-budgeted zombie saga The Last of Us (2023), where she guested as a cold-blooded war criminal.
      - IMDb mini biography by: R.N.

Family

  • Spouses
      Jason Ritter(March 31, 2020 - present) (1 child)
      Jimmi Simpson(April 14, 2007 - May 22, 2014) (divorced)
  • Children
      Kahi Ritter
  • Parents
      Kay Lynskey
      Tim Lynskey

Trademarks

  • Known for playing soft-spoken women with a dark side.

Trivia

  • She was discovered by Fran Walsh - who was looking for a teenage actress to play Pauline Parker in Créatures célestes (1994) - during an exhaustive search of New Zealand high schools, just two weeks before filming was due to commence.
  • Close friend Emily Deschanel was a bridesmaid at her wedding.
  • Announced to Hollywood Today Live (2015) on Thursday, February 16, 2017, that she is engaged to her boyfriend of four years, actor Jason Ritter. They later married sometime before December 2018.
  • Has a daughter (b. December 2018) with her husband, Jason Ritter.
  • Friends with Clea DuVall and Natasha Lyonne, both of whom she worked with in But I'm a Cheerleader (1999).

Quotes

  • [on life after Créatures célestes (1994)] I think the hardest thing was to go back to school. It's a pretty catty environment at an all-girls school and things happened. For example, 60 Minutes (1993) came to do a story on me and followed me around for a day. At school you just don't need that. And then I would have to go to New York or Sydney for a week and take time out. And while they were amazing experiences, it was hard because I had these two completely separate lives. I think a lot of people resented that. It put me outside of them a bit.
  • You always see those movies that have amazing casts, and it's funny to be in one of them. It's a list of all these fantastic people--and, oh, me as well.
  • If I ever have time off and don't know what's coming up next, I get really nervous and think, 'Oh well, it's probably over.'
  • I always thought I'd be in New Zealand doing theater. Everything I've done is greater than my greatest dreams.
  • [on the success of Mon oncle Charlie (2003)] It seems funny to me that it's all worked so well. I have so much respect for the people who do this. It's so hard to keep the energy up and to make people laugh.

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