Thandie Newton - November 6, 1972

Thandiwe Newton

Born:  November 6, 1972

Birthplace:   Westminster, London, England

Zodiac Sign:  Scorpio

Career and Life

Melanie Thandiwe "Thandie" Newton is an English actress who has appeared in several British and American films.


She is known for her starring roles, such as the title character in Beloved (1998), Nyah Nordoff-Hall in Mission: Impossible 2 (2000), and Christine in Crash (2004), for which she received a BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role, Linda in The Pursuit of Happyness (2006), Kate Thomas in Norbit (2007), Laura Wilson in 2012 (2009), Tangie Ambrose in For Colored Girls (2010), and as Val in Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018).


Since 2016, she has played the sentient android, madam Maeve Millay, in the HBO science fiction-Western television series Westworld, which earned her a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series, as well as Critics' Choice Award, Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild Award nominations. She also portrayed DCI Roz Huntley in Series 4 of the BBC One police procedural series Line of Duty.


Newton was born in Westminster, London, England, the daughter of Nyasha, a Zimbabwean princess of the Shona people, and Nick Newton, an English laboratory technician, and artist. Her birthplace has been incorrectly reported to be Zambia in some biographies, but she has confirmed in interviews that she was born in London. The name "Thandiwe" means "beloved" in Ndebele, Zulu, Xhosa, or Swati, and "Thandie" are pronounced /ˈtændi/ in English. Newton remarked at a TED conference about her childhood, "From about the age of 5, I was aware that I didn't fit. I was the black, atheist kid in the all-white Catholic school run by nuns. I was an anomaly." Newton was brought up in London and Penzance, Cornwall, and studied dance at the Tring Park School for the Performing Arts. Between 1992 and 1995, Newton attended Downing College, Cambridge, where she studied social anthropology.


After the film Flirting (1991), Newton played a faithful house enslaved person, "Yvette," in the Brad Pitt/Tom Cruise film Interview with the Vampire (1994). Newton appeared in the Merchant Ivory production of Jefferson in Paris as Sally Hemings, followed by Jonathan Demme's drama Beloved, based on Toni Morrison's novel (1998), in which she played the title character, the ghost of a young slave girl whose mother murders her to save her from slavery. The film also starred Oprah Winfrey and Danny Glover. Newton then starred as Nyah Hall, again opposite Cruise, in Mission: Impossible 2. Her next role was in a low-budget film. It Was an Accident, written by her husband, screenwriter Ol Parker.


Between 2003 and 2005, Newton played Makemba "Kem" Likasu, the love interest of Dr. John Carter on the American television series ER. She reprised the role for the series finale in 2009. In 2004, she also appeared in The Chronicles of Riddick and Crash. Newton won a BAFTA award for Best Supporting Actress in 2006 for her role in Crash. She played Chris Gardner's wife, Linda Gardner, in The Pursuit of Happyness. Also, in 2006, Newton performed in a pantomime version of Cinderella on the radio.


In 2007, Newton co-starred with Eddie Murphy in the comedy Norbit as his love interest and then opposite Simon Pegg as his ex-girlfriend in the 2008 comedy Run Fatboy Run. Newton next portrayed US National Security Advisor-turned-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in W. Oliver Stone's film biography of President George W. Bush. The film was released on 17 October 2008.


Newton was an introducer at Wembley Stadium on 7 July 2007 for the UK leg of Live Earth. She was due to introduce Al Gore to the concert, but he was delayed, leaving Newton to tell jokes to entertain the audience. Newton next portrayed fictional US First Daughter Laura Wilson in 2012, a disaster film directed by Roland Emmerich and released on 13 November 2009.


In July 2011, Newton delivered a TED Talk on "Embracing otherness, embracing myself." She discussed finding her "otherness" as a child growing up in two distinct cultures and as an actress playing many different selves. In 2012, she starred alongside Tyler Perry in the romantic drama film Good Deeds. In 2013, Newton starred in Rogue, the first original drama series for DirecTV's Audience Network. She left Rogue during the third season. In 2015, she starred in the US miniseries The Slap. In 2016, Newton began portraying Maeve Millay in HBO's Westworld. Newton appeared as Val in the Star Wars film Solo: A Star Wars Story, which was released in May 2018.


In 2017, she served as a narrator for the documentary surrounding American comedian Bill Cosby and his sexual assault cases entitled Bill Cosby: Fall of an American Icon, which aired on BBC One.


Newton married English writer, director, and producer Ol Parker in 1998. They have three children: daughters Ripley (b. 2000) and Nico (b. 2004), and son Booker Jobe (b. 2014). Her daughters were named after the character Ellen Ripley in the Alien films and the singer Nico. Newton had homebirths with all three of her children. She is vegan and was named PETA's "Sexiest Vegan of 2014" in the UK.


In 2006 Newton contributed a foreword to We Wish: Hopes and Dreams of Cornwall's Children, a book of children's writing published in aid of the NSPCC. In it, she wrote vividly about her childhood memories of growing up in Cornwall and how the county's cultural heritage made it easy for her to "enrich every situation with layers of magic and meaning."


In 2007 Newton sold her near-new BMW X5 and replaced it with a Toyota Prius after Greenpeace stuck a "This gas-guzzling 4x4 is causing climate change" sticker on her BMW. In 2008 Newton visited poverty-stricken Mali, describing it as a "humbling experience." She saw the village of Nampasso in the Ségou Region of the country. In 2013 Newton led the One Billion Rising flash mob in London to end violence and for justice and gender equality.


David Schwimmer (who directed Run Fatboy Run) called the actress "the queen of practical jokes." Newton has expressed an affinity for Buddhism.


In 2016, Newton stated she had been the victim of a director who repeatedly showed his friends a video of her in a sexually-graphic audition she made as a teenager. Newton cited this experience as part of why she had taken the Westworld role, which involved actual nudity, as it mirrored the experiences of survivors of sexual abuse while also asking moral questions about the meaning of humanity and what it means to be humane.


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