Wednesday 14 December 2011

Rachel Mcadams Biography

Name:Rachel Mcadams
Date of Birth: October 7, 1976


Rachel McAdams was born in St. Thomas, just a few miles south of London, Ontario. When she was four, she took up figure skating and competed throughout high school. However, she knew that she wanted to be an actor one day and attended summer theater camp as well as appearing in school plays. In 1995, she received an acting award for her role in the one-act high school play I Live in a Little Town when it was presented at the prestigious Ontario Showcase at the Sears Drama Festival. McAdams went on to study theater at York University in Toronto, where she appeared in numerous stage and student film productions. During her senior year, she played a child in The Piper, a workshop led by a creative team from Toronto's Necessary Angel Theatre Company.


Rachel McAdams first professional onscreen role came in 2001, playing a girl with bulimia in the Disney series The Famous Jett Jackson, filmed just outside of Toronto. Soon after, she landed a starring role in a pilot for MTV called Shotgun Love Dolls. Rachel McAdams also made a guest appearance on Earth: Final Conflict and filmed a role in the TV movie Guilt by Association. McAdams made her film debut in the Canada/Italy co-production My Name is Tanino (2002). The same year, she played a role in the Canadian film Perfect Pie, for which she earned a Genie nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

McAdams decided to head to Los Angeles, where she quickly landed a co-starring role opposite Rob Schneider in the major studio comedy, The Hot Chick (2002). In 2003, she returned to Toronto to play a role in the six-part comedy TV series Slings and Arrows, starring Paul Gross. With her stage background, the show was right up her alley, as it focused on a Shakespearean Theater Festival. Still in Toronto, McAdams played one of the title characters in the Hollywood big budget film Mean Girls (2004), starring Lindsay Lohan. Rachel McAdams returned to the States to co-star opposite fellow Canadian Ryan Gosling in the feature film The Notebook (2004), about two young people in love who have to make choices.

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