Kate Nelligan
Known for: Acting
Born: March 15, 1950 in London, Ontario, Canada
Kate Nelligan, born Patricia Colleen Nelligan on March 16, 1950, in London, Ontario, Canada, is a retired stage, film, and television actress celebrated for her commanding performances and versatility. She trained at Glendon College in Toronto and London's Central School of Speech and Drama before launching her professional career in 1972 with the Bristol Old Vic, appearing in productions like Barefoot in the Park. Nelligan rose to prominence in the UK with the National Theatre in plays such as David Hare's Knuckle (1974) and Tales from the Vienna Woods (1977), alongside early television roles in The Onedin Line and her film debut in The Romantic Englishwoman (1975). In the early 1980s, she relocated to New York, where she garnered critical acclaim on Broadway, earning four Tony Award nominations for Plenty (1983), A Moon for the Misbegotten (1984), Serious Money (1988), and Spoils of War (1989). Her film career flourished with standout roles in Eye of the Needle (1981) opposite Donald Sutherland, Without a Trace (1983), and later Frankie and Johnny (1991), for which she won a BAFTA for Best Supporting Actress; she also received an Academy Award nomination for The Prince of Tides (1991). Other notable films include Wolf (1994), U.S. Marshals (1998), and The Cider House Rules (1999).
Known for
Showing 24 of 63 titles
The Cider House Rules
Olive Worthington
The Prince of Tides
Lila Wingo Newbury
Wolf
Charlotte Randall
Frankie and Johnny
Cora
The Count of Monte-Cristo
Mercédès
Eye of the Needle
Lucy
In from the Night
Vera Miller
Into the Deep
Narrator
U.S. Marshals
Walsh
How to Make an American Quilt
Constance Saunders
Dracula
Lucy Seward
Up Close & Personal
Joanna Kennelly
Premonition
Joanne
Fatal Instinct
Lana Ravine
A Wrinkle in Time
Mrs. Which
The Romantic Englishwoman
Isabel
The Arcata Promise
Laura
Without a Trace
Susan Selky
Margaret's Museum
Catherine MacNeil
Old Times
Terror Stalks the Class Reunion
Kay
White Room
Jane
Blessed Stranger: After Flight 111
Kate O'Rourke
Revisiting Brideshead
Self (archive footage)