Sienna Miller

Sienna Rose Diana Miller (born 28 December 1981)[1] is a British-American[lower-alpha 1] actress. Born in New York City and raised in London, she began her career as a photography model, appearing in the pages of Italian Vogue and posing topless for the 2003 Pirelli calendar. Her acting breakthrough came in the 2004 films Layer Cake and Alfie. She subsequently portrayed socialite Edie Sedgwick in Factory Girl (2006) and author Caitlin Macnamara in The Edge of Love (2008), and was nominated for the 2008 BAFTA Rising Star Award. Her role as The Baroness in G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (2009) was followed by a brief sabbatical from the screen amid increased tabloid scrutiny.

Sienna Miller
Miller at the 2017 Berlin Film Festival
Born
Sienna Rose Diana Miller

(1981-12-28) 28 December 1981
Nationality
  • British
  • American
OccupationActress
Years active2000–present
Partner(s)Jude Law (2003–2006; 2009–2011)
Tom Sturridge (2011–2015)
Children1

Miller returned to prominence with her role as actress Tippi Hedren in the television film The Girl (2012), for which she was nominated for the BAFTA Television Award for Best Actress and the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film. Further critical acclaim followed throughout the 2010s, with appearances in the films Foxcatcher (2014), American Sniper (2014), Mississippi Grind (2015), The Lost City of Z (2016), Live by Night (2016), and American Woman (2018), as well as the miniseries The Loudest Voice (2019).

Early life

Born Sienna Rose Diana Miller[6] in New York City, United States,[1] Miller moved to London with her family when she was 18-month-old. Her mother, Josephine, is a South African-born British former model, who was a personal assistant to David Bowie and one-time manager of the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute in NYC.[7][8] Her father, Edwin Miller, is an American banker turned dealer of Chinese art.[9] Miller has a sister, Savannah, and two half-brothers, Charles and Stephen.[10] Her parents divorced in 1987, and Miller moved to Parsons Green with her mother, who at the time was being treated for breast cancer. Miller's father remarried three times and moved to the Virgin Islands. Miller attended Heathfield School, a boarding school in Ascot, Berkshire where she also used to act and play Lacrosse. According to Celebrity Biographies – The Amazing Life Of Sienna Miller, she developed a "mischievous and rebellious side" when she became a teenager, often being "chastised" for smoking, drinking and flirting.[11] After graduating at 18, Miller obtained a modelling gig for a German commercial for soda pop,[11] and with the money she earned from it, she relocated in NYC and enrolled in a three-month course at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute.[10]

Acting career

Early acting credits, 2001–2003

Miller's screen debut came in the romantic comedy South Kensington (2001), opposite Rupert Everett and Elle Macpherson. In 2002, she had supporting roles in High Speed and its follow-up The Ride, and guest-starred in The American Embassy and Bedtime. She went on to obtain a regular role as the combative yet caring flatmate of an NYPD detective in the television drama series Keen Eddie (2003). Although FOX ceased airing the program after only seven episodes, Keen Eddie was Miller's first exposure to American audiences.[11]

Breakthrough and tabloid notoriety, 2004–2008

With roles in two commercial films and a higher public profile due to her relationship with actor Jude Law, 2004 marked a turning point for Miller's career. The crime thriller Layer Cake, directed by Matthew Vaughn and co-starring Daniel Craig, featured Miller as the love interest of a London-based cocaine supplier. While the film was acclaimed, The New York Times described Miller as "a new It Girl who barely registers on-screen despite wearing little more than lacey filaments that make her look like a gift meant to be unwrapped very quickly".[12] In Alfie, the remake of Bill Naughton's 1966 film, she played the girlfriend of a cockney limo driver and sex addict (Jude Law). On her new It Girl status, she stated at the time: "I'm not very happy about it to be honest. It makes me uncomfortable because I don't think it's as a result of having a film come out, I think it's as a result of being scrutinised because of the relationship I'm in".[13]

Miller at the 2007 London premiere for Factory Girl

Miller portrayed a writer of illegal feminist books and the love interest of Giacomo Casanova (Heath Ledger) in the period dramedy Casanova (2005). The film made a moderate US$37.6 million, and Entertainment Weekly, in a positive review for the film, wrote: "Ms. Miller has a modern, smart-girl look about her; her Francesca is neither too tough to melt nor too glittering from the Emma Thompson school of smarties".[14] In 2005, she also made her West End debut in a revival of As You Like It, at the Wyndhams Theatre. Her performance received lukewarm responses from the critics. Paul Taylor of The Independent bemoaned: "She approaches an emotion with the finesse of someone beating a carpet" and that she "brings to it all the ripe professional stage experience that can be mustered from appearing in three movies".[15]

Miller took on the role of 1960s socialite and Andy Warhol's muse Edie Sedgwick in the biographical drama Factory Girl (2006). Johnny Vaughan from Sun Online concluded that "[i]t's Sienna Miller's star that shines brightest in this heartbreaking cautionary tale", but Rotten Tomatoes' critical consensus states: "Despite a dedicated performance by Sienna Miller, Factory Girl delves only superficially into her character, and ultimately fails to tell a coherent story."[16] In 2007, Miller had a role as the love interest of a young man from a fictional Great Britain town, in Matthew Vaughn's adaptation Stardust, and played a starlet in Steve Buscemi's Interview, a remake of Dutch filmmaker Theo van Gogh's 2003 movie of the same name. Budgeted at US$65 million, Stardust grossed a modest US$137 million worldwide, while critics felt that Buscemi and Miller's "[c]aptivating performances" in Interview made "a seemingly simple premise gripping and entertaining".[17]

In The Mysteries of Pittsburgh (2008), a film adaptation of writer Michael Chabon's novel,[18] Miller played a woman romantically involved with a rebellious bisexual man. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and received a limited release.[19] She created a minor stir in Pittsburgh when, in a 2006 interview with Rolling Stone, she referred to the city as "Shitsburgh", saying, "Can you believe this is my life? Will you pity me when you're back in your funky New York apartment and I'm still in Pittsburgh? I need to get more glamorous films and stop with my indie year."[20] Miller was parodied in Pittsburgh media (including one article that was headlined "Semi-famous actress dumps on the 'Burgh") and criticised for making what was seen as an unnecessarily disparaging remark, given the special treatment the film's cast and crew had been given by the visitor's bureau and other city offices. Miller soon apologised and said her remarks were taken out of context.[21]

In The Edge of Love, (2008), a British biographical romantic drama, Miller starred alongside friend Keira Knightley, portraying Caitlin Macnamara, the wife of Welsh poet Dylan Thomas. Despite a mixed critical reception, The Hollywood Reporter critic Ray Bennett commented that The Edge of Love is a "wonderfully atmospheric tale of love and war." Of Knightley and Miller, he stated: "the film belongs to the women, with Knightley going from strength to strength (and showing she can sing!) and Miller again proving that she has everything it takes to be a major movie star."[22] Miller earned a BIFA Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress for her performance. In 2008, she also voiced a circus fox in the animated film A Fox's Tale and played an undead newlywed in the romantic comedy Camille.

Screen hiatus, 2009–2011

Miller in 2009

Miller was cast as The Baroness in the live-action film adaptation of the G.I. Joe franchise G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (2009), her first –and to date, only– mainstream Hollywood blockbuster. She auditioned for the part because it did not involve "having a breakdown or [being] addicted to heroin or dying at the end, something that was just maybe really great fun and that people went to see and actually just had a great time seeing."[23] She sprained her wrist after slipping on a rubber bullet while filming a fight scene with Rachel Nichols. G.I. Joe was not well received by most critics,[24] but made US$302.5 million worldwide.[25]

By this point, Miller's skyrocketing career had been driven off course by her tabloid notoriety. The Independent observed that her professional trajectory reached "its lowest ebb" with G.I. Joe, an experience that "convinced her she had well and truly lost her way", while in an interview with UK's Esquire magazine, she stated that roles dried up – because "people don’t want to see films with people they don’t approve of in them".[26][27] She opted to take a hiatus from film projects for the next two years and work on theater instead.[27] She later expressed: "I was sick of myself, to be honest, or sick of that perception of me. It all felt so fucking dirt".[28]

Miller played the title role in Patrick Marber's 2009 production of After Miss Julie on Broadway.[29] She told The New York Times: "This is what I have always wanted, to be on Broadway. I'm living my dream, and that's all you can ask for. At a certain point, you have to ignore all the rest". On her performance, The Guardian stated: "Miller masters it intermittently: an accomplishment, however incomplete".[30] She starred as a former starlet caught up in a love-triangle in Trevor Nunn's 2011 production of Flare Path, at London's Theatre Royal Haymarket.[31] The play drew favourable reviews, with Henry Hitchings of Evening Standard, remarking that she "brings to her role just the right mixture of glacial poise and agonised tension". For The Independent, Paul Taylor asserted: "Her performance as the conflicted actress-heroine is genuinely heart-tugging in the subtle way it communicates this young woman's struggle between patriotic duty and extra-marital desire".[32]

Resurgence, 2012–2017

After her professional slump, Miller experienced what was described as a "career revival" by journalists,[27] as in subsequent years, she went on to play more complex, dramatic parts in a series of critically acclaimed films.[33] "All the directors speak to each other," she said in an interview. "And once you crack that upper echelon of incredible directors, you've got people rooting for you. People who people listen to. I've never had that before".[27]

In The Girl (2012), an HBO and BBC film, Miller portrayed actress Tippi Hedren, the muse of director Alfred Hitchcock. As part of her research, Miller (who was in the early stages of pregnancy) spoke to Hedren several times during filming, and the two became friends.[34] Live birds were used to recreate the filming of the attic scene in The Birds. Miller told the Radio Times, "I did go through a bird attack for two hours. It pales in comparison to what [Hedren] was subjected to, but it was pretty horrible. There were men off-camera with boxes of birds, throwing seagulls and pigeons in my face".[35][36] The film received mixed reviews, but the Daily Mirror's Jane Simon stated: "[G]liding gracefully through it all (and with an impeccable American accent) Sienna Miller brings untouchable beauty and icy glamour, but also captures the extraordinary resilience Hedren must have had to withstand everything Hitchcock threw at her." Writing for The Telegraph, Clive James said "[a] better choice [to play Hedren] could not have been made than Sienna Miller, who is even lovelier than Hedren was".[37] She garnered nominations for the BAFTA Television Award for Best Actress and the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film. In 2012, she also played a socialite in the dramedy Two Jacks, the hysterical sister of an elementary teacher in the drama Yellow, and a housewive looking to participate in a belly dance competition in the made-for-television film Just like a Woman.

In 2014, Miller portrayed Nancy Schultz, the wife of murdered 10 time Olympic gold medal-winning wrestler Dave Schultz, in Bennett Miller's Foxcatcher as well as Taya Renae Kyle, the wife of United States Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle in Clint Eastwood's American Sniper. While both films were highly acclaimed, American Sniper emerged as the highest-grossing war film of all time.[38] In 2015, she took on the roles of a prostitute in the road drama Mississippi Grind, the former boss of a hard-working small business owner in the comedy Unfinished Business, a single mother in the dystopian film High-Rise, and that of a sous-chef in the drama Burnt, which reunited her with Bradley Cooper. For High-Rise, she received a BIFA Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress.[39] Miller also took over the role of Sally Bowles in the Broadway revival of Cabaret after Emma Stone's scheduled departure from the production and performed for the last six weeks of the show's engagement, between February and March 2015. New York Daily News praised her "cocky and steely" performance and felt that her approach to the role "works well in the Kander and Ebb songs "Don't Tell Momma" and "Perfectly Marvelous"."[40] She was selected to be on the jury for the main competition section of the 2015 Cannes Film Festival.[41][42]

Miller appeared in Paramount Pictures and Plan B Entertainment's adaptation of The Lost City of Z (2016), directed by James Gray, portraying Nina Fawcett, the wife of British geographer Percy Fawcett. The New York Times found her to be "wonderful" in her role,[43] while Time described her as "luminous and astute".[44] In Ben Affleck's period crime drama Live by Night (also 2016), Miller played the mistress of a notorious gangster and the love interest of a World War I veteran.[45][46][47][48] In 2017, Miller starred in the drama The Private Life of a Modern Woman, which was screened out of competition at the 74th Venice International Film Festival,[49] and in a West End production of the Tennessee Williams classic Cat On A Hot Tin Roof, at the Apollo Theatre.[50]

Continued acclaim, 2018–present

In 2018, Miller appeared in the war film The Catcher Was a Spy as Estella, the girlfriend of Moe Berg, a catcher for the Boston Red Sox who joined the OSS during World War II, as well as the drama American Woman, in which she portrayed a single mother who is faced with raising her grandson after her daughter goes missing under mysterious circumstances. American Woman, which gave Miller some of the best reviews of her career, was her first role as the main character not bolstered by any other actors, and marked the first time she was able to delve into a woman character's life in "nuanced ways".[51] Miller remarked: "These opportunities have been few and far between, and that's intrinsic to being a woman in film. I think it's quite rare; not necessarily specific to me, but at 37 years old, I'm thrilled I’ve had this opportunity. I've done good supporting work in fantastic films and had to work very hard to show something in smaller moments. I loved being able to have the space and time to really do everything I want to with a character".[51]

Miller starred as a narcotics detective in the action film 21 Bridges (2019), alongside Chadwick Boseman. The Guardian felt that the actress was "vocally channelling Edie Falco from The Sopranos",[52] and with a worldwide gross of US$50 million, the film emerged as a moderate commercial success. She next took on the role of Beth Ailes, the wife of television executive Roger Ailes (played by Russell Crowe), in the miniseries The Loudest Voice (also 2019), which aired on Showtime. Miller struggled to find materials on which to base her performance, aside from the script and Gabriel Sherman’s book The Loudest Voice in the Room. During an interview with Entertainment Weekly, she said: "There's very little footage of her that I had access to. But there were these two speeches which she gave, which were on YouTube, and another little interview, so I really kind of based my research around that, and relied on the script because there's just not a lot of information on her out there. But the interview and the speeches I found really revealing".[53]

Other endeavours

Modelling

Before her professional acting career, Miller worked as a photography model. She signed with Tandy Anderson of Select Model Management London, and modelled for Coca-Cola, Italian Vogue, and posed topless in the 2003 Pirelli Calendar.[54] She went on to grace the covers of Vogue's American, British, Australian and Portuguese editions, as well as other international fashion magazines such as Nylon,[55] Marie Claire, and Porter Edit.[56]

Miller signed a two-year contract with Madrid-based denim label Pepe Jeans London. The first ad campaign appeared on magazines in March 2006 and was shot by photographer Mikael Jansson and stylist Karl Templer.[57] In February 2009, Hugo Boss Fragrances announced that she would be the new ambassador for their BOSS Orange women's perfume.[58] In March 2016, she announced as the new face of Swedish fashion chain Lindex, starring in the 1970s-inspired Sienna Hearts Lindex spring campaign.[59] Miller appeared as a guest at a Rome retro-styled dinner party in Gucci's Cruise 2020 campaign, which was directed and photographed by American film director Harmony Korine.[60]

Fashion design

In 2007, Miller, along with her sister Savannah, a professional fashion designer, launched a complete fashion label. Called Twenty8Twelve, it gets its name from Miller's date of birth and is financially backed by Pepe Jeans.[61] The sisters remained at the helm of the label until 2012 when they announced they were stepping down as co-creative directors.[62]

Charity

Miller is the Global Ambassador for the International Medical Corps. She travelled with them to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in April 2009 and kept a blog about her experiences.[63] She also visited Haiti with the group after the 2010 Haiti earthquake.[64] Miller also worked alongside Global Cool during their 2007 eco-friendly campaign.[65]

Miller is an ambassador for the UK branch of the Starlight Children's Foundation, which works with seriously ill children and their parents.[66] On 1 July 2007, Miller appeared as a speaker at the Concert for Diana held at Wembley Stadium, London to celebrate the life of Princess Diana almost 10 years after her death.[67] Proceeds from the concert went to Diana's charities as well as to charities of which her sons Princes William and Harry are patrons.[68][69]

Public image

Her relationship with – and, for a time, engagement to – actor Jude Law, after they had starred together in the 2004 film, Alfie, brought both her and her style of dress[70] to the media headlines in the mid 2000s. In December 2004, Vogue featured Miller on its front cover and described her as "the girl of the year".[71]

Dubbed by some publications as "the new Kate Moss",[72] Miller has been closely associated with the style of fashion that became known as boho chic,[73] and is sometimes credited for bringing it into the mainstream. In advertisements for Chloé in early 2005, for instance, she was shown as if casually shopping, while she told Vogue that she had a laid-back approach to grooming, including cutting her own hair.[71] Miller herself has adopted other styles of dress and her shorter, bobbed hairstyle – ironically a feature of bohemian fashion in the quarter century before World War II – helped to define a new trend in 2007.[74][75]

Miller at the 2007 BAFTA Awards

Throughout the 2000s, Miller gradually became much better known for her tabloid persona and her fashion sense than her professional work. As noted by The Independent, "she was one of the most famous young actresses of her generation, but still boasted precious little credibility in the industry".[27] Her 2008 affair with married actor Balthazar Getty caused a hit in Miller's popularity. While the North American media labelled Miller a "home-wrecker", in the UK, her apparent enthusiasm for hopping from one relationship to the next earned her the nickname "Serial Miller".[27] Aware of the damage the negative publicity imposed on her career, she said to GQ Magazine, "I probably seem like not a particularly nice person, not a girl's girl," but she defended her behaviour as part of the normal experience of growing up. "I think if you put a camera in anyone's life and document it daily for six years, from the age of 21 to 27, there are going to be things that aren't always pretty".[27]

Her 2010s career resurgence marked a turnabout in Miller's public image as audiences started to take her seriously as an actress.[27] In an interview with The Sydney Morning Herald, she stated: "I definitely feel like I'm in a place now where people are more focused on my career than on my private life and clothes, which is refreshing. There's not the same drama around me that there was".[76]

Throughout her career, Miller has appeared in several magazines' lists of the world's most beautiful women. She ranked 48th, 46th, 11th, 27th, and 51st in Maxim magazine's Hot 100 Women in 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009 respectively.[77][78][79] She ranked 86th and 2nd in Askmen's top 99 "most desirable" women lists of 2005 and 2006.[80] She was also 63rd in FHM magazine's "100 Sexiest Women in the World" 2006 supplement. From 2004 to 2010, Miller was chosen as one of the "most beautiful famous faces" by The Annual Independent Critics List of the 100 Most Beautiful Famous Faces From Around the World.

Personal life

Relationships

On Christmas Day 2004, Miller became engaged to her Alfie co-star Jude Law.[81] On 8 July 2005, Law issued a public apology to Miller for having an affair with the nanny of his children.[82] After attempting to salvage their relationship, Miller and Law separated in November 2006.[83] In December 2009, it was reported that Law and Miller had rekindled their relationship after starring in separate shows on Broadway in late 2009.[84] They spent Christmas 2009 in Barbados, along with three of Law's children.[85] They announced they had split again in February 2011.[86]

In 2008, Miller had a highly publicised affair with married actor Balthazar Getty.[87] Miller later sued two British tabloids over the publication of photos showing her and Getty together.[88]

From 2011 to 2015, Miller dated actor Tom Sturridge, with whom she has a daughter, Marlowe Ottoline Layng Sturridge (b. 7 July 2012).[89][90]

Phone hacking scandal

Following a High Court hearing in May 2011, Sienna Miller was awarded £100,000 in damages from News of the World after the newspaper admitted hacking into her phone.[91] Later, as a core participant, she gave evidence to the Leveson Inquiry in November 2011,[92] including the following:[93]

I would often find myself almost daily, I was 21, at midnight running down a dark street on my own with 10 big men chasing me. The fact that they had cameras in their hands meant that was legal. But if you take away the cameras, what have you got? You've got a pack of men chasing a woman, and obviously that's a very intimidating situation to be in.

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
2001 South Kensington Sharon Credited as Sienna Rose
2002 High Speed Savannah
2002 The Ride Sara
2004 Layer Cake Tammy
2004 Alfie Nikki
2005 Casanova Francesca Bruni
2006 Factory Girl Edie Sedgwick
2007 Interview Katya
2007 Stardust Victoria
2008 The Mysteries of Pittsburgh Jane Bellwether
2008 Camille Camille Foster
2008 A Fox's Tale Darcey Voice
2008 The Edge of Love Caitlin Macnamara
2009 The September Issue Herself Documentary
2009 G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra The Baroness
2012 Just Like a Woman Movie star
2012 Nous York Movie star
2012 Two Jacks Diana
2012 Yellow Xanne
2013 A Case of You Sarah
2014 Foxcatcher Nancy Schultz
2014 American Sniper Taya Renae Kyle
2015 Mississippi Grind Simone
2015 Unfinished Business Chuck Portnoy
2015 High-Rise Charlotte Melville
2015 Black Mass Catherine Greig Deleted scenes[94]
2015 Burnt Helene
2016 The Lost City of Z Nina Fawcett
2016 Live by Night Emma Gould
2017 The Private Life of a Modern Woman Vera Lockman
2018 The Catcher Was a Spy Estella Huni
2018 American Woman Deborah Callahan
2019 21 Bridges Detective Frankie Burns
2020 Wander Darkly Adrienne

Television

Year Title Role Notes
2002 The American Embassy Babe Episode: "Long Live the King"
2002 Bedtime Stacey 4 episodes
2003–04 Keen Eddie Fiona Bickerton Main cast
2009 Top Gear Herself 2 episodes
2012 The Girl Tippi Hedren Television film
2012 Just Like a Woman Marilyn Television film
2019 The Loudest Voice Beth Ailes Miniseries

Theatre

Year Title Role Notes
2005 As You Like It Celia Wyndhams Theatre, West End
2009 After Miss Julie Miss Julie American Airlines Theatre, Broadway
2011 Flare Path Patricia Theatre Royal Haymarket, West End
2015 Cabaret Sally Bowles Studio 54, Broadway
2017 Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Margaret Apollo Theatre, West End

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Film Result
2007 Environmental Media Awards EMA Futures Award N/A Won
Independent Spirit Awards Best Female Lead Interview Nominated
London Film Critics Circle Awards British Actress of the Year Nominated
2008 BAFTA Rising Star Award N/A Nominated
British Independent Film Awards Best Supporting Actress The Edge of Love Nominated
2009 ShoWest Awards Best Supporting Actress Won
2012 Golden Globe Award Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film The Girl Nominated
BAFTA TV Award BAFTA TV Award for Best Actress Nominated
2013 Critics' Choice Television Awards Best Movie/Miniseries Supporting Actress Nominated
2015 Denver Film Critics Society Award Best Supporting Actress American Sniper Nominated
British Independent Film Award Best Supporting Actress High-Rise Nominated
2019 FCAD Deauville, France American Film Festival Awards Film Talent Award American Woman Won

Notes

  1. Miller is an American citizen because she was born in the United States and has an American father. However, she has noted that she carries a British passport, and is also a citizen of the United Kingdom, and has been described by both herself[2][3] and various publications as English and British.[4][5][5]
gollark: Anticool.
gollark: Uncoolest uncool.
gollark: <@151391317740486657> vanilla smelters are uncool.
gollark: 🌵
gollark: Hiumwn.

References

  1. Wright, Joanna. "Ten Things About... Sienna Miller". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 6 December 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2012. FilmReference.com notes "born December 28, 1981 (some sources say 1982)" at Sienna Miller Biography (1981?-).
  2. "Questions and Answers with Sienna Miller". MTV News. Retrieved 1 September 2017. ...I love cooking! I'm English, so I tend to be towards the roasts.
  3. "Sienna Miller on SoulCycle, Motherhood, and Her Glamorous '70s Transformation in High-Rise". Vogue. Retrieved 1 September 2017. I've done SoulCycle a few times when I'm here. Sometimes I cringe a little bit at the motivational aspect of it, but that's just because I'm English and we're not used to saying, 'You see your dream! Go get it!'
  4. Reaney, Patricia (14 January 2015). "A Minute With: Sienna Miller on acting, 'American Sniper'". Reuters. Retrieved 21 November 2017.
  5. "MiNDFOOD Interview: Sienna Miller". MINDFOOD. Retrieved 1 September 2017.
  6. "Leveson Inquiry, Transcript of Morning Hearing 24th November 2011" (PDF). p. 5. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  7. Film. "Sienna Miller: a sense of theatre". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  8. Film. "Jeremy Clarkson interviews Sienna Miller our Reasonably Priced Star". topgear.com. Archived from the original on 10 October 2014. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
  9. "Sienna Miller Denies Having Temper Tantrum – Page 1210295 – Sienna Miller". People. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  10. "Sienna Miller Biography". The Biography Channell. Archived from the original on 16 August 2009. Retrieved 6 September 2009.
  11. Green, Matt. "Celebrity Biographies - The Amazing Life Of Sienna Miller - Famous Actors". Matt Green via Google Books.
  12. Dargis, Manohla (13 May 2005). "Derailing a Drug Dealer's Retirement" via NYTimes.com.
  13. "Alfie : Sienna Miller Interview". culture.com.
  14. "Casanova". EW.com.
  15. "As You Like It, Wyndham's Theatre, London". The Independent. 22 June 2005.
  16. "Factory Girl". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
  17. "Interview (2007)" via www.rottentomatoes.com.
  18. "Mysterious casting for Nolte and Suvari". Theguardian.com. London, UK. 24 August 2006.
  19. "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh". RottenTomatoes.com. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  20. "Hot Actress: Sienna Miller". by Jenny Eliscu, Rolling Stone. 6 October 2006. Retrieved 4 February 2007.
  21. "Sienna Miller apologizes for dissing Pittsburgh". Associated Press. 6 October 2006. Retrieved 31 October 2007.
  22. Film Review: The Edge of Love Hollywood Reporter, 17 June 2008 Archived 12 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  23. Topel, Fred (6 March 2009). "Sienna Miller hams it up as the Baroness in G.I. Joe". Sci Fi Wire. Archived from the original on 9 March 2009. Retrieved 6 March 2009.
  24. "G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 29 July 2010.
  25. "G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (2009)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 29 July 2010.
  26. "Sienna Miller says she sabotaged her career in new interview". EW.com.
  27. "Sienna Miller's career comeback as she claws back credibility and clout in Hollywood". independent.
  28. Craig, Tom (28 January 2014). "Girl Interrupted". Esquire.
  29. McGrath, Charles (19 October 2009). "What She Really Wants to Do Is Act". New York Times. Retrieved 19 October 2009.
  30. Soloski, Alexis (23 October 2009). "Review: Sienna Miller's Miss Julie avoids getting butchered on Broadway" via www.theguardian.com.
  31. "Sienna Miller travels down Flare Path". Broadway.com. 9 March 2011. Archived from the original on 15 April 2011. Retrieved 29 March 2011.
  32. Benedictus, Leo (15 March 2011). "What to say about ... Flare Path with Sienna Miller" via www.theguardian.com.
  33. Gay, Jason. "Sienna Miller on Motherhood, Her New Movies, and Why She'll Never Be on Twitter". Vogue.
  34. Adams, Tim (16 December 2012). "When Sienna Miller met Tippi Hedren". The Observer. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  35. Wilson, Benji (26 December 2012). "Sienna Miller on her flight from Hitchcock". Radio Times. Retrieved 10 January 2013.
  36. Battersby, Matilda (11 December 2012). "Sienna Miller endured 'horrible' two-hour bird attack while filming The Girl". The Independent. Independent Print Ltd. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
  37. James, Clive (4 January 2013). "Clive James on TV: Downton Abbey, Restless and The Girl". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
  38. "Box Office Milestone: 'American Sniper' Hits $500M Globally, Becomes Top 2014 Title in U.S." The Hollywood Reporter.
  39. "'The Lobster' Leads British Independent Film Awards Nominations". The Hollywood Reporter.
  40. Dziemianowicz, Joe. "Sienna Miller time at 'Cabaret': 'American Sniper' star follows Michelle Williams and Emma Stone as Broadway's Sally Bowles". nydailynews.com.
  41. "The Jury of the 68th Cannes Film Festival". Cannes Film Festival. Retrieved 21 April 2015.
  42. "Jake Gyllenhaal, Sienna Miller and Guillermo del Toro Join Cannes Film Festival Jury". The Wrap. Retrieved 21 April 2015.
  43. Dargis, Manohla (13 April 2017). "Review: Hearts of Darkness and Light in 'The Lost City of Z'" via NYTimes.com.
  44. "'Lost City of Z' Is a Grand Epic". Time.
  45. Chitwood, Adam (22 March 2016). "Ben Affleck's 'Live by Night' Gets Oscar-Friendly 2017 Release Date". Collider. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  46. Flemming, Michael (27 January 2014). "Ben Affleck on Argo, His Distaste For Politics and the Batman Backlash". Playboy. Retrieved 5 June 2014.
  47. Kit, Borys (11 October 2012). "Ben Affleck in Talks to Adapt Dennis Lehane's 'Live by Night'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  48. Chitwood, Adam (9 January 2013). "Ben Affleck Confirms LIVE BY NIGHT as His Next Directorial Project; Explains Why He Dropped Out of FOCUS". Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  49. "Venice Competition Includes Films From George Clooney, Guillermo del Toro, Darren Aronofsky". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 27 July 2017.
  50. Limited, London Theatre Direct (14 August 2017). "West End Journey: Sienna Miller". www.londontheatredirect.com.
  51. Wally, Maxine; Wally, Maxine (13 December 2019). "Five Minutes With Sienna Miller".
  52. Bradshaw, Peter (22 November 2019). "21 Bridges review – Chadwick Boseman takes Manhattan" via www.theguardian.com.
  53. "'The Loudest Voice' star Sienna Miller on playing the 'very, very different' Elizabeth Ailes". EW.com.
  54. "Sienna Miller: Biography". People. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  55. "Her Look Of The Day - Sienna Miller Covers Nylon Magazine". Her.ie.
  56. "Porter Edit July 2019 Cover: Sienna Miller (Porter Edit)". MODELS.com.
  57. "Pepe bags Sienna (January 10, 2006)". Vogue UK. 10 January 2006. Archived from the original on 11 June 2011. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  58. "Who's The Boss? That Would Be Sienna Miller". style.com. 24 February 2009. Retrieved 13 August 2009.
  59. "Sienna Miller Is The New Face Of Scandi Brand Lindex". Grazia.
  60. "Gucci Cruise 2020 Campaign (Gucci)". MODELS.com.
  61. Emili Vesilind (30 September 2007). "Shades of Sienna". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  62. "Sienna and Savannah Miller leave Twenty8Twelve - Telegraph". fashion.telegraph.co.uk.
  63. Miller, Sienna. "Sienna Miller: A Diary from Democratic Republic of Congo". imcworldwide.org. Archived from the original on 11 June 2010. Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  64. "Sienna Miller, International Medical Corps Global Ambassador, in Haiti". alertnet.org. 10 March 2010. Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  65. "Global Cool is hot on carbon emissions". The Times. London. 12 May 2007. Retrieved 1 February 2011.
  66. "Sienna Miller, ambassador". Starlight childrens foundation, who we are: ambassadors. Starlight Childrens Foundation. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  67. "Princes open Wembley Diana concert with joke". The Telegraph. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  68. "What is the Concert for Diana?". BBC. 13 August 2015.
  69. Diana concert a 'perfect tribute'. BBC News. Retrieved 18 June 2016
  70. Harvey, Catriona (13 October 2015). "Cosmopolitan, the women's magazine for fashion, beauty, sex tips and celebrity news". Getlippy.com. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  71. Vogue, December 2004
  72. See, for example, London Evening Standard, 5 November 2004
  73. Challah, Doha. "London Breeds The 'New Bohemians'". visavismag.com. Archived from the original on 17 May 2008. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  74. Hair, June 2007
  75. Vogue, January 2007
  76. Purcell, Andrew (9 January 2017). "Sienna Miller, once a fixture of gossip mags, longs for career-defining role". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  77. "Lohan, Alba, Johansson top Maxim 'Hot 100'". The Hollywood Reporter.
  78. Staff, Maxim. "2008 Hot 100 List". Maxim.
  79. Staff, Maxim. "2009 Hot 100 List". Maxim.
  80. Rogers, Sabrina. "Famous couples". AskMen.
  81. Stephen M. Silverman (5 January 2005). "Jude Law to Marry Girlfriend Sienna Miller". People. Archived from the original on 2 August 2009. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  82. "I cheated on Sienna: Jude". Sydney Morning Herald. 8 July 2005. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  83. Norman, Pete (12 November 2006). "Jude Law and Sienna Miller Call It Quits". People. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  84. "Jude Law & Sienna Miller Take Romantic Ride in NYC". E!. 18 December 2009. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
  85. "Sienna Miller, Jude Law & Kids Holiday Together". E!. 28 December 2009. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
  86. "Jude Law, Sienna Miller Break Up", People.
  87. Talarico, Brittany (20 September 2010). "Balthazar Getty Talks 'Challenging Time' Post Sienna Miller Affair". OK!. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  88. "Sienna Miller Files Lawsuit Against Tabloids". Starpulse.com. 23 July 2008. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  89. "Sienna Miller Gives Birth". US Weekly. Retrieved 8 July 2012.
  90. "Sienna Miller names daughter Marlowe Ottoline Layng". The Arizona Republic. Bang Showbiz. 12 July 2012. Retrieved 13 September 2012.
  91. "Sienna Miller Awarded £100,000 over Phone Hacking". BBC. 13 May 2011. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  92. "Sienna Miller's Written Statement to the Leveson Inquiry". The Guardian. 24 November 2011. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  93. "Leveson Inquiry: Actress Sienna Miller gives evidence". BBC. 24 November 2011. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  94. Goldstein, Meredith (2 September 2015). "Director confirms Sienna Miller cut from 'Black Mass'". The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on 4 September 2015. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.