Alberta_Watson

Alberta Watson

Alberta Watson

Canadian actress (1955–2015)


Faith Susan Alberta Watson (March 6, 1955 – March 21, 2015), better known as Alberta Watson, was a Canadian film and television actress.[1]

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Early life

Watson was born in Toronto, Ontario, in 1955.[2] She grew up in Toronto with her mother Grace, a factory worker, and her brother. She began performing with a local Toronto theatre group, T.H.O.G. (Theatre House of God),[3] of the Bathurst Street United Church, at age 15.[4]

Watson took a workshop for the Hair musical.[5] While at the workshop she acted in Hamlet, which was directed by René Bonnière,[6] who later directed her in La Femme Nikita.[7]

Acting career

Watson got her first role at age 19 in a CBC movie called Honor Thy Father.[3][8] Early in her career she portrayed the role of Mitzi in George Kaczender's[9] In Praise of Older Women (1978), for which she received a Genie nomination. A year later she received the Best Actress award at the Yorkton Film Festival for "Exposure".[4] She moved to Los Angeles, California, and later to New York City.[10]

Watson lived in New Jersey for eight years[11] with her husband until they divorced.[7] She then returned to Toronto and focused on finding roles in independent films. She worked with director Colleen Murphy on the film Shoemaker (1996), for which she received a second Genie nomination for Best Actress.[4]

Among her well-known film roles are the bed-ridden mother Susan Aibelli in the 1994 American independent film Spanking the Monkey, Lauren Murphy (the mother of Jonny Lee Miller's character Dade, also called "Crash Override"/"Zero Cool") in the 1995 cult film Hackers, and Risa in the 1997 Academy Award-nominated Canadian film The Sweet Hereafter, directed by Atom Egoyan.[4]

In Spanking the Monkey, Watson plays her favourite character,[12] a mother who has an incestuous relationship with her son. The role was turned down by several actresses such as Susan Sarandon, Jessica Lange and others.[2] Watson said:[7]

I took it because it was a heck of a challenge. And I'm not a name with an image to protect. The subject was incest. It didn't scare me at all. I seized the character and made her something. She was a deeply disturbed woman with a roller coaster of emotions. Her son visits for the summer and she's laid up in a cast with a broken leg and things get out of hand.

She played the role of Madeline in La Femme Nikita for four seasons from 1997 to 2001 (with guest appearances in the short fifth season). During the show's second season (in 1998), Watson was diagnosed with lymphoma, for which she had to undergo chemotherapy treatment which caused her to lose her hair.[12][13] Producers at La Femme Nikita worked around her treatment and limited her appearances.[13] Watson wore wigs in the show when she lost her hair.[13] When her hair started to regrow, she sported the short haircut in her role as Madeline in the show's third season.[13]

Watson's first name inspired the character Alberta Green in the first season of 24.[citation needed] In 2005, Watson joined the cast of 24, playing CTU Director Erin Driscoll for 12 episodes of the show's fourth season.

During 2007 and 2008, Watson played a supporting role in the Canadian television series The Border as the Minister of Public Safety.

In 2010, Watson guest-starred in Heartland, a series on CBC Television, and she won a 2011 Gemini Award for her portrayal of Sarah Craven.

In a nod to her La Femme Nikita role, Alberta played a recurring character Madeline Pierce in Nikita, the CW's 2010–2013 reboot of the film and TV series.

Death

Watson died on March 21, 2015, due to complications from cancer at Kensington Hospice in Toronto fifteen days after her 60th birthday.[14]

Filmography

Film

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Television

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Bibliography

  • Heyn, Christopher. "A Conversation with Alberta Watson". Inside Section One: Creating and Producing TV's La Femme Nikita. Introduction by Peta Wilson. Los Angeles: Persistence of Vision Press, 2006. pp. 88–93. ISBN 0-9787625-0-9. In-depth conversation with Alberta Watson about her role as Madeline on La Femme Nikita, as well as her more recent acting experiences.

References

  1. Alberta Watson profile, filmreference.com; accessed March 23, 2015.
  2. Rita Zekas. "Alberta's Feeling At Home On Deranged" Archived 2008-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, Toronto Star, August 5, 1994.
  3. Neil Morton. "In Praise of Alberta Watson" Archived 2008-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, Elm Street Magazine; accessed March 23, 2015.
  4. Bruce Blackadar. "Young Actress Is Behind Bars -- For A Movie" Archived 2008-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, Toronto Star, August 7, 1980.
  5. Profile of René Bonnière; accessed March 23, 2015.
  6. Jim Bawden. Toronto Star, Nikita's Iciest Femme Fatale Archived 2008-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, albertawatson.net, July 18, 1999.
  7. Liz Braun. "Happy In Her Work" Archived 2008-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, albertawatson.net, December 29, 1995.
  8. George Kaczender profile, imdb.com; accessed March 23, 2015.
  9. "She Wasn't Afraid of 'Spanking'" Archived 2008-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, San Francisco Examiner, August 23, 1994.
  10. Profile Archived 2008-07-02 at the Wayback Machine TVGuide/Yahoo Chat, January 7, 1999.
  11. Michelle Erica Green. "Alberta Watson: The Toughest Woman on Television", TheLittleReview.com; accessed March 23, 2015.
  12. "'24' actress Alberta Watson dies at 60". Fox News. March 23, 2015. Archived from the original on March 26, 2015. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
  13. "awards database". academy.ca. Archived from the original on 2016-11-25. Retrieved 25 November 2016.

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