Andrea Arnold

Filmmaker

Birthday April 5, 1961

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Dartford, Kent, England

Age 62 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#15673 Most Popular

1961

Andrea Arnold, OBE (born 5 April 1961) is an English filmmaker and former actor.

1970

After leaving school in the late 1970s, Arnold got her first TV jobs as a dancer on shows that included Top of the Pops.

1980

She first came to prominence as an actor and television presenter alongside Sandi Toksvig, Nick Staverson and Neil Buchanan in the 1980s children's television show No. 73.

This Saturday morning show on ITV, in which she played Dawn Lodge, had a similar premise to that of The Kumars at No. 42 in the way that the show was part sitcom, part chat show and based at a domestic residence.

In addition to these parts, the show had the usual mix of music, competitions and cartoons that was in keeping to the formula of British Saturday morning children's TV of the 1980s.

After a couple of years of experience in front of the camera, Arnold realized, "Television was great fun and I went along for the ride, but I never felt that comfortable in front of the camera".

1988

In 1988 No. 73 had morphed into 7T3, with the set being moved from the Maidstone house (in fact in TVS studios in Kent) to that of a theme park.

This revamp would only last the season, but Arnold would be seen for another two years in the same timeslot as part of the Motormouth presenting team.

1990

In 1990 she presented and wrote for the environmental awareness show for teens, A Beetle Called Derek.

This also featured Benjamin Zephaniah and gave exposure to The Yes/No People of Stomp fame.

After retiring from her career as a television presenter, Arnold studied directing at the AFI Conservatory in Los Angeles and trained in screenwriting at the PAL Labs in Kent.

1998

Her early short films included Milk (1998), which premiered at the International Critics' Week Cannes, and Dog (2001).

2003

Also in 2003, she directed an episode of the Channel 4 series Coming Up titled "Bed Bugs", though she is sometimes erroneously credited as "Andrew Arnold" for the work.

Red Road is the first instalment of Advance Party, a planned set of three conceptually-related films by different first-time directors.

Set on a housing estate in Glasgow, the revenge-themed story centres on a CCTV (security TV cameras) operator who develops an obsession with someone she observes, for reasons that become clear through the progress of the film.

The picture has won the British director comparisons with established names such as Michael Haneke and Lars von Trier.

2004

She won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film for Wasp, in 2004.

She was named a Screen International Star of Tomorrow.

2005

She won an Academy Award for her short film Wasp in 2005.

2006

Her feature films include Red Road (2006), Fish Tank (2009), and American Honey (2016), all of which have won the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival.

Arnold has also directed four episodes of the Amazon Prime Video series Transparent, as well as all seven episodes of the second season of the HBO series Big Little Lies.

Her documentary Cow premiered at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival and played at the 2021 Telluride Film Festival.

Arnold was born in Dartford, Kent, the eldest of four children.

She was born when her mother was only 16 years old and her father was 17, and they separated when she was very young.

Growing up on a council estate, she spent her youth days constantly exploring the "chalk pits, fields, woods and motorways" of Dartford.

Her mother had to bring up all four children alone, which is reminiscent of the narrative in Arnold's third short film, Wasp.

When asked if the story is in any way autobiographical, Arnold replies "I grew up in a working class family, so I guess you could say I write from what I know."

As a young girl, she was writing dark stories about human experience.

In an interview, Arnold speaks about how when she was 10 years old, she wrote her first play that expressed her "horror" of the slave trade, and a few years later while studying for a dance GCSE, she made a performance piece; "I took quotes from The Diary of Anne Frank and read them aloud as I moved around the room. All the other kids would just bung on some pop music and dance. I remember the examiners sitting there looking at me, perplexed."

Arnold left school when she was 16, when she was drawn to becoming an actor.

When Arnold was 18 years old she began working as a host and actor for a children's TV show called No. 73.

She worked in TV for the next 10 years while continually writing on the side.

Arnold realized she could turn her stories into films so she studied at the American Film Institute of Los Angeles, where she gained experience in the film industry.

In explaining why she moved from London to study film in the U.S. she states, "I felt my lack of education and accent always held me back in the eyes of the gatekeepers".

After finishing her studies and returning to Britain she had her daughter, Coral, and began making short films for TV.

Screen International critic Allan Hunter said the film was "likely to emerge as one of the discoveries of this year's Cannes Film Festival (2006)."

It went on to win the Jury Prize at Cannes that year.

2007

She won the 2007 BAFTA Award for Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer for directing Red Road.

2008

In 2008, Arnold was reported to be directing an adaptation of Gillian Flynn's novel Sharp Objects for French production company Pathé, but the project never materialized.

2011

In 2011, she was reported to be working on a television project with writer Danny Brocklehurst called Dirty, but this project also failed to materialize.