By Guest Blogger Spencer Blohm
The incomparable Dame
Helen Mirren is turning 68 years old today, but you wouldn’t know it from her spunky
attitude or unique fashion choices - she was spotted in clear platform heels at
the Red 2 premiere in Hollywood a few weeks ago on July 11. She has
portrayed the Queen of England, Alfred Hitchcock’s wife, and Linda Kenney
Baden, but her roles don’t just include famously imposing females - Mirren
played Prospero (changed to Prospera) in Shakespeare’s epic screen adaptation
of The Tempest, just to cite one unexpected example. The following year,
Mirren also appeared as Hobson in the 2011 remake of the 1981 comedy Arthur
- coincidentally, both roles were previously played by British actor Sir John
Gielgud, certainly a far cry from Mirren in terms of, well, everything.
At
68, Dame Mirren is basically a one-woman powerhouse. She has won an Academy
Award, 3 Golden Globes, 4 Emmy’s, and 4 SAG Awards, just to name the most
recognizable of her many trophies, and she continues to dazzle both on and off
screen. Like many of her fellow British actors, Mirren worked with the Royal
Shakespeare Company throughout the late 1960s, made her West End stage debut in
the 1970s and recently returned again to the stage, portraying Queen Elizabeth
II for the second time in her career in the play The Audience. Earlier
this year, in January, Mirren was awarded her very own star on the Hollywood
Walk of Fame, a well-deserved honor for an actress rapidly becoming something
of an icon.
In
November of this year, the long-running British sci-fi show Doctor Who
will be celebrating its 50th anniversary, and just a month later, the show
says goodbye to the eleventh regeneration of the Doctor when Matt Smith leaves
the role. Smith’s announcement has opened up the door to speculation and
predictions about possible actors to play the twelfth incarnation of Dr. Who,
and Mirren’s name has repeatedly come up among fans, amongst whom the cry for
there to finally be a female Doctor has grown louder and louder. Dame Helen
Mirren herself has said publicly that she believes it is time for a female
Doctor - but not her. So far, she has stuck with her assertion that she would
never even contemplate the role, but since Mirren has successfully portrayed
previously male characters before, and because her presence might bring a new
audience to the cult show that Dr. Who has always been, it has to be
said that if anyone could be the first female Doctor it would be Dame Helen
Mirren.
Despite
her 68 years, Dame Helen Mirren continues to work both in front of the camera
and on stage, and it doesn’t look like she plans on retiring from acting in the
next few years or any time soon. The bold actress continues to entertain us
with her art as well as her fiery, unapologetically honest and fun personality,
and we hope she doesn’t go anywhere for a long, long time.
Author Bio: Spencer
Blohm is a freelance film, entertainment, and culture blogger for DirectTVcomparison.com. When he’s not working he can usually be found in bed watching
movies with his less than enthusiastic cat. He lives and works in Chicago,
despite the winters.