Quid Pro Quo (2007)
Character Fiona
Director Carlos Brooks
Status Completed | Info
In Tranzit (2007)
Character Natalia
Director Tom Roberts
Status Completed | Info
Never Forever (2007)
Character Sophie
Director Gina Kim
Status Completed | Info
Joshua (2007)
Character Abby Cairn
Director George Ratliff
Status Completed | Info
"I think I want to quit acting after every movie. Each time I have to decide whether or not I want to go back to the struggle of seducing people into believing that I am an entirely different individual. It's especially challenging when Hollywood would like me to be the same bland character over and over again."
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Press Archive
Titles only | With Description
| NY Daily News - June 7, 2008 |
New Jersey girl Vera Farmiga became 'known' overnight thanks to 'The Departed.'
Vera Farmiga isn't an actress who bounded into the spotlight. The New Jersey-born beauty selects her projects carefully, seeking stories, she says, about "women who achieve wholeness."
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| Metromix Los Angeles - June 10, 2008 |
With her combination of striking beauty and undeniable talent, Vera Farmiga could've been a star at any point in Hollywood history. It's just as easy to imagine her as a tragic silent movie heroine, a 1950s glamour girl or a 1970s dramatic powerhouse.
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| Defamer - June 12, 2008 |
Now that we've opened Defamer HQ to a vindicated John Cusack and a defiant Werner Herzog, we figure that this whole "Five Questions" thing might be worth revisiting as opportunities arise (or at least until people realize who's interviewing them). This week we had an audience with Vera Farmiga, the indie darling and no-nonsense Departed love interest whose disturbing new film, Quid Pro Quo, features her as the lovely face of apotemnophilia — the condition of desiring disability and/or amputation as a sexual preference.
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| Premiere - 2008 |
Vera Farmiga Offers up 'Quid Pro Quo'
Vera Farmiga discusses the romantic drama 'Quid Pro Quo' and her role as an able-bodied woman who desires nothing more than to live life in a wheelchair.
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| Film deCulture - September 7, 2007 |
Presented in competition at the 33rd American Film Festival in Deauville, Never Forever has conquered the hearts of viewers with its magnificent portrait of a woman in love. The South Korean director Gina Kim and the sublime American actress Vera Farmiga were prétées Thursday with the elegance of the press conference.
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| Buzzine - February 20, 2006 |
Coming to theaters February 23, 2006: For over a decade, Joey Gazelle (Paul Walker) has successfully juggled his conflicting roles as both loving family man and a low-level employee of the Italian mob in New Jersey. However, when Joey ignores the mob's explicit instructions to dispose of a gun used in the fatal shooting of a corrupt cop during a bungled drug buy, he unwittingly puts his entire family in immediate danger. Vera Farmiga plays his wife, Teresa--a woman with more sides to her than anyone could guess.
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| Venice Magazine - December 2005 |
It's been over 4 years since we last met with Vera Farmiga and they've been very good to her. At the time, she was doing publicity for 15 Minutes, an action thriller starring Robert De Niro and Ed Burns in which she played a supporting role of an immigrant hairdresser who witnesses a murder. The actress was in the early stages of really getting noticed at that point, having landed other roles in Autumn in New York with Richard Gere and Winona Ryder, as well as The Opportunists with Christopher Walken. On a strictly visual level, it was easy to see why she was garnering attention from these small parts.
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| Scripps Howard News Service - August 2, 2007 |
Vera Farmiga is both a typical actress (she guest-starred on "Law & Order" early in her career) and an unusual one -- she lives in upstate New York and raises goats for their wool, which she spins and knits.
She has played the daughter of Richard Gere ("Autumn in New York"), Christopher Walken ("The Opportunists") and Jon Voight ("The Manchurian Candidate") and the mother of several young children, the latest of whom is the title character in "Joshua," now in theaters.
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| Esquire - June 2007 |
The Departed garnered four Academy Awards. She's got four movies coming out this year. But instead of sitting poolside at the Roosevelt Hotel or eating Caesar salad at Chateau Marmont, she spends her days herding goats. Is it any wonder Vera Farmiga is a Woman We Love?
Two Nubian goats battle with a pair of Angoras to eat sunflower seeds out of Vera Farmiga's hand. She coos their names -- Zoshya and Fruzia -- hearty Ukrainian names that recall her own Slavic heritage. "We want to breed them," she explains. "They're so horny. You can see it in their eyes. They dilate."
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| MovieWeb - January 25, 2007 |
Director Anthony Minghella takes a break from the epic period films with Breaking and Entering. Set in London's culturally changing landscape, the film stars Jude Law and Juliette Binoche as married strangers who embark on a disastrous affair for different reasons. It's a serious drama with excellent character work by the actresses involved. The female cast members: Juliette Binoche, Vera Farmiga, and Robin Wright Penn, joined Anthony Minghella at a recent press conference here in New York City. They don't share any scenes in the film, so it was the first time that the actresses had met each other. It certainly was an interesting display of different personalities.
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| New York Magazine - January 22, 2007 |
It’s hard enough being a young actress, much less a poster girl for why it’s so hard to be a young actress. “It was terrifying,” says Vera Farmiga, 33, the subject of a New York Times Magazine cover story about the scarcity of meaty roles for movie actresses. But Farmiga, first buzzed-about at Sundance ’04 with Down to the Bone, just appeared in The Departed, and she stars in two Sundance premieres: Joshua, a psychological thriller, and Never Forever, an interracial love story.
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| Everything Jersey - January 21, 2007 |
She has won acting awards at Sundance, and from the L.A. Film Critics and the National Board of Review. More than one person has compared her, without hyperbole, to Meryl Streep. "Fearless," is the word Martin Scorsese used, picking up a New York Film Critics prize for directing her in "The Departed."
"Actually, I'm just very good at hiding my fear," says Vera Farmiga, nursing a cold and a cup of chamomile tea in a New York hotel. "It is terrifying to put yourself out on the line and do what everybody else spends their entire life trying to hide, to portray all the inconsistencies and mysteries and negatives of life. There's always an element of fear in the roles I choose. But I use it as fuel."
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| Philadelphia Inquirer - January 21, 2007 |
It's not really about the hair, but that's a good way to remember. Vera Farmiga, an actress who's been on the brink of big things for years, can look back at the crazy time in 2005 when she was shooting both The Departed, in which she plays a Boston police psychologist, and Breaking and Entering, in which she's Oana, a smoky-voiced London streetwalker, and think about her 'do.
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| New York Post - January 21, 2007 |
Vera Farmiga just faced one of her biggest fears in life - going on Letterman. "It was a last-minute thing. I'm glad it was last-minute, because if I had known, I would have had colitis in apprehension," says the actress the day after her ordeal. "I was mute and catatonic the whole day."
Yet, for all that angst, she admits it went terrifically - par for the course in a year that's seen the actress catapulted into up-and-coming It Girl status. Phrases like "the next Meryl Streep" have been bandied about so much that she's completely unfazed by them now.
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| USA Weekend - January 7, 2007 |
She romanced Matt Damon and Leonardo DiCaprio in "The Departed," and she may be the next Meryl Streep.
"I'm terrified," says Vera Farmiga, when told she has been called the next Meryl Streep. "Besides, isn't Cate Blanchett the next Meryl Streep?"
Sitting cross-legged on a shag rug at a Beverly Hills hotel poolside lounge, Farmiga, 33, admits she is recognized more often these days -- but says fans often think she's someone else: "The baristas at Starbucks think I'm Patricia Arquette. I don't think we look anything alike. It's just a coffee conspiracy."
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