Naomi Watts Career Biography, Australia, Pink Floyd and Acting Career
During a trip to Australia, her mother became convinced that Australia was “the land of opportunities” and moved the family to Sydney in 1982. Her grandmother, Nikki, was Australian, which made it easier to obtain the documentation necessary, since Naomi and her family were entitled to Australian citizenship.
Her father was a sound engineer with Pink Floyd and her mother is described by Watts as a hippie “with passive-aggressive tendencies” who used to threaten to send her and her brother to foster care in order to convince her grandparents to take care of the family, since her mother had no money after her father’s passing.
In Sydney, she attended several acting schools (and in the very first lesson in the first school, she met Nicole Kidman, with whom she shared a taxi home from class). In 1986 she took a break from acting and went to Japan to work as a model, but the experience was fruitless, and Watts describes it as one of the worst periods of her life, which lasted for about four months. Upon returning to Australia, Watts went to work for a local department store and from there she went to work as assistant fashion editor with an Australian fashion magazine. She only returned to acting when a casual invitation from a colleague to participate in a small play rekindled her passion for the scenic arts and prompted her to quit her job and dedicate herself completely to making it as an actress.
She first appeared in television commercials and then the drama series Home and Away in 1988 in the role of Julie Gibson. Her first big break came with the 1995 movie Tank Girl with the part of Jet Girl.
In 2001, Watts appeared in David Lynch’s Mulholland Drive, a performance which won high praise. The quality and size of Watts’ roles improved after Mulholland Drive, and she starred in the highly successful US remake of The Ring, a Japanese horror movie. In 2004 she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress for her performance in the film 21 Grams.
Although she had been acting for more than fifteen years, Naomi Watts broke through to stardom when she was tapped by David Lynch to portray an aspiring starlet in “Mulholland Drive” (2001), his darkly nightmarish vision of Los Angeles. Originally made as a pilot for a projected television series, the film found a second life when producer Alain Sarde and StudioCanal joined forces to provide funding for Lynch to re-imagine his vision as a feature film. After its premiere at Cannes, “Mulholland Drive” went on to confound or captivate critics and audiences, but nearly all were certain that Watts emerged as an actress of force and presence.
Watts appeared in a string of TV productions of varying quality, from the “Hallmark Hall of Fame” drama “Timepiece” (CBS, 1995) to the failed 1997 NBC series “Sleepwalkers” to the above average miniseries “The Hunt for the Unicorn Killer” (CBS, 1999). Between small screen gigs, the actress was cast as the wife of a Venetian nobleman in “Dangerous Beauty/Destiny of Her Own” (1998) and as a fragile, morally upright young woman in “Strange Planet” (1999), Emma-Kate Croghan’s ensemble film about a group of friends struggling to cope with modern life. Watts was then cast in what was hoped would be her breakthrough, an ABC TV series created by and directed by David Lynch. Although the network passed on the quirky drama, Lynch was able to shoot additional material and create a strange, trippy picture that painted a dark look at the dream factory of Hollywood. Indeed her dual role as perky wannabe Betty Elms and the cynical Diane Selwyn provided Watts with rich and complex material that she skillfully handled. If anyone had any doubts about her capabilities, one scene in particular clinched it: Betty auditions for a movie role and while the dialogue is trite, her reactions to her scene partner (Chad Everett) and her approach to the part allowed Watts to play many layers and moods at once. That astonishing scene alone made critics and audience take notice.
Watts displayed a similar charisma in the Sundance-screened short “Ellie Parker” (2001), about an Australian actress trying to carve a career in L.A. Having to switch gears from auditioning for the role of a Southern belle to trying out for the part of a street junkie, she displayed her amazing range and prodigious talent. Casting agents and directors began to take notice following this one-two punch and Watts found herself being offered choice roles. She starred as a frontier widow who harbors an outlaw in the Showtime original “The Outsider” (lensed 2001) and played a TV newswoman investigating a rash of elevator accidents in “Down” (2001). After the rush of attention following “Mulholland Drive,” Watts effectively kept herself in the public eye thanks to two high-profile relationships: one with her longtime friend Nicole Kidman, whose constant shows of support added luster to Watts’ rising star; and a romantic relationship with up-and-coming heartthrob Heath Ledger, which captivated the paparazzi.
Naomi Watts continued to deliver the goods on-screen as wells, delivering a strong, emotional performance in her first mainstream star vehicle, the haunted high-tech thriller “The Ring” (2002), playing an investigative journalist and single mom who discovers a cursed videotape. The film established her firmly as a bankable star, and she returned to give an equally strong central performance in the otherwise less inspired 2005 sequel “The Ring 2.”