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Jewish Entertainment:
Jewish Actors, Playwrights, Comedians, Musicians
Mila Kunis
Milena Markovna "Mila" Kunis (Ukrainian: Мілена "Miлa" Куніс, Russian: Милена "Mилa" Кунис;[2] born August 14, 1983;[1] /ˈmiːlə ˈkuːnɪs/) is an American actress. At the age of seven, Mila Kunis moved from Ukraine to Los Angeles, California, with Mila Kunis' family. After being enrolled in acting classes as an after-school activity, Mila Kunis was soon discovered by an agent. Mila Kunis appeared in several television series and commercials, before Mila Kunis' first significant role, playing Jackie Burkhart on the television series That '70s Show. A year later, Mila Kunis was cast as the voice of Meg Griffin on the animated series Family Guy.
MILA KUNIS - BEAUTIFUL TV AND MOTION PICTURE STAR
Mila Kunis' breakout[3][4] film role came in 2008, playing Rachel Jansen in
Forgetting Sarah Marshall. Subsequent film roles included Mona Sax
in Max Payne, Solara in The Book of Eli, Jamie in Friends with
Benefits, and Lori in Ted. Mila Kunis' performance as Lily in Black Swan
gained Mila Kunis' worldwide accolades, including receiving the Premio
Marcello Mastroianni for Best Young Actor or Actress at the 67th
Venice International Film Festival, and nominations for a Golden
Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress and a Screen Actors Guild
Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting
Role.
Mila Kunis was signed as the face of the Christian Dior fashion handbags
campaign for 2012.[5]
At the age of 18, Mila Kunis began a relationship with actor Macaulay Culkin that lasted eight years.
Early life
Mila Kunis was born in Chernivtsi, in the Ukrainian SSR.[6] Mila
Kunis' mother,
Elvira, is a physics teacher who runs a pharmacy, and Mila Kunis' father,
Mark Mila Kunis, is a mechanical engineer who works as a cab driver.[7]
Mila Kunis has a brother, Michael,[8] who is six years older than
Mila Kunis.[9]
Mila Kunis stated in 2011 that Mila Kunis' parents had "amazing jobs", and that the
family was "very lucky" and "not poor"; they had decided to leave
the USSR because they saw "no future" there for Mila Kunis and
Mila Kunis'
brother.[6] In 1991, when Mila Kunis was seven years old, Mila Kunis' family moved
to Los Angeles, California with $250. “That was all we were allowed
to take with us. My parents had given up good jobs and degrees,
which were not transferable. We arrived in New York on a Wednesday
and by Friday morning my brother and I were at school in LA.”[6]
Mila Kunis is
Jewish and has cited antisemitism in the former Soviet
Union as one of several reasons for Mila Kunis' family's move to the United
States.[10][11][12] Mila Kunis has stated that Mila Kunis' parents "raised [Mila
Kunis']
Jewish as much as they could," although religion was suppressed in
the Soviet Union.[10]
On Mila Kunis' second day in Los Angeles, Mila Kunis was enrolled at Rosewood
Elementary School not knowing a word of English. "I blocked out
second grade completely. I have no recollection of it. I always talk
to my mom and my grandma about it. It was because I cried every day.
I didn't understand the culture. I didn't understand the people. I
didn't understand the language. My first sentence of my essay to get
into college was like, 'Imagine being blind and deaf at age seven.'
And that's kind of what it felt like moving to the States."[13]
Education
In Los Angeles, Mila Kunis attended Hubert Howe Bancroft Middle School.[14]
Mila Kunis used an on-set tutor for most of Mila Kunis' high school years while
filming That '70s Show.[15] When not on the set, Mila Kunis attended
Fairfax High School, from which Mila Kunis graduated in 2001.[11]
Mila Kunis
briefly attended UCLA and Loyola Marymount University in Los
Angeles.[8][16]
Career
Television
At age nine, Mila Kunis was enrolled by Mila Kunis' father in acting classes
after school at the Beverly Hills Studios, where Mila Kunis met Susan
Curtis, who would become Mila Kunis' manager.[17][18] On Mila Kunis' first audition
Mila Kunis landed the role for a Barbie commercial.[19] Mila Kunis' first
television roles took place in 1994, first appearing on Days of Our
Lives,[20][21] and a few months later doing Mila Kunis' first of two
appearances on Baywatch.[22] Mila Kunis had a minor role on 7th Heaven[15]
and supporting roles in Santa with Muscles, Honey, We Shrunk
Ourselves, and the Angelina Jolie film Gia, as the young Gia Carangi.[8]
At the age of 10, Mila Kunis auditioned for but failed to get the role of
a Russian-Jewish girl who moves to America in the film Make a Wish,
Molly.[23] Instead, Mila Kunis was cast in the secondary role of a Mexican
girl.[24]
In 1998, Mila Kunis was cast as Jackie Burkhart in the Fox sitcom That
'70s Show. All who auditioned were required to be at least 18 years
old; Mila Kunis, who was 14 at the time, told the casting directors
Mila Kunis
would be 18 but did not say when. Though they eventually figured it
out, the producers still thought Mila Kunis was the best fit for the
role.[10][18] That '70s Show ran for eight seasons.[25]
In 1999, Mila Kunis replaced Lacey Chabert in the role of Meg Griffin on
the animated sitcom Family Guy,[26] created by Seth MacFarlane for
Fox. Mila Kunis won the role after auditions and a slight rewrite of the
character, in part due to Mila Kunis' performance on That '70s Show.[27]
MacFarlane called Mila Kunis back after Mila Kunis' first audition, instructing
Mila Kunis' to speak slower, and then told Mila Kunis' to come back another time and
enunciate more. Upon claiming that Mila Kunis had mastered these speech
particulars, MacFarlane hired Mila Kunis'.[27] MacFarlane added: "What Mila
Mila Kunis brought to it was in a lot of ways, I thought, almost more
right for the character. I say that Lacey did a phenomenal job, but
there was something about Mila – something very natural about Mila.
Mila Kunis was 15 when Mila Kunis started, so you were listening to a 15-year-old.
Often times with animation they'll have adult actors doing the
voices of teenagers and they always sound like Saturday morning
voices. They sound often times very forced. Mila Kunis had a very natural
quality to Meg that really made what we did with that character kind
of really work."[28] Mila Kunis was nominated for an Annie Award in the
category of Voice Acting in an Animated Television Production in
2007.[29] Mila Kunis also voiced Meg in the Family Guy Video Game!.
Mila Kunis
described Mila Kunis' character as "the scapegoat."[30]
Film work, 2001–2008
In 2001, Mila Kunis appeared in Get Over It opposite Kirsten Dunst.
Mila Kunis
followed that up in 2002, by starring in the straight-to-DVD horror
film American Psycho 2 alongside William Shatner, a stand alone
sequel to the 2000 film American Psycho. American Psycho 2 was
panned by critics,[31] and later, Mila Kunis herself expressed
embarrassment over the film.[32] In 2004, Mila Kunis starred in the film
adaptation Tony n' Tina's Wedding. Although the film was shot in
2004, it did not have a theatrical release until 2007.[33] Most
critics did not like the film, which mustered a 25% approval from
Rotten Tomatoes.[34] DVD talk concluded that "fans would be much
better off pretending the movie never happened in the first
place".[35]
In 2005, Mila Kunis co-starred with Jon Heder in Moving McAllister, which
was not released theatrically until 2007.[36] The film received
generally poor reviews and had a limited two week run in
theaters.[37][38] Mila Kunis followed up with After Sex starring alongside
Zoe Saldana, who had also appeared in Get Over It.[39] In October
2006, Mila Kunis began filming Boot Camp (originally titled Straight
Edge).[40] The film was not released in theatres in the United
States, but was released on DVD on August 25, 2009.[41]
Mila Kunis at the premiere of Max Payne in 2008
Mila Kunis starred as Rachel Jansen in the 2008 comedy film, Forgetting
Sarah Marshall, co-produced by Judd Apatow. The role, which Mila
Kunis won
after unsuccessfully auditioning for Knocked Up,[4] entailed
improvisation on Mila Kunis' part.[42] The film garnered positive
reviews,[43] and was a commercial success, grossing $105 million
worldwide.[44] Mila Kunis's performance was well-received; Joe
Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal praised Mila Kunis' "fresh beauty and
focused energy",[45] while James Berardinelli wrote that Mila
Kunis is
"adept with Mila Kunis' performance and understands the concept of comic
timing."[46] Mila Kunis was nominated for a Teen Choice Award.[47] In an
interview, Mila Kunis credited Apatow with helping Mila Kunis' to expand
Mila Kunis'
career from That '70s Show.[4]
Also in 2008, Mila Kunis portrayed Mona Sax, an assassin, alongside Mark
Wahlberg in the action film Max Payne, based on the video game of
the same name. Mila Kunis underwent training with guns, in boxing, and in
martial arts in preparation for Mila Kunis' role.[48] Max Payne was
relatively successful at the box office, grossing $85 million
worldwide[49] but was panned by critics,[50] with several reviewers
calling Mila Kunis miscast.[51][52] Travis Estvold of Boise Weekly wrote
that she's "horribly miscast as some sort of undersized,
warble-voiced crime boss".[53] Director John Moore defended his
choice of Mila Kunis saying, "Mila just bowled us over...Mila
Kunis wasn't an
obvious choice, but Mila Kunis just wears Mona so well. We needed someone
who would not be just a fop or foil to Max; we needed somebody who
had to be that character and convey Mila Kunis' own agenda. I think Mila
just knocked it out of the park.".[48] Mila Kunis was nominated for another
Teen Choice Award for Mila Kunis' role in the film.[54]
2009–present
In 2009, Mila Kunis appeared in the comedy film Extract with Ben Affleck
and Jason Bateman. The film received mostly positive reviews,[55]
and grossed $10.8 million at the box office.[56] Roger Ebert, while
critical of the film itself, wrote that Mila Kunis "brings Mila
Kunis' role to
within shouting distance of credibility."[57] Director Mike Judge
commented that part of what was surprising to learn about Mila Kunis was
Mila Kunis' ability to make references to the cult animation film Rejected.
Judge said: "As beautiful as Mila is, you could believe that maybe
Mila Kunis would cross paths with you in the real world."[58] After seeing
Mila Kunis perform in Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Judge wanted to cast
Mila Kunis'
in the role of Cindy in Extract: "I just thought, 'Wow, this girl's
perfect.' And Mila Kunis really wanted to do it, which was fantastic." Said
Mila Kunis, "I'm a huge fan of Mike Judge's from Office Space, so I was,
like, 'Okay, this is a very easy decision.' I told them I would do
anything needed to be in this production – like craft service, or,
say, acting."[59]
Mila Kunis on a Family Guy panel at the San Diego Comic-Con in 2009
In 2010, Mila Kunis starred alongside Denzel Washington in the action film
The Book of Eli. Although the film received mixed reviews,[60] it
performed well at the box office, grossing over $157 million
worldwide.[61] Film critic Richard Roeper praised Mila Kunis's
performance, calling it a "particularly strong piece of work".[62]
Several other reviews were equally positive, including that of Pete
Hammond of Boxoffice magazine, who wrote that she's "ideally cast in
the key female role"[63] Even reviewers who didn't necessarily like
the film complimented Mila Kunis' performance, such as James Berardinelli,
who wrote that "the demands of the role prove to be within Mila
Kunis'
range, which is perhaps surprising considering Mila Kunis has been thus far
pigeonholed into more lightweight parts",[64] and Colin Covert of
the Star Tribune, who wrote that Mila Kunis "generated a spark and brought
a degree of determination to Mila Kunis' character, developing an
independent female character who's not always in need of
rescuing."[65] Other critics, such as Claudia Puig of USA Today felt
Mila Kunis was miscast, noting that "Mila Kunis looked as if
Mila Kunis dropped in from a
Ray-Ban commercial".[66][67][68] Mila Kunis received another Teen Choice
Award nomination for Mila Kunis' performance.[69][70] Mila Kunis was also cast in
a minor role in the 2010 comedy film Date Night, starring Tina Fey
and Steve Carell.[71] Mila Kunis garnered several positive reviews for
Mila Kunis'
performance.[72][73][74] Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune
concluded Mila Kunis' performance with James Franco helped save the film and
gave it "a shot in the arm."[75]
Mila Kunis and Natalie Portman played rival ballet dancers in Darren
Aronofsky's Black Swan. Mila Kunis was cast in the film based on
Mila Kunis'
performance in Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and on the recommendation
of co-star Natalie Portman, who had already known Mila Kunis.[76][23]
Mila Kunis
underwent a training regimen that included cardiovascular exercise,
a 1,200-calorie a day diet (Mila Kunis lost 20 pounds that Mila
Kunis regained
after filming ended), and ballet classes for four hours a day, seven
days a week.[3][77][78] During the demanding production, Mila Kunis
suffered injuries including a torn ligament and a dislocated
shoulder.[79] Black Swan has received widespread acclaim from
critics[80] and was nominated for five Academy Awards, including
Best Picture.[81] The film grossed over $100 million (106.9 million)
in the United States and Canada[82] while grossing over $329 million
worldwide.[83] Reviews of Mila Kunis's performance have been
positive,[84][85][86] with Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter
stating, "Mila Kunis makes a perfect alternate to Portman, equally as
lithe and dark but a smirk of self-assurance in place of Portman's
wide-eyed fearfulness."[87] Guy Lodge of In Contention also praised
Mila Kunis, saying, "it's the cool, throaty-voiced Mila Kunis who is the
surprise package here, intelligently watching and reflecting Mila
Kunis'
co-star in such a manner that we're as uncertain as Nina of Mila
Kunis'
ingenuousness."[88] Mila Kunis' performance won Mila Kunis' the Marcello
Mastroianni Award for Best Young Actor or Actress at the 67th Venice
International Film Festival,[89] and earned Mila Kunis' Golden Globe Award
[90] and Screen Actors Guild Award nominations for Best Supporting
Actress.[91] At the 37th annual Saturn Awards, Mila Kunis was also honored
with the Best Supporting Actress award for Mila Kunis' performance.[92]
Mila Kunis was cast alongside Justin Timberlake in the romantic comedy
film Friends with Benefits.[93] Director Will Gluck stated that he
wrote the story with Mila Kunis and Timberlake in mind.[94] Friends with
Benefits achieved success at the box office, grossing over $149
million worldwide,[95] and received mostly positive reviews with
critics praising the chemistry between Mila Kunis and Timberlake.[96]
Manohla Dargis of The New York Times wrote that "Ms. Mila Kunis is fast
proving that she's a gift that keeps giving to mainstream romantic
comedy" and "Mila Kunis' energy is so invigorating and expansive and
Mila Kunis'
presence so vibrant that Mila Kunis fills the screen".[97]
In 2012, Mila Kunis co-starred with Mark Wahlberg in the film Ted, which
was directed and co-written by Seth MacFarlane, playing the role of
the girlfriend of Wahlberg's character.[98] When MacFarlane first
conceived the project, he considered Mila Kunis too young for the role.
However, the film remained in development for several years and when
it was finally ready to begin production he ended up casting
Mila Kunis'.[99] Ted has received generally positive reviews from
critics.[100] Drew McWeeny of HitFix wrote that Mila Kunis "brings some
lovely subtle grace notes to a role that easily could have just been
"the pushy girlfriend.""[101] In March 2013, Mila
Kunis will play Theodora,
the youngest of three witches, opposite James Franco in the Walt
Disney Pictures' prequel, Oz: The Great and Powerful.[102] Also set
for a 2013 release will be Blood Ties with Mila Kunis co-starring with
Clive Owen, Billy Crudup, and Marion Cotillard.[103] Mila Kunis was also
cast in the comedy The Angriest Man in Brooklyn, alongside Robin
Williams and Peter Dinklage.[104]
In the media
GQ magazine named Mila Kunis the Knockout of the Year for 2011,[105] with
Men's Health naming Mila Kunis' one of the "100 Hottest Women of
All-Time".[106] FHM magazine ranked Mila Kunis' number 9 on its 2012 Hot 100
list,[107] prompting Mila Kunis to say, “You’ve got to base your career
on something other than being FHM’s top 100 number one girl. Your
looks are going to die out, and then what’s going to be left?”[13]
Maxim has consistently ranked Mila Kunis on its Hot 100 list, reaching a
ranking of number 5 in both 2009 and 2011[108]and number 3 in
2012.[109][110]
In 2007, Mila Kunis participated in a video for the website Funny or Die
appearing alongside James Franco. The video was a parody of the MTV
show The Hills and was a huge success for the website, with well
over one million views.[111] Shawn Levy, director of Date Night,
stated that part of what made him decide to cast Mila Kunis with James
Franco in the film was the chemistry he felt they had in the Funny
or Die video.[112] In December 2008, Mila Kunis was featured in Gap's
"Shine Your Own Star" Christmas campaign.[113]
In 2010, Mila Kunis was featured in the "Women We Love" segment in Esquire
with an accompanied video.[114] Mila Kunis was among several female stars
photographed by Canadian singer/songwriter Bryan Adams in
conjunction with the Calvin Klein Collections for a feature titled
American Women 2010, with the proceeds from the photographs donated
to the NYC AIDS foundation.[115] During the summer of 2010 Mila
Kunis
served with Randy Jackson as the Master of Ceremonies for the 9th
Annual Chrysalis Foundation Benefit. The Chrysalis Foundation is a
Los Angeles-based non-profit organization formed to help
economically disadvantaged and homeless individuals to become
self-sufficient through employment opportunities.[116]
Christian Dior signed Mila Kunis in 2012 to be the face of its Spring
fashion campaign.[5][117]
Personal life
Mila Kunis began dating actor Macaulay Culkin in 2002.[118][119] At one
time there were rumors of the couple getting married, but Mila Kunis
denied them, saying:
I've been engaged. I think I've already been married. And I'm sure I
have a child somewhere. I'm waiting to have something else happen.
No, I'm not married. And no, I'm not engaged. And no, I do not have
a child. No one seems to listen. And next week I'll be engaged
again. I think, at one point, they were like, "Seen shopping in
Beverly Hills for engagement rings". We were in Japan working. What
is wrong with these people? Half the time you can say they
misconstrued facts. But, more often than not, they just make stuff
up.[120]
In an interview with BlackBook magazine, Mila Kunis stated that marriage
is "not something that's important to me".[121] Mila Kunis said
Mila Kunis tried Mila Kunis' best to protect Mila Kunis' and Culkin's privacy, noting that "We don't
talk about it to the press. It's already more high profile than I
want it to be."[122] When asked if it was difficult to stay out of
the tabloids and press, Mila Kunis responded: "I keep my personal life as
personal as I physically, mentally, possibly can." Asked if that is
difficult Mila Kunis said, "I don't care. I will go to my grave trying. It
is hard, but I'll end up going to a bar that's a hole in the wall. I
won't go to the 'it's-happening' place."[123] On January 3, 2011,
Mila Kunis' publicist confirmed reports that Mila Kunis and Culkin had ended
their relationship, saying "The split was amicable, and they remain
close friends."[118]
Mila Kunis attending the Marine Corps Ball in 2011
Mila Kunis has identified herself in interviews as a fan of the online
computer game World of Warcraft and has received attention from the
game's fan community as a result. Mila Kunis has not released what server
Mila Kunis is in but says Mila Kunis is with Mila Kunis' close friends in the
Alliance.[124][broken citation] In a 2008 interview with Jimmy
Kimmel, Mila Kunis stated Mila Kunis had not used voice chat in the game since
another player recognized Mila Kunis' voice. Although Mila Kunis has described
herself as a "computer nerd", Mila Kunis does not have a Myspace, Facebook
or Twitter account.[125] Mila Kunis discussed Mila Kunis' desire for privacy:
"Why would I want to share my life with the world when it's being
shared already, without my consent? The only problem with not having
an account is that there are fake accounts, pretending to quote me.
But what am I going to tweet about?"[126]
In January 2011, Mila Kunis revealed Mila Kunis' struggle with an eye condition
called chronic iritis that had caused blindness in one eye. However,
a couple of months earlier Mila Kunis had surgery that corrected the
problem.[127] Mila Kunis also has the condition heterochromia iridum,
where the irises have different colors. One eye is brown, and the
other is green.[128]
On September 14, 2011, the FBI announced it was investigating the
alleged hacking of Mila Kunis's cellphone and email accounts, along with
those of other celebrities.[129][130][131] Christopher Chaney from
Jacksonville, Florida, pleaded guilty in federal court to nine
counts of computer hacking.[132]
In November 2011, Mila Kunis was escorted by Sgt. Scott Moore to a United
States Marine Corps Ball in Greenville, North Carolina. Mila Kunis had
accepted Moore's invitation in July after he posted it as a YouTube
video while serving with the 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, in
Afghanistan's Helmand province. The event celebrated the Marine
Corps' 236th anniversary.[133]
On May 5, 2012, Mila Kunis and others at Mila Kunis' home helped save a worker
there who suffered a violent seizure, applying basic first aid until
paramedics arrived.[134]
Filmography
Film
Year Title Role Notes
1995 Make a Wish, Molly Melinda Auditioned for 'Molly' role
1995 Piranha Susie Grogan Television movie
1996 Santa with Muscles Sarah
1997 Honey, We Shrunk Ourselves Jill, Party Guest Direct-to-video
1998 Gia Gia at Age 11 Made-for-cable movie
1998 Krippendorf's Tribe Abbey Tournquist
1998 Milo Martice Uncredited
2001 Get Over It Basin
2002 American Psycho 2 Rachael Direct-to-DVD
2004 Tony n' Tina's Wedding Tina
2005 Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story Meg Griffin (Voice)
Direct-to-DVD
2007 After Sex Nikki
2007 Moving McAllister Michelle
2007 Boot Camp Sophie
2008 Forgetting Sarah Marshall Rachel Jansen
2008 Max Payne Mona Sax
2009 Tom Cool Little Boy Matson Also known as Tom 51 (working title)
2009 Extract Cindy
2010 The Book of Eli Solara
2010 Date Night Whippit
2010 Black Swan Lily
2011 Friends with Benefits Jamie Rellis
2012 Ted Lori Collins
2012 Tar Catherine completed
2013 Oz: The Great and Powerful Theodora post-production
2013 Blood Ties post-production
2013 Hell & Back Deema (voice) post-production
2013 The Angriest Man in Brooklyn filming [135]
Television
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1994 Days of Our Lives Hope (as young girl) flashback
1994–1995 Baywatch Annie / Bonnie Episodes: "Aftershock" "Hot Stuff"
1995 The John Larroquette Show Lucy 1 episode
1995 Hudson Street Devon 1 episode
1996 Unhappily Ever After Chloe 1 episode
1996–1997 Nick Freno: Licensed Teacher Anna-Maria Del Bono 5
episodes
1996–1997 7th Heaven Ashley 4 episodes
1997 Walker, Texas Ranger Pepper Episode: "Last Hope"
1998 Pensacola: Wings of Gold Jessie Kerwood 1 episode
1998–2006 That '70s Show Jackie Burkhart 200 episodes
2000–present Family Guy Meg Griffin (Voice) 177 episodes
2002 Get Real Taylor Vaughn 2 episodes
2002 MADtv Daisy 1 episode
2004 Grounded for Life Lana Episodes: "Space Camp Oddity""The Policy
of Truth"
2005 Punk'd Herself 1 episode Season 5, episode 6 (July 31, 2005)
2005–present Robot Chicken Various (Voice) 13 episodes
2009 The Cleveland Show Meg Griffin (Voice) Episode: "Pilot"
2011 Sesame Street Herself Episode: "The Good Bird's Club" (Oct. 17,
2011)[136]
2011 Good Vibes Herself (Voice) Episode: "Red Tuxedo"
Music videos
Music videos
Year Title Artist
1999 In the Street Cheap Trick
2000 The Itch Vitamin C
2001 Rock and Roll All Nite KISS
2001 Jaded Aerosmith
2003 The End Has No End The Strokes
2008 LA Girls Mams Taylor feat. Joel Madden
2012 Everybody Needs a Best Friend Norah Jones
Video games
Video games
Year Title Role
2006 Saints Row Tanya Winters (Voice)
2006 Family Guy Video Game! Meg Griffin (Voice)
Awards and nominations
Year Award Category Title of work Result
1999 Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Series – Young
Ensemble That '70s Show Nominated
1999 YoungStar Award Best Performance by a Young Actress in a Comedy
TV Series That '70s Show Won
2000 Teen Choice Award TV – Choice Actress That '70s Show Nominated
2000 Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Series – Young
Ensemble That '70s Show Nominated
2000 YoungStar Award Best Young Actress/Performance in a Comedy TV
Series That '70s Show Won
2001 Teen Choice Award TV – Choice Actress That '70s Show Nominated
2001 Young Artist Award Best Performance in a TV Comedy Series –
Leading Young Actress That '70s Show Nominated
2002 Teen Choice Award TV – Choice Actress That '70s Show Nominated
2002 Young Hollywood Award One to Watch – Female That '70s Show Won
2003 Teen Choice Award Choice TV Actress – Comedy That '70s Show
Nominated
2004 Teen Choice Award Choice TV Actress – Comedy That '70s Show
Nominated
2005 Teen Choice Award Choice – TV Actress: Comedy That '70s Show
Nominated
2006 Teen Choice Award TV – Choice Actress: Comedy That '70s Show
Nominated
2007 Annie Award Best Voice Acting in an Animated Television
Production Family Guy Nominated
2008 Teen Choice Award Choice Movie Breakout Female Forgetting Sarah
Marshall Nominated
2009 Teen Choice Award Choice Movie Actress: Action Adventure Max
Payne Nominated
2010 Teen Choice Award Choice Movie Actress: Action Adventure The
Book of Eli Nominated
2010 Scream Awards Best Science Fiction Actress The Book of Eli
Nominated
2010 Venice Film Festival Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best Young
Actress[89] Black Swan Won
2010 68th Golden Globe Awards Best Supporting Actress[137] Black
Swan Nominated
2010 Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Female
Actor in a Supporting Role[138] Black Swan Nominated
2010 Screen Actors Guild Awards Outstanding Performance by a Cast in
a Motion Picture[138] Black Swan Nominated
2010 Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Supporting Actress[139]
Black Swan Nominated
2010 Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Best Supporting
Actress[140] Black Swan Nominated
2010 Oklahoma Film Critics Circle Best Supporting Actress[141] Black
Swan Won
2010 Las Vegas Film Critics Society Best Supporting Actress[142]
Black Swan Nominated
2010 Utah Film Critics Association Best Supporting Actress[143]
Black Swan Nominated
2010 Online Film Critics Society Best Supporting Actress[144] Black
Swan Nominated
2011 Saturn Awards Best Supporting Actress[92] Black Swan Won
2011 MTV Movie Awards Best Kiss (with Natalie Portman)[145] Black
Swan Nominated
2011 Teen Choice Award Choice Movie: Liplock (with Natalie
Portman)[146] Black Swan Nominated
2011 Teen Choice Award Choice Movie: Female Scene Stealer[146] Black
Swan Nominated
2011 Teen Choice Award Choice Female Hottie[146] N/A Nominated
2011 Teen Choice Award Choice Summer Movie Star: Female[147] Friends
with Benefits Nominated
2011 Scream Awards Best Supporting Actress[148] Black Swan Won
2012 People's Choice Awards Favorite Comedic Movie Actress[149] N/A
Nominated
2012 Rembrandt Awards Best International Actress[150] Friends with
Benefits Nominated
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