
Personal details
Name: Emily BluntBorn: 23 February 1983 (Age: 28)
Where: London, England
Height: 5' 8"
Awards: Won 1 Golden Globe, Nominated for 2 BAFTAs
All about this star
Biography:
Most saw the Golden Globes of 2007 as simply another stop-off on Helen Mirren's triumphant world tour, as she gathered a giant collection of awards for her performances as the two Queen Elizabeths. But the Globes also served to announce the arrival of Britain's latest thespian sensation, Emily Blunt. Like Mirren, Blunt was nominated twice and she'd win for her efforts in Gideon's Daughter. By the end of the year, she'd have headlined a production for George Clooney and Steven Soderbergh, appeared in two for Tom Hanks, and starred alongside such heavyweights as Julia Roberts, John Malkovich, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Alan Arkin. Not since Kate Winslet had the Brits seen one of their own so rapidly achieve such lofty heights.
Emily Blunt was born on the 23rd of February, 1983, in London, to a barrister father and teacher mother. She was the second of four children. The eldest, Felicity, is a literary agent. Several years younger would be brother Sebastian and sister Susannah. Emily would be sent to the independent Ibstock Place School, a co-ed private school at Roehampton on the edge of Richmond Park, where she'd receive a rigorous education. Ibstock Place, running for over 100 years, followed the principles of the 19th Century educationalist Friedrich Froebel, a strong believer in constructive play and the central role of the mother in a child's early learning. Emily, however, though enthusiastically joining in with sport, music and academics, would be held back somewhat by the appearance, at age 8, of a painful stammer. For three years she'd visit speech therapists and cranial osteopaths, at night being played tapes of waves lapping and dolphins trilling in order to lessen the tension believed to be the cause. A turning-point would be reached when, at 12, one of her teachers cleverly cast her in a class play, encouraging her to try a different accent. Attempting a northern enunciation, she found that, although the accent was unconvincing, the stammer was gone. The stage, she thought, was clearly where she was meant to be.
Blunt has described Ibstock Place as a pressurized environment where her fellow pupils were highly competitive and thoroughly bitchy (much like everywhere else, really). A bit of a geek and excluded from the cool set, she was ever watchful and rather lonely. Life would improve considerably when, for her A-levels, she moved on to Hurtwood House at Holmbury St Mary, near Dorking, just south of London. Hurtwood was perhaps the top co-ed boarding school in the country. Academic results were impressively high and students could enjoy rugby, football, hockey, swimming, golf and horseriding, as well as being able to work at the school's radio station and film academy.



























