Rachel McAdams
Prior to her arrival in Los Angeles, the talented young actress starred in Perfect Pie, for which she was nominated for a Genie Award (Canada's equivalent of an Academy Award). It is a feature film based on the play by acclaimed Canadian playwright Judith Thompson and directed by Barbara Willis Sweete (Yo-Yo Ma Inspired by Bach) and is the story of two friends pulled apart by tragedy as teens who, years later, must come to terms with the past.
McAdams' other credits include the acclaimed coming-of-age drama My Name Is Tanino, directed by award-winning filmmaker Paolo Virzi and produced by Cecchi Gore Groupe Internationale. The film premiered at the Venice Film Festival in 2002.
McAdams was raised in a small town near London, Ontario. At the age of four, she took up figure skating and skated competitively throughout high school. She always knew she wanted to be an actress, and when a summer theater camp finally opened nearby, she was performing in productions of Shakespeare at the age of 13.
McAdams went on to York University, appearing in numerous student films and stage productions, where she graduated with honors with a B.F.A. degree in theater, which remains her first love. She landed her first professional on-screen role as a girl with bulimia in the Disney series The Famous Jett Jackson, and followed with a pilot for MTV.
She recently completed New Line's The Notebook (scheduled for release this summer), starring opposite Ryan Gosling, Gena Rowlands, Sam Shepard, Joan Allen, James Garner and James Marsden. Based on the best-selling Nicholas Sparks' novel of the same name, The Notebook follows a young couple (McAdams and Gosling) who meet in their teens and are reunited after World War II.
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Rachel McAdams Facts
| Occupation | Actress |
| Birthday | October 7, 1978 (30) |
| Sign | Libra |
| Birthplace | London, Ontario, Canada |
| Height | 5' 9" (1m75) |
Selected Filmography
| Red Eye (2005) |
| Wedding Crashers (2005) |
| Mean Girls (2004) |
| The Notebook (2004) (breakthrough) |
| The Hot Chick (2002) |
| Family Stone |

