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Natasha Henstridge
Birth at
15 August 1974
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Canadian actress and model, Natasha Henstridge (Natasha Henstridge) was born on August 15, 1974 in Springdale (Canada) in the family of an oilman. Natasha grew up beautiful and intelligent, and at the age of fourteen she dropped out of school and tried herself in the career of a model. First Paris, then New York – photos of 15-year-old Natasha could be seen on the cover of the French edition of Cosmopolitain and many other glossy magazines. When Henstridge turned 21, she became the wife of actor
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Canadian actress and model, Natasha Henstridge (Natasha Henstridge) was born on August 15, 1974 in Springdale (Canada) in the family of an oilman. Natasha grew up beautiful and intelligent, and at the age of fourteen she dropped out of school and tried herself in the career of a model. First Paris, then New York – photos of 15-year-old Natasha could be seen on the cover of the French edition of Cosmopolitain and many other glossy magazines.
When Henstridge turned 21, she became the wife of actor Damien Chap, but their marriage did not last for six months. She married actor Liam Waite, with whom she has two sons. In addition to modeling, Henstridge actively starred in films. Fantastic.
film "Special" The film, which was released in 1995, received not only the recognition of the audience - Natasha herself received the first film award in her life - the MTV prize for "Best Kiss in a Film". However, after the film directors and producers saw her in the role of beautiful, but negative characters.
“Adrenaline: Fear of the Chase” (1996) with Christopher Lambert and “Maximum Risk” with Jean-Claude Van Damme only cemented her status as a heroine of fantastic action films. Then there were several passing series and films, but in 2000 the actress received invitations to high-budget films: “Alien ticket”, “Nine yards”, “Ghosts of Mars”, “You will not escape from fate”, “The Expendables”, “Woman-President”, “Shark”, “To death is beautiful” and others. Like any girl, Natasha was frivolous. In 1998, in an interview with an American glamour magazine, she admitted that she did not always read the scripts carefully. So, the scripts for the films “Independence Day” and “Men in Black” Henstridge dropped with the words: “What is this nonsense?”, without looking. /