Maisie Williams Belly Button

Maisie Williams Belly Button




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Maisie Williams Belly Button
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with Maizie Williams .
Williams at the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con
Actress dancer internet entrepreneur
Gary Williams (father) Hilary Pitt Frances (mother)

^ a diminutive of Margaret which is used most frequently in Scotland. [6]

^ The personal forename Arya is also a real world name for both sexes of Sanskrit and Persian origins long used in South Asia. [64] [65]

^ From Founders Fund , 8VC, Kleiner Perkins , and from the newer venture capital firm Shrug Capital, set up by AngelList 's former head of marketing Niv Dror, who also separately invested.


Listen to this article ( 8 minutes )
This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 7 August 2014 ( 2014-08-07 ) , and does not reflect subsequent edits.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maisie Williams .
Margaret Constance " Maisie " Williams (born 15 April 1997) is an English actress. Williams made her acting debut in 2011 as Arya Stark , a lead character in the HBO epic medieval fantasy television series Game of Thrones (2011–2019). She garnered critical praise and accolades for her work on the show, receiving two Emmy Award nominations and global recognition. Williams' other television appearances include guest starring as Ashildr in the BBC science fiction series Doctor Who (2015), she has also starred in the British docudrama television film Cyberbully (2015), and in the British science-fiction teen thriller film iBoy (2017). She played Kim Noakes - the central character in comedy action drama series Two Weeks to Live (2020), and portrayed punk rock icon Jordan ( Pamela Rooke ) in Pistol (2022) a biopic about the groundbreaking band the Sex Pistols . Williams has also voiced Cammie MacCloud in the American animated web series Gen:Lock (2019–present).

In 2014, she starred as Lydia in her first feature film, the coming-of-age mystery drama The Falling , for which she received critical acclaim and awards recognition. She co-starred in films such as the romantic period-drama film Mary Shelley (2017), the animated prehistorical sports comedy film Early Man (2018), and the romantic comedy-drama film Then Came You (2018). In 2020, she starred in the superhero horror film The New Mutants and the psychological thriller The Owners . In 2018, she made her stage debut in Lauren Gunderson 's play I and You at the Hampstead Theatre in London, to positive critical reviews.

Williams is also an internet entrepreneur . In 2019, she jointly developed and co-launched the social media platform Daisie, a multi-media networking app designed to be an alternative means to help artists and creators (especially those who are trying to get started) in their careers. One of the main purposes of the platform is to support collaboration between creators on artistic projects across various creative industries, as well as a hosting service upon which creators can showcase their own and joint work.

Margaret Constance Williams was born in Bristol on 15 April 1997 to Hilary Frances (née Pitt), a university course administrator who later gave up her job to support her daughter's acting career. [1] [2] [3] Williams' parents divorced when she was four months old. The youngest of four siblings - James, Beth and Ted - Williams was raised by her mother and stepfather in a three-bedroom council house in the village of Clutton, Somerset . [1] [4] [5] From an early age from when "she was tiny", Williams has always been known as "Maisie", [a] [7] nicknamed because of her perceived likeness to the cartoon character from the UK newspaper comic strip The Perishers . [2] [8]

Williams went to Clutton Primary School and Norton Hill School in Midsomer Norton school. She subsequently transferred to Bath Dance College to study Performing Arts, where she trained in musical theatre , ballet , pointe , tap , street , freestyle , gymnastics and trampolining , with the ambition of becoming a professional dancer. [1] [9] [10] She left school at 14 years old partly due to the successful commencement of her acting career but also due to difficulties she faced attending school whilst also starring in a popular television series. She was then home educated, but did not take any education examinations . [11] [12] [7]


At the age of 12, Williams commenced her professional acting career by co-starring in one of the largest ensemble casts on television. She was cast as Arya Stark , the feisty young tomboy daughter of a noble family in HBO 's historical fantasy drama series Game of Thrones (based on George R. R. Martin 's A Song of Ice and Fire epic fantasy novel series). [2] [13] [14] [15] Williams almost missed the audition (her second in her career) because it coincided with a school trip to a farm; her mother convinced her to go to the audition. [7] [16] As the series viewership rose , the international popularity of Game of Thrones gave Williams global recognition. [17] [18] [19] [20]
The character of Arya Stark is regarded as an anti heroine , a fan favourite that developed into one of the central protagonists in the Game of Thrones fantasy epic. [21] The character's story arc across the first six seasons encompasses severance, trauma, tragedy and revenge. [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] The physical role required a young actor who could portray a deadly assassin . Williams, who is naturally right-handed but kept in character by performing left handed in the show, did the majority of her own stunts and fight scenes in the series. She was told a year before the filming of " The Long Night " to build up her stamina for the episode. [28] [29] [30] [31] Her performance in that episode, longest battle scene in film and television history, was nominated for the 2020 BAFTA TV Awards under the "Must-see moment" category. [32] [33] [34] [35] Williams appeared in all eight broadcast seasons of Game of Thrones , the final episode of which aired in May 2019. [36]

In retrospect Williams has said that while she looks back at her role as Arya with pride and affection she did not miss that period of her personal life. Arya was not only younger than Williams was, but the role demanded that she was made to look boyish with short hair and make up, plus a strap across her chest that made Williams feel ashamed during her mid teen years as her real life feminine body developed. The character did not match who she was becoming in reality nor did Arya resemble what Williams believed to be attractive, and at the same time she resented her own body for not matching with that of her iconic character's. The was a mismatch between what the world expected her to look and act like her character and what her own form of self-expression looked like in reality. [37] [38] [39] [40] [41]

Williams received critical praise and recognition for her portrayal of Arya in the show. [42] [43] In 2012, only the second year of her professional acting career, she was submitted in the category of Outstanding Supporting Actress for the 64th Primetime Emmy Awards by HBO, but did not make the nomination shortlist. [44] She was however awarded both the 2012 Portal Award for Best Young Actor and the Portal Award for Best Supporting Actress – Television (at 15 years, the youngest actress to achieve this). [1] In November 2013, she received the BBC Radio 1 Teen Award for Best British Actor. [45] [46] August 2014 she was presented with "Best Supporting Actress, Drama" in the EWwy Awards. [47] In 2015, she was awarded the Empire Hero Award , and the Saturn Award for Best Performance by a Young Actor in a Television Series. [48] [49] [50] In 2016 she reached the nomination short list for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series . [51] In 2018 Williams was nominated for the Best Performance in a Show in the MTV Movie & TV Awards . In 2019 her performance in the final season of the drama resulted in her again receiving the Saturn Award for Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Television Series, as well as nominations for the Best Hero and Best Fight in the MTV Movie & TV Awards and People's Choice Awards for The Female TV Star and The Drama TV Star. [52] [53] [54] [55] In the same year Williams achieved her second nomination for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series, Daniel D'Addario from Variety said that Williams "entered the show as a child with minimal experience, but swiftly proved herself a very gifted performer... Millions watched her grow into her talents – and a fitting end to her very unusual journey through her first role" would be for her to win an Emmy. [43]

Considered a result of Williams' fictional characters popularity in 2012 the name Arya became the fastest-rising baby girl's name in the United States jumping in popularity from 711th to the 413th position. [56] [57] The popularity of the name peaked in 2019, when it was ranked 92nd in the U.S. (while its variation Aria was listed at 20th) and in 2020 the names were ranked 112th and 26nd respectively. [58] [59] [60] The name also entered the top 200 most commonly used names for baby girls born in England and Wales in 2017. [61] [62] [63] [b]

The 2017 international hit " Look What You Made Me Do " by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift was partially inspired by Williams's Arya, with the line "I've got a list of names and yours is in red, underlined" inspired by her kill list, and Canadian rapper Drake thanked Arya Stark for killing the Night King during his acceptance speech at the 2019 Billboard Music Awards . [66] [67] Williams was also one of ten actors from Game of Thrones featured in character in a collection of Royal Mail first class postage stamps. The set which celebrates British contributions towards the show was released to the UK Post Office in January 2018. [68] [69] [70]

In 2012, Williams portrayed Loren Caleigh in the three part BBC supernatural thriller series The Secret of Crickley Hall . [71] Williams took part in The Olympic Ticket Scalper , a Funny or Die skit. [72] She also appeared in the independent film Heatstroke (2012), and the short film Up on the Roof (2013). [73] [74] [75]

In 2014, Williams played the lead role of Lydia in the British melodramatic coming of age mystery film drama The Falling , set in an all-girls school, for which she was awarded the London Film Critics' Circle Award for Young Performer of the Year, Evening Standard British Film Award Rising Star and the European Shooting Stars Award at the 65th Berlin International Film Festival for her role in Carol Morley 's feature. [76] [77] [78] [79] [80] The film premiered at the BFI London Film Festival on 11 October 2014, and was released theatrically on 24 April 2015 in the UK. Guy Lodge of Variety described Williams as "prodigiously gifted" and giving a "brilliantly articulated ... bristling, often spikily funny performance." [81] In 2014, she also played Abbie in the Irish comedy-drama film Gold . [82]


In January 2015, Williams (a victim of cyberbullying herself) starred as Casey Jacobs in the one-hour-long BAFTA nominated Cyberbully , a Channel 4 docudrama television film . [83] [84] Writing for The Guardian , Filipa Jodelka described Williams' central, almost solo, performance as a "tour-de-force". [85] [86] [87] In 2015, Williams guest starred in four episodes of series 9 of the BBC science fiction series Doctor Who (" The Girl Who Died ", " The Woman Who Lived ", " Face the Raven " and " Hell Bent "), in the recurring role of Ashildr , a Viking girl made immortal by the Doctor. Williams' performance in "The Woman Who Lived" was described as "superb" by Patrick Mulkern of the Radio Times . [88] [89] [90]
In 2017, Williams starred, alongside Bill Milner , as Lucy in the Netflix science fiction teen superhero thriller film iBoy . [91] Tristram Fane Saunders of the Daily Telegraph wrote that she brought "depth, humour and honesty to the role." [92] Also in 2017, Williams appeared as Isabel Baxter in Mary Shelley a romantic period-drama film directed by Haifaa al-Mansour and written by Emma Jensen. [93] [94]

In 2018, she voiced the character Goona, a Bronze Age fearless rebel tomboy football enthusiast in Nick Park 's animated prehistoric comedy sports film Early Man which also featured Eddie Redmayne and Tom Hiddleston , though both Gwilym Mumford of The Guardian and Kate Stables of the British Film Institute noted that Williams' accent varied during the film. [95] [96] [97] [98] From 18 October to 24 November 2018, Williams starred as Caroline in the stage play I and You , which was written by Lauren Gunderson . The play premiered at the Hampstead Theatre in London. [99] [100] The play did well at the box office and Williams' stage performance was regarded a critical success, with the production later being broadcast free on Instagram from 30 November to 3 December 2018 and again during the last week of March 2020. [101] [102] [103] She also starred in the eleven-minute short film Corvidae , a dark fairy tale filmed in 2013 and released in 2018, of which Craig Holton of flickfeast commented that Williams brought "an undeniably ethereal quality to this short film, helping it make the leap from grounded realism to eldritch bucolic fantasy". [104] [105]

In 2019, Williams starred alongside Asa Butterfield and Nina Dobrev in the coming of age romantic comedy-drama film Then Came You , in which she played a teenager with a terminal illness. Frank Scheck of the Hollywood Reporter felt that Williams made her "sprightly character appealingly vulnerable". The film premiered at the Woodstock Film Festival on 12 October 2018 and was released nationwide in 2019. [106] [107] [108] From 2019 to 2021 Williams has voiced the role Cammie MacCloud, a mischievous Scottish hacker, in the U.S. animated web series Gen:Lock that is set in a dystopian future , which is broadcast on the Rooster Teeth subscription service. [109] On 4 November 2021, the second season of nine episodes premiered on HBO Max first before it is released on Rooster Teeth three months later. [110]

Originally set for release in April 2018, in late August 2020, Williams co-starred in the delayed Disney/Fox superhero horror film The New Mutants . [111] [112] The New York Times said Williams portrayed the Marvel superhero Rahne Sinclair / Wolfsbane —a Scottish mutant who can turn into a wolf, but struggles to reconcile this with her religious beliefs -- "with endearing sincerity". [113] Though the film received mixed to negative reviews her performance was regarded as good by The Hollywood Reporter , including adding "layers of panache and emotion" to her character. [114] The film was released in "in theatres" which were partly open, with reduced capacity, due to the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic , in August 2020 (despite many other major Disney films being further delayed). [111] [115] [116] Written and directed by Josh Boone , the film also stars Anya Taylor-Joy , Blu Hunt , Charlie Heaton , Alice Braga and Henry Zaga . [117] The Los Angeles Times described the same sex romantic relationship between Williams' Rahne and Hunt's Danielle Moonstar as feeling honest and a central part of the story that grounded the film with "a sense of humanity", which also made the New Mutants both a rare LGBTQ inclusive superhero film and groundbreaking for a Disney release. [118] [119]

Released in September 2020, Williams was the lead in Two Weeks to Live , a six-part dark, deadpan comedy revenge drama. Williams plays Kim Noakes, who (following the murder of her father) has been raised in total isolation, living off the grid in the wilderness, by her overprotective doomsday prepping badass survivalist mother, Tina (played by Sian Clifford ). Action is set in motion following a seemingly harmless prank played on Kim of a fake video that makes her believe that everybody in the world has just two weeks to live. Kim – raised to believe the end times were close – sets off to kill the man who murdered her father in front of her when she was a child. [120] [121] [122] The Guardian considers that Williams "excels in her fish-out-of-water role, flitting between hapless and determined, worldly and childlike". [120] Two Weeks To Live lets Williams flex comedy muscles while also showing off her stunt fighting and stunt skills. [122] The NME described the action drama as also genuinely funny. [121] The UK series, written by Gaby Hull and produced by Kudos for Sky UK , debuted on 2 September 2020, and premiered in the U.S. on HBO Max on 5 November. [123] [124] [125] The six part first series also starred Sean Knopp, Mawaan Rizwan and Taheen Modak. [126] [127] [128]

Also in September, Williams starred in the 1990s-set psychological thriller The Owners , in which she played Mary, a young woman who reluctantly agrees to participate in a botched robbery with her boyfriend and two other young low level criminals (Ian Kenny, Jake Curran and Andrew Ellis) of an old couple's home ( Sylvester McCoy and Rita Tushingham ). The Hollywood Reporter , while praising McCoy and Tushingham more, felt that Williams 'used her innate appeal to make her character sympathetic'. [129] Dread Central felt that she gave better performance than she did in New Mutants and commented "it's undeniably cool to see the young, now forever iconic actress kick ass in a real world setting". [130] The film was released by RLJE Films at select theatres, and digital on demand on 4 September. The film was directed by French director Julius Berg and adapted from the graphic novel Une Nuit De Pleine Lune by Belgian artist Hermann and writer Yves H. [131] [132] [133] Her veteran co-actor Sylvester McCoy predicted success for Williams beyond acting "she's full of energy – a little bubbly ball of fire and creativity... she's grown up in the business and she knows it inside out... She's a rising star as an actress, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if she became a director and a producer... She's got all those abilities and that intelligence and the knowledge of the business from years of doing it ... from a young age." [134]

In the six-episode biopic limited series Pistol for FX, about the Sex Pistols , Williams plays the part of the real life punk rock icon Jordan ( Pamela Rooke ). The series is based on guitarist Steve Jones , 2018 memoir Lonely Boy: Tales from a Sex Pistol ; [135] and was executively produced and directed by Danny Boyle . [136] Jordan was the archetypal subversive model whose 'distinctive Vivienne Westwood -designed outfits' and 'outrageous make-up' made her the original face of punk, and was co-credited with creating the punk fashion style. [137] [138] [139] Williams' is underutilized but brings her "formidable screen presence" as the "untouchably cool" Jordan complete "with a vertical sheet of peroxide blonde hair." [140] [141] [142] Rooke acted as an advisor on the show informing Wil
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