Early life and schooling
Margot Elise Robbie was brought into the world on 2 July 1990 in Dalby, Queensland, to Doug Robbie, a previous ranch proprietor and sugarcane mogul, and Sarie Kessler, a physiotherapist.[1][2][3] She is the second most youthful of four; more seasoned kin Anya and Lachlan and more youthful sibling Cameron.[4][5] Her folks isolated when she was five.[6] Robbie and her kin were raised by their single parent and had negligible contact with their dad. The family spent most of Robbie's childhood on her grandparents' Currumbin Valley farm[7] in the Gold Coast hinterland.[8][9] A lively kid, Robbie frequently put on shows in her house.[10]
2008-2012: Early work and Neighbors
Robbie at the 2011 Logie Grants
Robbie's most memorable acting jobs came when she was in secondary school. She featured in two low-spending plan autonomous spine chiller films, called Vigilante and I.C.U., both delivered years after the fact. She portrayed the experience of being on a film set as "a fantasy come true".[16] She made her TV debut in a 2008 visitor job as Caitlin Brentford in the show series City Murder and followed this with a two-episode bend in the youngsters' TV series The Elephant Princess, in which she featured close by Liam Hemsworth.[17]
With specialist support at that point and as Robbie reviewed on The Graham Norton Show,[18] she called FremantleMedia consistently. "At some point, I helped put through unintentionally to the projecting chief for Neighbors," and she expressed, "I'm visiting the area chipping away at something." The projecting chief asked how old she was, and she answered "seventeen." She was told, "We're searching for precisely that, come in and audition"[18] for the TV drama Neighbors. In June 2008, she started playing Donna Freedman, a job that was intended to be a visitor character, however Robbie was elevated to the customary cast after she made her debut.[19] In her three-year spell on the cleanser, she got two Logie Grant nominations.[20]
Not long after showing up in America, Robbie handled the job of Laura Cameron, a recently prepared airline steward in the period dramatization series Skillet Am (2011). The series debuted to high appraisals and positive surveys yet was dropped after one season due to falling ratings.[21][22]
2013-2015: Leap forward
Robbie next showed up in Richard Curtis' rom-com Finally (2013), co-featuring Domhnall Gleeson and Rachel McAdams. It recounts the narrative of a young fellow with the capacity to time travel who attempts to change his past in order to work on his future. To play Gleeson's out of reach teen love interest, she embraced an English accent.[23] The film was an unassuming business success.[24] Robbie's advancement came that very year with the job of Naomi Lapaglia, the spouse of hero Jordan Belfort, in Martin Scorsese's true to life dark parody The Wolf of Money Road. In her tryout for the job, Robbie ad libbed a slap on co-star Leonardo DiCaprio during a battle scene which at last won her the part.[25] The film and her exhibition got positive surveys; she was especially lauded for her on-screen Brooklyn accent.[26] Pundit Sasha Stone composed of Robbie's presentation, "She's Scorsese's best blonde stunner revelation since Cathy Moriarty in Seething Bull. Robbie is entertaining, hard and kills each scene she's in."[27] The Wolf of Money Road was a film industry achievement, netting $392 million around the world, making it Scorsese's most noteworthy earning film to date.[28] Robbie was named for the MTV Film Grant for Best Advancement Execution and won the Domain Grant for Best Newcomer.[29]
Robbie at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con
She later said that the acclaim and consideration the film carried her drove her to consider stopping acting, however her mom was philosophical about her calling and clarified for her that it was presumably past time to stop. She completely got it and stayed with it.[30] With the expect to deliver more female-driven projects, Robbie and her future spouse, Tom Ackerley, and their individual long-lasting companions Sophia Kerr and Josey McNamara, began their own creation organization LuckyChap Diversion. The organization was established in 2014 and its name was propelled by Charlie Chaplin.[6]
She followed this with Craig Zobel's dystopian show Z for Zachariah inverse Chris Pine and Chiwetel Ejiofor, in her most memorable driving job. To some degree in light of Robert C. O'Brien's book of a similar name, the film follows Ann Weight (Robbie) as she winds up in a sincerely accused circle of drama of the latest overcomers of a calamity that wipes out a large portion of progress. In anticipation of the film, Robbie colored her hair brown and figured out how to talk in an Appalachian accent.[36] The film got positive surveys, and Robbie's presentation was generally commended, with Drew McWeeny of HitFix declaring that "Robbie's work here lays out her as one of the absolute best entertainers in her age range today."[37][38] Her fourth arrival of 2015 was an appearance in Adam McKay's parody show The Large Short, in which she breaks the fourth wall to make sense of subprime contracts while in a bath. The Enormous Short was a business and basic achievement and Robbie's appearance turned into a moving subject six years after the fact, directly following the GameStop short press, as her clarification gave reference focuses to what was occurring with the GameStop and related stocks.[39]
2016-2018: Overall acknowledgment