Dakota Fanning

































Dakota Fanning

Dakota Fanning Very Good Girls Premiere (cropped).jpg
Fanning at the premiere of Very Good Girls, January 2013

Born
Hannah Dakota Fanning
(1994-02-23) February 23, 1994 (age 24)
Conyers, Georgia, U.S.
Education
Campbell Hall School
Alma mater
New York University
Occupation
Actress • model
Years active
1999–present
Relatives
Elle Fanning (sister)

Hannah Dakota Fanning (born February 23, 1994)[1] is an American actress and model. She rose to prominence at the age of seven for her performance as Lucy Dawson in the drama film I Am Sam (2001), for which she received a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination at age eight, making her the youngest nominee in SAG history.[2] Fanning played major roles in the films Uptown Girls (2003), The Cat in the Hat (2003), Man on Fire (2004), War of the Worlds (2005), Dreamer (2005) and Charlotte's Web (2006).


Fanning followed with more mature roles, playing Lewellen in Hounddog (2007), Lily in The Secret Life of Bees (2008), the eponymous character in Coraline (2009), Cherie Currie in The Runaways (2010) and Jane Volturi in The Twilight Saga (2009–12). Throughout the 2010s, she continued appearing in independent productions such as the dramas Now Is Good (2012) and Night Moves (2013), the comedy-drama Very Good Girls (2013), and the biographical film Effie Gray (2014). In 2018, she appeared in the heist comedy Ocean's 8 and had a starring role in the period drama miniseries The Alienist. She will portray Manson girl Squeaky Fromme in the Quentin Tarantino film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019).


Fanning made her modelling debut in 2009 when she was featured on the cover of fashion magazines Elle, Vanity Fair, and Cosmopolitan, among others. She also appeared in the fashion week in New York in 2014 and at the opening ceremony of Fashion Week New York S/S 2015.




Contents






  • 1 Early life


  • 2 Acting career


    • 2.1 1999–2003


    • 2.2 2004–2007


    • 2.3 2008–2011


    • 2.4 2012–present




  • 3 Personal life


  • 4 Filmography


    • 4.1 Film


    • 4.2 Television


    • 4.3 Video games




  • 5 Awards and nominations


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links





Early life


Fanning was born in Conyers, Georgia. She attended Montessori School of Covington. Her mother, Heather Joy (née Arrington), played tennis professionally, and her father, Steven J. Fanning, played minor league baseball and now works as an electronics salesman in Los Angeles, California.[3][4] Her maternal grandfather is former American football player Rick Arrington, and her aunt is former ESPN reporter Jill Arrington.[5] Dakota is the elder sister of Elle Fanning, also an actress; both were brought up Southern Baptist.[6][7]



Acting career



1999–2003


When Fanning was a small child, she was an actress at the Towne Lake Arts Center in Woodstock, Georgia, starring in small plays. In 1999, at the age of five, she began her professional acting career, appearing in a Tide television commercial. Her first significant acting job was a guest role in the NBC prime-time drama ER, which remains one of her favorite roles:


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I played a car accident victim who has leukemia. I got to wear a neck brace and nose tubes for the two days I worked.[8]


Fanning subsequently had several guest roles on television series, including CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, The Practice, and Spin City. She also portrayed the title characters of Ally McBeal and The Ellen Show as young girls.


In 2001, Fanning was chosen to star opposite Sean Penn in the movie I Am Sam, the story of a mentally challenged man who fights for the custody of his daughter (played by Fanning). Her role in the film made Fanning the youngest person ever to be nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award, being seven years of age at the time.[9] She also won the Best Young Actor/Actress award from the Broadcast Film Critics Association for her performance.[10]


In 2002, director Steven Spielberg cast Fanning in the lead child role of Allison "Allie" Clarke/Keys in the science fiction miniseries Taken. By this time, she had received positive notices from several film critics, including Tom Shales of The Washington Post, who wrote that Fanning "has the perfect sort of otherworldly look about her, an enchanting young actress called upon ... to carry a great weight."[11]


In the same year, Fanning appeared in three films: as a kidnap victim who proves to be more than her abductors bargained for in Trapped, as the young version of Reese Witherspoon's character in Sweet Home Alabama, and as Katie in the movie Hansel and Gretel.


A year later, she starred in two prominent films: playing the uptight child to an immature nanny played by Brittany Murphy in Uptown Girls, and as Sally in The Cat in the Hat. In addition, Fanning did voice-over work for four animated projects during this period, including voicing Satsuki in Disney's English language release of My Neighbor Totoro, a little girl in the Fox series Family Guy, and a young Wonder Woman in the episode "Kids Stuff" from Cartoon Network's Justice League Unlimited.


In 2004, she made an appearance on season ten of the television series Friends, playing the role of Mackenzie, a young girl who is moving out of the house Monica and Chandler are buying.



2004–2007




Fanning at the London premiere of War of the Worlds, in June 2005


In 2004, Fanning appeared in Man on Fire as Pita, a nine-year-old who wins over the heart of a retired mercenary (Denzel Washington) hired to protect her from kidnappers. Roger Ebert wrote that Fanning "is a pro at only ten years old, and creates a heart-winning character."[12]


Hide and Seek was her first release in 2005, opposite Robert De Niro. The film was generally panned, and critic Chuck Wilson called it "a fascinating meeting of equals – if the child star [Fanning] challenged the master [De Niro] to a game of stare-down, the legend might very well blink first."[13]


Fanning voiced Lilo Pelekai (taking over for Daveigh Chase) in the direct-to-video film Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch. She also had a small part in the Rodrigo García film Nine Lives (released in October 2005), in which she shared an unbroken nine-minute scene with actress Glenn Close, who had her own praise for Fanning: "She's definitely an old soul. She's one of those gifted people that come along every now and then."[14] Fanning also recorded voice work for Coraline during this time.[15]


Fanning completed filming on Dreamer: Inspired by a True Story (opposite Kurt Russell) in late October 2004.


Kris Kristofferson, who plays her character's grandfather in the film, said that she is like Bette Davis reincarnated.[16] While promoting her role in Dreamer, Fanning became a registered member of Girl Scouts of the USA at a special ceremony, which was followed by a screening of the film for members of the Girl Scouts of the San Fernando Valley Council.[17]




Fanning at the Toronto International Film Festival in 2008


Fanning then went on to star in War of the Worlds, starring alongside Tom Cruise. Released in reverse order (War in June 2005 and Dreamer in the following October), both films were a critical success.[citation needed]War director Steven Spielberg praised "how quickly she understands the situation in a sequence, how quickly she sizes it up, measures it up and how she would really react in a real situation."[18]


Fanning moved straight to another film without a break: Charlotte's Web, which she finished filming in May 2005 in Australia, and premiered on December 15, 2006.


During the summer of 2006, Fanning worked on the film Hounddog, described in press reports as a "dark story of abuse, violence, and Elvis Presley adulation in the rural South."[19] Fanning's parents have been criticized for allowing her to film a scene in which her character is raped. However, Fanning defended the film by saying to Reuters, "It's not really happening. It's a movie, and it's called acting."[20]


Although the film was a failure both at the box office and with critics,[citation needed] Fanning's performance was praised by Roger Ebert, who compared her to Jodie Foster in Taxi Driver.[21]


In the same year, at the age of twelve, she was invited to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, becoming the youngest member in the Academy's history.[22] Later that year, she was ranked 4th in Forbes list of "Top-Earning Stars Aged Under 21", having earned an estimated $4 million in 2006.[23]


In the spring of 2007, she filmed Fragments – Winged Creatures alongside Kate Beckinsale, Guy Pearce, Josh Hutcherson, and Academy Award winners Forest Whitaker and Jennifer Hudson. She plays Anne Hagen, a girl who witnesses her father's murder and who turns to religion in the aftermath. In July, Fanning appeared on a short film titled Cutlass, one of Glamour's "Reel Moments" based on readers' personal essays. Cutlass was directed by Kate Hudson.


From September to the end of the year, Fanning filmed Push, which centers on a group of young American expatriates with telekinetic and clairvoyant abilities who hide from the Division (a U.S. government agency) in Hong Kong and band together to try to escape the control of the division.[24] Fanning played Cassie Holmes, a 13-year-old psychic.



2008–2011


In January 2008, Fanning began filming the film adaptation of The Secret Life of Bees, a novel by Sue Monk Kidd.[25] Set in South Carolina in 1964, the story centers on Lily Owens (Fanning), who escapes her lonely life and troubled relationship with her father by running away with her caregiver and only friend (played by Jennifer Hudson) to a South Carolina town where they are taken in by an eccentric trio of beekeeping sisters (played by Queen Latifah, Sophie Okonedo, and Alicia Keys).




Fanning at the premiere Eclipse in June 2010


Her films Coraline and Push were released on the same day, February 6, 2009.


In March 2008, upon the original creation of the film adaptation Dakota and Elle Fanning were cast to play Kate and Anna respectively in the film My Sister's Keeper. However, when Dakota heard that she would be required to shave her head for the role, she dropped out of the film as then did Elle. The two sisters were replaced; Abigail Breslin took on the lead role as Anna Fitzgerald, and Sofia Vassilieva was cast as Kate Fitzgerald.[26]


Fanning played Jane, a member of the Volturi Guard, in New Moon and reprised the role in Eclipse, based on novels by Stephenie Meyer.[27]New Moon was released on November 20, 2009, and Eclipse was released on the following June. On in March 2009, she was ranked number three on the list of Forbes' Most Valuable Young Stars[28] after having earned an estimated $14 million.[citation needed]


In 2010, she starred in the film The Runaways, alongside Kristen Stewart, Stella Maeve, and Scout Taylor-Compton, where she played Cherie Currie, the lead singer of the band. Then from the end of the year until early 2011, Fanning filmed Breaking Dawn, reprising the role of Jane.[29]


Fanning's voice was heard in Rise, a documentary film commissioned by U.S. Figure Skating to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the crash of Sabena Flight 548 which resulted in the loss of the entire American team and subsequent cancellation of the 1961 World Figure Skating Championships. She read a poem written by U.S. national champion Laurence Owen (who died in the crash) that was said to be an eerie premonition of the afterlife.[30][31]


During the summer of 2011, she played Tessa in Now Is Good. Fanning also became the face of Marc Jacobs' Oh, Lola! perfume campaign, but the ad was banned in the UK as the Advertising Standards Authority judged that "the ad could be seen to sexualize a child."[32][33]


In 2011, she played Annie James in The Motel Life, which was released on November 8, 2013. In the fall of 2011, Fanning played the starring role in Effie Gray, directed by Richard Laxton, written and co-starred by Emma Thompson, with Greg Wise, Tom Sturridge, Robbie Coltrane, Julie Walters, Derek Jacobi and Claudia Cardinale.



2012–present


In August 2012, she signed to play the lead role of a wealthy financial eco-terrorist, Dena Brauer, who finances a plan, in a thriller film Night Moves opposite actors Jesse Eisenberg and Peter Sarsgaard. The film was directed by Kelly Reichardt.[34]Night Moves tells the story of three Eco-terrorists who work at an organic farm and collaborate on a plot to blow up a hydroelectric dam.[35]


In January 2013, she was cast as Beverly Aadland in the Errol Flynn biopic The Last of Robin Hood.[36] Later that year in September, Fanning was cast as Olivia in Franny.[37] In November, she was cast in Viena and the Fantomes as Viena; about a roadie traveling across America with a punk rock band in the 1980s.[38] The film is set to be released in 2015.[39]


In February 2014, she recorded a voice role for the animated movie Yellowbird.[40]


In May 2015, Every Secret Thing, based on the 2004 novel by Laura Lippman, co-starring Diane Lane, Elizabeth Banks, Danielle Macdonald, Colin Donnell and Nate Parker was released in the U.S.


Also in 2015, Martin Koolhoven confirmed that Jack Roth joined the cast of the film Brimstone. In June 2015, The Hollywood Reporter confirmed that Fanning and Kit Harington had replaced Mia Wasikowska and Robert Pattinson in the film, respectively. The set of primary recording began June 15 and will be held in Romania, Spain, and Germany.


In July 2016, it was announced Fanning was cast in a film adaptation of The Bell Jar as Esther Greenwood.[41]Kirsten Dunst is directing the movie.


In 2017, Fanning starred in Neil Blomkamp's Zygote, as part of Blomkamp's series of experimental short films released through Oats Studios.[42]


Fanning had a cameo role in the heist comedy Ocean's 8, which was released in 2018.[43] On June 6, 2018, Fanning was announced to play Squeaky Fromme in Quentin Tarantino's upcoming Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.[44]



Personal life


In June 2011, Fanning graduated from Campbell Hall School in Studio City, California,[45] where she participated on the varsity spirit cheerleading squad and was voted homecoming queen.[46][47] From 2011 to 2014, she attended the Gallatin School of Individualized Study at New York University, where she majored in women's studies, with a focus on the portrayal of women in film and culture.[48]


In January 2012, it was reported that Fanning signed to be represented by WME (William Morris Endeavor),[49] thus ending a decade-long association with Osbrink Talent Agency.[50] In April 2014, it was announced that Fanning switched agencies again and is now represented by CAA.[51]



Filmography




Fanning at the premiere of Push in February 2009




Fanning at the Vanity Fair party for the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival



Film

































































































































































































































































Year
Title
Role
Notes
2001

Father Xmas
Clairee

Short

Tomcats
Little Girl in Park


I Am Sam
Lucy Diamond Dawson

2002

Trapped
Abigail "Abbie" Jennings


Sweet Home Alabama
Young Melanie


Hansel and Gretel
Katie

2003

Uptown Girls
Lorraine "Ray" Schleine


The Cat in the Hat
Sally Walden


Kim Possible: A Sitch in Time
Preschool Kim

Voice role
2004

Man on Fire
Lupita "Pita" Martin Ramos


My Neighbor Totoro
Satsuki Kusakabe
Voice role

In the Realms of the Unreal
Narrator
Voice role
2005

Hide and Seek
Emily Callaway


Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch
Lilo Pelekai
Voice role

Nine Lives
Maria


War of the Worlds
Rachel Ferrier


Dreamer
Cale Crane

2006

Charlotte's Web
Fern Arable

2007

Hounddog
Lewellen


Cutlass
Lacy
Short
2008

The Secret Life of Bees
Lily Owens

2009

Coraline
Coraline Jones
Voice role

Push
Cassie Holmes


Fragments – Winged Creatures
Anne Hagen


The Twilight Saga: New Moon

Jane Volturi

2010

The Runaways

Cherie Currie


The Twilight Saga: Eclipse
Jane Volturi

2012

The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2
Jane Volturi


Celia
Hannah Jones
Short

The Motel Life
Annie James


Now Is Good
Tessa Scott

2013

Night Moves
Dena Brauer


The Last of Robin Hood
Beverly Aadland


Very Good Girls
Lilly Berger

2014

Effie Gray
Euphemia "Effie" Gray


Every Secret Thing
Ronnie Fuller


Yellowbird
Delf
Voice role; English version
2015

The Benefactor
Olivia

2016

Brimstone
Liz


American Pastoral
Merry Levov


The Escape
Lily
Short
2017

Viena and the Fantomes
Viena


Zygote
Barklay
Short

Please Stand By
Wendy

2018

Ocean's 8
Penelope Stern

2019

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood

Squeaky Fromme
Post-production


Television


























































































Year
Title
Role
Episode
2000

ER
Delia Chadsey
Episode: "The Fastest Year"

Ally McBeal
Ally (5 years old)
Episode: "The Musical, Almost"

Strong Medicine
Edie's Girl
Episode: "Misconceptions"

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation
Brenda Collins
Episode: "Blood Drops"

The Practice
Alessa Engel
Episode: "The Deal"

Spin City
Cindy
Episode: "Toy Story"
2001

Malcolm in the Middle
Emily
Episode: "New Neighbors"

The Fighting Fitzgeralds
Marie

Pilot

Family Guy
Little girl
Episode: "To Love and Die in Dixie"

The Ellen Show
Young Ellen
Episode: "Missing the Bus"
2002

Taken

Allie Keys
Miniseries; 10 episodes (voice only in 6)
2004

Justice League Unlimited
Young Wonder Woman (voice)
Episode: "Kids' Stuff"

Friends
Mackenzie
Episode: "The One with Princess Consuela"
2018

The Alienist[52]
Sara Howard
Main role; 10 episodes
2019

gen:LOCK
Miranda Worth (voice)
Web series


Video games















Year
Title
Platform(s)
Voice role
2009

Coraline

PlayStation 2, Wii, Nintendo DS
Coraline Jones


Awards and nominations


































































































































































































































































































Year
Association
Category
Work
Result

Ref.
2001

Broadcast Film Critics Association

Best Young Performer

I Am Sam
Won
[53]
2002
Las Vegas Film Critics Society
Youth in Film

I Am Sam
Won
[54]
2002

Screen Actors Guild

Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role

I Am Sam
Nominated
[55]
2002

Satellite Awards
Outstanding New Talent[citation needed]

I Am Sam
Won

2002

Chicago Film Critics Association
Most Promising Performer[citation needed]

I Am Sam
Won

2002

Young Artist Awards

Best Performance in a Feature Film – Young Actress Age Ten or Under

I Am Sam
Won
[56]
2003

Best Performance in a TV Movie, Mini-Series or Special – Leading Young Actress

Taken
Won
[57]
2003

Saturn Awards

Best Supporting Actress in a Television Series

Taken
Nominated

2004

Young Artist Awards

Best Performance in a Feature Film – Leading Young Actress

The Cat in the Hat
Nominated
[58]
2005
Young Artist Awards

Best Performance in a Feature Film – Leading Young Actress

Man on Fire
Nominated
[59]
2005

Gotham Awards
Best Ensemble Cast

Nine Lives
Nominated
[60]
2005

Locarno International Film Festival
Best Actress[citation needed]

Nine Lives
Won

2005

MTV Movie Awards

Best Frightened Performance

Hide and Seek
Won
[61]
2005

Irish Film and Television Awards

Best International Actress

War of the Worlds
Nominated
[62]
2005

Broadcast Film Critics Association

Best Young Actress

War of the Worlds
Won

2006

MTV Movie Awards

Best Frightened Performance

War of the Worlds
Nominated
[63]
2006

Saturn Awards

Best Performance by a Younger Actor

War of the Worlds
Won
[64]
2006

National Association of Theatre Owners (ShoWest Award)
Actress of the Year
Herself
Won
[61]
2006

Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards

Favorite Movie Actress

Dreamer
Nominated

2006
Young Artist Awards

Best Performance in a Feature Film (Comedy or Drama) – Leading Young Actress

Dreamer
Won
[65]
2006

Fangoria Chainsaw Awards
Best Actress

Hide and Seek
Nominated

2006

Broadcast Film Critics Association

Best Young Actress

Charlotte's Web
Nominated

2007
Young Artist Awards

Best Performance in a Feature Film – Leading Young Actress

Charlotte's Web
Nominated
[66]
2007
Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards

Favorite Movie Actress

Charlotte's Web
Won

2008

Black Reel Awards

Best Ensemble Cast

The Secret Life of Bees
Nominated

2008

Broadcast Film Critics Association

Best Young Actress

The Secret Life of Bees
Nominated

2008

Hollywood Film Festival
Cast year (Shared with cast)[citation needed]

The Secret Life of Bees
Won

2009
Broadcast Film Critics Association

Best Young Performer

The Secret Life of Bees
Nominated

2009
Young Artist Awards

Best Performance in a Feature Film (Comedy or Drama) – Leading Young Actress

The Secret Life of Bees
Won
[67]
2009

Palm Springs International Film Festival
Rising Star Award
Herself
Won
[68]
2010
Young Artist Awards

Best Performance in a Voice-Over Role – Young Actor/Actress

Coraline
Nominated
[69]
2010

MTV Movie Awards

Best Kiss (shared with Kristen Stewart)

The Runaways
Nominated
[70]
2010

Teen Choice Awards

Choice Movie Scene Stealer – Female

The Twilight Saga: New Moon
Nominated

2013

National Arts Awards

Bell Family Foundation Young Artist Award
Herself
Won

2018
Saturn Awards
Best Supporting Actress on Television

The Alienist
Nominated
[71]


References





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  2. ^ "Screen Actors Guild™ Honors". Screen Actors Guild. October 3, 2002. Retrieved June 5, 2012.


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  4. ^ "Twilight's evil vampire Dakota Fanning shows her sweet side as she unveils adorable childhood photos". Daily Mail. London. June 22, 2010.


  5. ^ Stein, Joel (February 27, 2005). "The Million-Dollar Baby". Time. Retrieved December 10, 2007.


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  7. ^ "Dakota Fanning's Religion and Political Views". hollowverse.com.


  8. ^ "Fanning the flames". Jam! Movies. Retrieved March 13, 2006.
    [permanent dead link]



  9. ^ "History of the 8th SAG Awards | Screen Actors Guild Awards". Sagawards.org. March 10, 2002. Archived from the original on September 7, 2008. Retrieved April 6, 2010.


  10. ^ "The BFCA Critics' Choice Awards :: 2001". Bfca.org. Archived from the original on February 15, 2012. Retrieved April 6, 2010.


  11. ^ "Sci Fi's 'Taken' Grabs You and Doesn't Let Go". The Washington Post via virtuallystrange.net. Archived from the original on December 17, 2004. Retrieved March 13, 2006.


  12. ^ "Man on Fire (review)". rogerebert.com. Retrieved March 13, 2006.


  13. ^ "Hide and Seek review". laweekly.com. Archived from the original on April 23, 2005. Retrieved March 13, 2006.


  14. ^ "Glenn Close raves about Dakota Fanning". monstersandcritics.com. Archived from the original on November 21, 2006. Retrieved March 13, 2006.


  15. ^ "Dakota Fanning Signs on to "Coraline"". about.com. Retrieved March 13, 2006.


  16. ^ "Dreamer: Inspired By a True Story (2005) DVD Review". reel.com. Archived from the original on January 1, 2007. Retrieved January 28, 2007.


  17. ^ "Dakota Fanning, Movie Star and Girl Scout". girlscouts.org. Retrieved April 28, 2007.


  18. ^ "War of the Worlds: Spielberg & Cruise – Part I". comingsoon.net. Archived from the original on March 8, 2006. Retrieved March 13, 2006.


  19. ^ "All shook up over Dakota's Hounddog". New York: nydailynews.com. Archived from the original on July 21, 2006. Retrieved July 20, 2006.


  20. ^ "Dakota Fanning: 'It's called acting'". cnn.com. Retrieved January 29, 2007.
    [dead link]



  21. ^ Ebert, Roger (September 18, 2008). "Hounddog". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved February 24, 2016.


  22. ^ "Brokeback stars to join Academy". BBC. April 2007.


  23. ^ "Young Hollywood's Top-Earning Stars". Forbes Magazine. February 26, 2007.


  24. ^ McNary, Dave (August 2007). "Fanning set to 'Push' for McGuigan". Vanity Fair.


  25. ^ Siegel, Tatiana; Fleming, Michael (December 2007). "Cast set for 'Secret Life of Bees'". Variety.


  26. ^ "Dakota Fanning Steps Down From 'My Sister's Keeper' Role". Starpulse.com. February 13, 2008. Archived from the original on January 19, 2012. Retrieved January 12, 2012.


  27. ^ "Dakota Fanning Confirmed For 'New Moon'". Access Hollywood. March 7, 2009. Retrieved March 7, 2009.


  28. ^ Vena, Jocelyn (March 12, 2009). "Daniel Radcliffe, Miley Cyrus Top Forbes List of Valuable Young Stars". MTV. Retrieved February 24, 2016.


  29. ^ ""Breaking Dawn" Night Shoot!". Gossip Center. December 16, 2010. Archived from the original on January 19, 2011. Retrieved January 16, 2011.


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  33. ^ Bergin, Olivia (November 9, 2011). "The Queen's Diamond Jubilee". The Daily Telegraph. London.


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  35. ^ "Jesse and Dakota making Night Moves". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk.


  36. ^ The Deadline Team. "Dakota Fanning To Play Kevin Kline's Teen Mistress in Errol Flynn Pic – Deadline". Deadline.


  37. ^ "Dakota Fanning, Theo James Join Richard Gere in Franny". eonline.com. Retrieved June 25, 2017.


  38. ^ The Deadline Team. "Dakota Fanning To Star in Helmer Gerardo Naranjo's First English-Language Pic". Deadline.


  39. ^ "Viena and the Fantomes (2015)". IMDb.


  40. ^ "Seth Green, Dakota Fanning 3D Animated Movie 'Yellowbird' Acquired by Wrekin Hill". TheWrap.


  41. ^ Hipes, Patrick (July 20, 2016). "Kirsten Dunst To Direct Sylvia Plath Adaptation 'The Bell Jar' Starring Dakota Fanning". deadline.com. Retrieved June 25, 2017.


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    [dead link]



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External links











  • Dakota Fanning on IMDb











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