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Renée Soutendijk

Renée Soutendijk
Renée Soutendijk 1992.jpg
Renée Soutendijk in 1992
Born Renette Pauline Soutendijk
(1957-05-21) 21 May 1957 (age 59)
The Hague, Netherlands
Occupation Actress
Spouse(s) Theo Lenssen

Renette Pauline Soutendijk, known as Renée Soutendijk (born 21 May 1957), is a Dutch actress. She was a favorite star of director Paul Verhoeven's films and is perhaps best known for her work in his 1980 release Spetters. Her good looks and striking blond hair secured her status as a Dutch sex symbol in the 1980s. She has also played a number of television and stage roles, and is one of the leads in the 2012 RTL 4 television series Moordvrouw.

A former gymnast, Soutendijk made her television debut in the Dutch television series Dagboek van een herdershond (1979–1980). She began her film career playing sexy blonde heroines in the Paul Verhoeven-directed cult films Spetters (1980) and The Fourth Man (1983). Spetters established her as a sex symbol; the movie and its star attracted attention in the United States as well, and The New York Times saw her "stylish performance" of a "compelling character" as a focal point of the movie. In the early 1980s, Soutendijk, Monique van de Ven, and Willeke van Ammelrooy were the three best-known actresses in Dutch cinema, and most movies featured one of the three. The movie that marked her breakthrough as an actress in a major role, though, is considered to be The Girl with the Red Hair (1981), in which she played Dutch resistance fighter Hannie Schaft. From 1981 to 1989 she played in Zeg 'ns Aaa, one of the longest-running and most popular Dutch sitcoms.

Soutendijk's first English-language role was as Eva Braun in the made-for-TV movie Inside the Third Reich. Her subsequent TV movie roles included Anna Mons in Peter the Great (1986) and Mrs. Simon Wiesenthal in Murderers Among Us (1989). She sought a career in Hollywood and lived in the United States for a year and a half, taking her six-year-old daughter Caro with her but leaving her husband in Amsterdam. She played opposite Academy-award nominee Chris Sarandon in the Holocaust-themed movie Forced March (1989), and the title character in Eve of Destruction (1991). According to Soutendijk, she was screen tested when other American actresses were reluctant to take on such an action-packed role; producers were reluctant to hire a relatively unknown actress "with an unpronounceable surname", so director Duncan Gibbons had to finance her himself. But she returned to the Netherlands, unhappy with the prospects offered her (a seven-year contract for a Star Trek series, she later said) and with the strain it placed on her marriage.


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