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Sarah Adler
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Sarah Adler (Hebrew: שרה אדלר; born 1978) is a French and Israeli actress with dual citizenship.[1]
Key Information
Career
[edit]Adler is now best known for her performances in the 2017 Israeli films Foxtrot and The Cakemaker; earlier in her career her notable films included Stones (2004), directed by her husband Raphael Nadjari; Our Music (2004), directed by Jean-Luc Godard; and Marie Antoinette (2006) directed by Sofia Coppola. Adler was nominated for European Film Award for Best Actress for her performance in Our Music, and Ophir Award for Best Actress for her performance in Jellyfish which won the Cannes Film Festivals' Caméra d'or.
In 2018, she won the Ophir Award for Best Actress for her role in The Cakemaker.
Filmography
[edit]| Title | Year | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Afraid of Everything | 1999 | Iris | |
| Dresden | 1999 | Woman in Coffee Shop | |
| Upheaval | 2001 | Unknown | Short film |
| French Variety | 2003 | Pascale | Variété française |
| Stones | 2004 | Lili | אבנים (Avanim) |
| Our Music | 2004 | Judith Lerner | Notre musique Nominated—European Film Award for Best Actress |
| Year Zero | 2004 | Anna | שנת אפס (Shnat Effes) |
| How I Feel | 2005 | Unknown | Short Film |
| Nina's House | 2005 | Marlène | La maison de Nina |
| Marie Antoinette | 2006 | Comtesse d'Artois | |
| The Case of the Week | 2006 | Anna | TV Series (2006–09) פרשת השבוע (Parashat Ha Shavua) |
| Jellyfish | 2007 | Batia | מדוזות (Meduzot) Nominated—Ophir Award for Best Actress |
| Ultimatum | 2009 | Tamar | Ultimatum |
| Andante | 2010 | Sarah | אנדנטה (Andante) |
| Bachelor Days Are Over | 2011 | Léa | Pourquoi tu pleures? |
| Restoration | 2011 | Hava | בוקר טוב אדון פידלמן (Boker Tov Adon Fidelman/Good Morning Mr. Fidelman) |
| Aya | 2012 | Aya | Short film |
| Ana Arabia | 2013 | Miriam | |
| Self Made | 2014 | Michal | |
| Dawn | 2014 | Ilana | |
| Tsili | 2014 | Tsili | |
| The Cakemaker | 2017 | Anat | |
| Foxtrot | 2017 | Daphna Feldmann | |
| Un entretien | 2019 | TV Series | |
| I Wish Someone Were Waiting for Me Somewhere | 2019 | Nathalie | |
| The Middleman | 2019-2020 | Louise Tronier | TV Series |
| Beating Sun | 2022 | Alma | |
| Tel Aviv/Beirut | 2022 | Myriam |
Awards and nominations
[edit]| Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | European Film Awards | Best Actress | Our Music | Nominated |
| 2007 | Ophir Awards | Best Actress | Jellyfish | Nominated |
References
[edit]- ^ Halutz, Doron; Melnikov, Ilya (Dec 16, 2011). "There's something unusual about Sarah Adler". Haaretz. Tel Aviv, Israel. Retrieved Oct 28, 2013.
External links
[edit]- Sarah Adler at IMDb
Sarah Adler
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Early life and education
Early life
Sarah Adler was born on June 18, 1978, in Paris, France, to a bohemian family.[1] Her father was an actor, director, and painter, while her mother worked at a jazz club, creating an intellectually vibrant and multicultural home environment in the lively 10th arrondissement.[12] As an only child, Adler grew up in this stimulating setting, surrounded by global visitors and exposed to diverse influences, which fostered her early independence—she began taking the Paris Metro alone at age eight and traveled internationally, including trips to Brazil at four and New York at eight.[12] Her parents divorced when she was young, after which she lived primarily with her mother, though her father's artistic background subtly shaped her nascent interests in performance.[12] In 1988, when Adler was ten years old, her mother decided to relocate the family to Israel to immerse her in Jewish history and the Hebrew language, beginning with a trial year in Jerusalem before settling in Tel Aviv.[12] This move marked a significant shift from the bohemian, lower-class Parisian life to the more structured Israeli society, where Adler initially struggled with feelings of foreignness and disconnection from her familial and linguistic roots.[12] The cultural transition was challenging, as she navigated a new environment far removed from the multicultural vibrancy of her childhood neighborhood.[12] Adler's relocation solidified her dual French-Israeli citizenship, which has profoundly influenced her bicultural identity, blending French intellectualism with Israeli resilience.[12] Over time, she became fluent in Hebrew, though retaining a distinct French accent, reflecting the enduring impact of her Parisian upbringing amid her adaptation to life in Tel Aviv.[12]Education
Sarah Adler was born in Paris in 1978 to a bohemian family; her father was an actor, director, and painter, while her mother worked at a jazz club, fostering an environment that nurtured her early artistic inclinations.[12] In 1988, at the age of 10, Adler moved with her mother to Israel, where she later attended the municipal Aleph High School of the Arts in Tel Aviv during the early to mid-1990s.[12] Initially enrolling in the theater track, she switched to the cinema track, expressing a preference for directing over performing at the time.[12] Her high school experience provided foundational exposure to performing arts techniques, though she left the program at age 17 in 1995, citing the "urgency of adolescence" as a factor in her declining academic performance from good to merely acceptable.[12][2] Following her departure from high school, Adler relocated to Paris at age 17 to complete her matriculation through correspondence courses, living independently for the first time.[12] Around age 18, she moved to New York City, where she pursued informal acting training, including three years of study at the Lee Strasberg Theatre & Film Institute in the late 1990s, and briefly worked with a group employing experimental Russian techniques.[12][2][13] This period marked her transition from educational pursuits to professional acting endeavors by her early 20s.[12]Career
Early career
Sarah Adler made her professional acting debut at age 21 in the 1999 independent drama Afraid of Everything, directed by David Barker, where she portrayed Iris, the younger sister of the protagonist in a tense family chamber piece.[14] The film, shot in New York, marked her entry into acting after brief training at the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute, providing a foundation for her multilingual and cross-cultural performances.[2] In the mid-2000s, Adler began building visibility through roles in both Israeli and French productions, often leveraging her dual citizenship to bridge the two industries. She appeared as Lili in the 2004 Israeli drama Stones (Avanim), directed by Raphaël Nadjari, a coming-of-age story exploring personal stagnation and renewal in contemporary Israel.[15] That same year, she took on the role of Judith Lerner, a determined Israeli journalist, in Jean-Luc Godard's experimental Our Music (Notre musique), a film structured around themes of hell, purgatory, and paradise that examined war and reconciliation, earning her a nomination for Best Actress at the European Film Awards.[16] Adler's early international exposure came in 2006 with a supporting role as the Comtesse d'Artois in Sofia Coppola's lavish historical drama Marie Antoinette, filmed in Versailles and Versailles-inspired sets, which introduced her to a broader Hollywood-adjacent audience despite the part's brevity. These roles highlighted her versatility in navigating French and Israeli cinema, though she faced challenges adapting to linguistic demands—switching between French, English, and Hebrew—and cultural differences stemming from her Parisian upbringing and later immersion in Israeli society after moving there at age 10.[2] This period of entry-level work laid the groundwork for her growing presence in independent and arthouse films.Breakthrough roles
Sarah Adler's breakthrough came with her lead role as Batia, a struggling waitress navigating personal turmoil, in the 2007 Israeli film Jellyfish (Meduzot), directed by Shira Geffen and Etgar Keret. The film's win of the Caméra d'Or at Cannes highlighted its innovative storytelling, and Adler's introspective performance was praised for its naturalistic depth, earning her an Ophir Award nomination for Best Actress.[6] This role marked a pivotal shift from her earlier minor appearances, overcoming initial career hurdles in the competitive Israeli film scene by showcasing her ability to anchor an ensemble narrative with quiet emotional intensity.[12] In 2011, Adler earned acclaim for her role as Noga, a woman confronting workplace sexual harassment and personal boundaries, in Michal Aviad's drama Invisible (Isha Lo Yodaat), winning Best Actress at the Haifa International Film Festival.[3] Building on this momentum, Adler demonstrated her dramatic range in Restoration (Boker Tov Adon Fidelman, 2011), directed by Yossi Madmoni, where she portrayed Hava, the resilient wife of a clock restorer grappling with family loss and renewal. Critics commended her chemistry with co-star Henry David and her portrayal of subtle psychological layers, which contributed to the film's 11 Ophir Award nominations, including her own for Best Supporting Actress.[17][12] Her work in this period, including the bilingual short Aya (2012), where she played a spontaneous woman embarking on an impromptu road trip, further emphasized her versatility across languages and formats; reviewers noted her grounded yet whimsical delivery as key to the film's Oscar-nominated appeal.[18][19] These roles not only garnered critical acclaim but also bridged French and Israeli cinematic traditions, reflecting Adler's dual heritage as a Paris-born actress immersed in Tel Aviv's indie scene. Her earlier nomination for the European Film Award for Best Actress in Jean-Luc Godard's Our Music (Notre Musique, 2004), where she delivered an understated performance as a Jewish journalist amid reflections on war and peace, continued to influence her trajectory, solidifying her reputation in international arthouse circles through the mid-2010s.[20] This phase established Adler as a compelling presence in cross-cultural narratives, with outlets like Haaretz highlighting her unique position in fostering dialogue between the two film worlds.[12]Later works
In 2017, Adler delivered a critically acclaimed performance as Anat Nachmias, a grieving widow navigating loss and unexpected intimacy, in Ofir Raul Graizer's The Cakemaker, earning her the Ophir Award for Best Actress at the Israeli Academy Awards.[21] Her portrayal of a resilient yet vulnerable woman grappling with cultural and personal taboos was praised for its emotional depth, contributing to the film's selection as Israel's entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 91st Academy Awards.[22] That same year, Adler portrayed Daphna Feldmann, a mother confronting the shattering news of her son's death in the Israeli military, in Samuel Maoz's Foxtrot, a film that earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Language Film and the Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival. Her restrained yet intensely poignant depiction of familial devastation and quiet resilience anchored the film's triptych structure, highlighting themes of fate and absurdity in Israeli society.[23] Adler's subsequent roles from 2019 onward reflected a deepening engagement with multifaceted female characters amid personal and societal upheaval. In the 2019 adaptation I Wish Someone Were Waiting for Me Somewhere, she played Nathalie, a woman reflecting on life's regrets and fleeting connections, bringing subtlety to the film's exploration of existential longing. She then appeared as Louise Tronier in the 2019–2020 miniseries The Middleman (L'Agent immobilier), embodying a sharp, introspective figure in a narrative blending real estate intrigue with surreal elements.[24] In 2022, Adler took on the role of Myriam Medin in Michale Boganim's Tel Aviv/Beirut, a drama spanning decades of the Israeli-Lebanese conflict, where she portrayed a mother separated from her family by borders and war, emphasizing themes of endurance and reconciliation.[25] Later that year, as Alma in Philippe Petit's Beating Sun (Tant que le soleil frappe), she depicted a character entangled in themes of displacement and human connection against a Mediterranean backdrop. Adler's international presence expanded in 2023 with a supporting role as Pauline's mother in Trần Anh Hùng's The Taste of Things, a lush period drama celebrating culinary artistry and romance, where her nuanced contribution added emotional texture to the ensemble. By 2025, she starred as Aya in Oded Binnun and Mihal Brezis's Dead Language, an expansion of their Oscar-nominated short Aya, portraying a woman whose chance airport encounter sparks a profound journey of desire and self-discovery; critics lauded her vulnerable yet defiant performance for its raw intensity.[27][28] Throughout this phase, Adler's work has evolved toward portraying emotionally layered women confronting grief, identity, and interpersonal boundaries, solidifying her reputation as a versatile actress bridging French and Israeli cinema. As of November 2025, she remains active in European and Middle Eastern productions, influencing cross-cultural narratives through her selective, introspective roles.[29]Personal life
Family and citizenship
Sarah Adler holds dual French-Israeli citizenship, a status she has maintained throughout her adult life, which has significantly enhanced her professional mobility across European and Middle Eastern film industries. This dual nationality allows her to work seamlessly in France, Israel, and international productions without visa restrictions, reflecting her ability to navigate opportunities in multiple linguistic and cultural contexts.[12] Following her studies in New York from ages 17 to 24, Adler returned briefly to France before settling in Tel Aviv around 2003, where she established a base for her Israeli cinema work. She has since divided her time between Israel and France, where her parents reside, influenced by family ties that draw her back periodically. This pattern of residence underscores her bicultural lifestyle, with Tel Aviv serving as a professional hub while France remains a personal anchor. As of the mid-2010s, she has been reported as living primarily in France, aligning with her family's location and ongoing European projects.[12][2][30] Adler's family connections in adulthood include a half-sister from her father's second marriage and an aunt close in age, though she maintains limited contact with them. Her parents, now based in France after her mother's decade in Israel, continue to influence her sense of heritage, particularly through their encouragement of her early relocation from Paris to Israel at age 10, which laid the foundation for her dual identity. In public statements, Adler has described merging her French and Israeli identities as a "complex journey," ultimately viewing herself as a "citizen of the world" who appreciates the warmth of Israeli culture upon revisiting it as an adult, while valuing the multicultural openness of her French roots. This bicultural perspective has shaped her career choices, enabling roles that explore themes of displacement and empathy across borders.[12][2]Marriage
Sarah Adler and French-Israeli film director Raphaël Nadjari began their relationship in the early 2000s. By that time, Adler had recently returned to Europe after studying acting at the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute in New York, where she had moved following her high school years in Israel.[12] The couple married in the early 2000s, with Nadjari relocating from New York—where he had been based since 1999 to pursue filmmaking—to Tel Aviv to join Adler, establishing their life together in Israel by around 2003.[31] This move aligned with Nadjari's growing interest in Israeli cinema, as evidenced by his direction of Avanim (2004) and subsequent films like Tehilim (2007), both shot in Israel.[32] Their partnership has been described as supportive of Adler's navigation between French and Israeli cultural spheres, facilitating her bilingual career in European and Middle Eastern productions.[2] Adler and Nadjari have not publicly collaborated on film projects where she appeared in leading roles in his works, though their professional circles overlap through shared festivals and industry events, such as the 2007 Cannes Film Festival where Tehilim premiered alongside Adler's involvement in other international features.[33] Post-2010, Nadjari continued directing films like the 2013 thriller The Last Winter, but no joint acting-directing credits between them have been documented in major productions.[34] The couple has one daughter, Elia, born in 2007, and maintains a high level of privacy regarding their family life, with limited public information available about further personal details as of 2025.[35][31]Filmography
Films
Sarah Adler debuted in feature films with the independent drama Afraid of Everything in 1999, portraying the supporting role of Iris under director David Barker. Her filmography reflects her French-Israeli background through roles in bilingual and co-produced works, including lead performances in Israeli films like Jellyfish (2007, directed by Shira Geffen and Etgar Keret) and The Cakemaker (2017, directed by Ofir Raul Graizer), as well as Foxtrot (2017, directed by Samuel Maoz). Below is a chronological list of her feature film roles.[36]| Year | Title | Role | Director | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | Afraid of Everything | Iris | David Barker | Supporting; debut role |
| 2003 | Variété française | Pascale | Supporting | |
| 2004 | Avanim | Lili | Supporting | |
| 2004 | La Maison de Nina | Marlène | Supporting | |
| 2004 | Notre musique | Elle-même | Supporting | |
| 2004 | Shnat Effes (Year Zero) | Anna | Supporting | |
| 2006 | Marie-Antoinette | Comtesse d'Artois | Supporting | |
| 2007 | Les Méduses (Jellyfish) | Batia | Shira Geffen, Etgar Keret | Lead; French-Israeli co-production |
| 2008 | Ultimatum | Tamar | Supporting | |
| 2010 | Andante | Sarah | Lead | |
| 2011 | Boker tov adon Fidelman | Unspecified | ||
| 2011 | Pourquoi tu pleures? | Léa | Supporting | |
| 2013 | Ana Arabia | Miriam | Supporting | |
| 2013 | Big Bad Wolves | La femme de Dror | Supporting | |
| 2013 | Tiens-toi droite (Up the Wrong Tree) | Emma | Supporting | |
| 2013 | Tsili | Tsili | Lead | |
| 2014 | Dawn | Ilana | Supporting | |
| 2014 | Self Made | Michal | Lead | |
| 2015 | La Vie des bêtes | Estelle | Supporting | |
| 2015 | Les Années perdues | Marie Launey | Supporting | |
| 2017 | Foxtrot | Dafna | Samuel Maoz | Lead; French-Israeli co-production |
| 2017 | The Cakemaker | Anat | Ofir Raul Graizer | Lead; German-Israeli co-production |
| 2018 | Je voudrais que quelqu'un m'attende quelque part (I Wish Someone Were Waiting for Me Somewhere) | Nathalie | Supporting | |
| 2019 | Monsieur Deligny, vagabond efficace | Unspecified | ||
| 2022 | Tant que le soleil frappe (As Long as the Sun Strikes) | Alma | Lead | |
| 2022 | Tel Aviv – Beyrouth | Myriam | Supporting; French-Israeli co-production | |
| 2023 | La Passion de Dodin Bouffant (The Taste of Things) | Mère de Pauline | Supporting | |
| 2025 | Dead Language | Aya | Oded Binnun, Mihal Brezis | Lead; Israeli-Czech-Polish co-production; feature adaptation of the short Aya[10] |
Television appearances
Sarah Adler has maintained a selective presence in television, primarily appearing in Israeli series and French miniseries, with roles that often explore complex interpersonal dynamics. Her television work, spanning from the mid-2000s to the early 2020s, complements her more extensive film career by showcasing her versatility in ensemble-driven narratives, though she has undertaken fewer long-form TV commitments compared to theatrical releases.[1] Her earliest notable television role came in the Israeli drama series Parashat HaShavua (also known as On Any Saturday), where she portrayed Anna across 35 episodes from 2006 to 2009. In this family-centered series, Adler's character navigates themes of love, friendship, and hidden tensions among interconnected households in contemporary Israel.[37] Following this, Adler starred as Maya in the Israeli series Avedot Vemetziot (Lost and Found), appearing in the 2007–2008 run. Playing a woman returning from New York to care for her ailing father, her performance highlighted emotional reconciliation and cultural displacement within a familial context.[38] In 2016, she took on the role of Yael in the Israeli miniseries Gerushim Meucharim (A Late Divorce), a three-episode adaptation of A.B. Yehoshua's novel directed by Ram Loevy. Adler's portrayal contributed to the series' exploration of marital dissolution and legal entanglements in Israeli society.[39] Adler's most recent television appearance to date is in the French-Belgian miniseries L'Agent immobilier (The Real Estate Agent), where she played Louise Tronier in all four episodes from 2019 to 2020. Directed by Shira Geffen and Etgar Keret, the series follows a struggling real estate agent, with Adler's character adding layers to the comedic-dramatic examination of urban alienation and professional desperation. While Adler has occasionally contributed to short-form content post-2010, no major web series or additional documentaries have been confirmed in her television portfolio through 2025. Her TV roles underscore a deliberate focus on character depth over volume, distinguishing her broadcast work from her broader cinematic output.[40]Awards and nominations
Ophir Awards
The Ophir Awards, presented annually by the Israeli Academy of Film and Television since 1990 and often referred to as the Israeli equivalent of the Academy Awards, recognize outstanding achievements in Israeli cinema, with the Best Film winner typically selected as Israel's entry for the Oscars' International Feature Film category. Sarah Adler's nominations and win at the Ophir Awards underscore her significant contributions to Israeli filmmaking, particularly through nuanced performances in independent dramas that explore personal and cultural tensions. Her accolades highlight her role in elevating Israeli cinema on both national and international stages, where she has portrayed complex female characters navigating identity, loss, and relationships. Adler received her first Ophir nomination in 2007 for Best Actress for her role as Batia in Jellyfish (Meduzot), directed by Shira Geffen and Etgar Keret, a film that earned 10 nominations overall, including for Best Film. In 2011, she was nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in Restoration (Boker Tov Adon Fidelman), a drama about an aging furniture restorer grappling with the death of his business partner and family dynamics in contemporary Israel, directed by Yossi Madmoni. These early recognitions marked her emergence as a versatile talent in Israeli cinema, blending French-Israeli heritage with authentic portrayals of local narratives.[7][41][42] Adler achieved her sole Ophir win in 2018 for Best Actress, portraying Anat in The Cakemaker, a poignant drama about grief and forbidden connections across cultures, directed by Ofir Raul Graizer; the film secured seven Ophir Awards total, including Best Film. More recently, in 2025, she earned a nomination for Best Actress for her role in The Sea, a drama exploring familial and societal conflicts, though the award went to Neta Riskin for Nandauri. These honors reflect Adler's enduring impact on Israeli film, emphasizing themes of cultural hybridity and emotional depth.[21][11]International recognition
Sarah Adler first garnered significant international attention with her nomination for the European Film Award for Best Actress for her portrayal of Judith Lerner in Jean-Luc Godard's Our Music (2004), highlighting her ability to embody complex, introspective characters in arthouse cinema.[4] Her domestic Ophir Award wins provided a foundation for broader notice, leading to prominent roles in films that achieved global festival success. In Foxtrot (2017), Adler's performance as the anguished mother Dafna earned acclaim alongside the film's Silver Lion Grand Jury Prize at the Venice Film Festival, with critics commending her raw emotional intensity and seamless rapport with co-star Lior Ashkenazi in scenes of familial confrontation.[43][44][45] Similarly, Adler's nuanced depiction of the widowed café owner Anat in The Cakemaker (2017) premiered to strong reception at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, where reviewers lauded the tender chemistry she shared with Tim Kalkhof, describing their interactions as exceptionally moving and integral to the film's exploration of grief and forbidden connection. The picture subsequently secured distribution across Europe and North America, bolstered by favorable critiques in major outlets that underscored Adler's restrained yet poignant delivery.[46][47][48][49] She also won Best Actress at the Haifa International Film Festival for her role in Invisible (2011).[2] By 2025, Adler continued to expand her international profile with the lead role of Aya in Dead Language, a Czech-Israeli co-production that debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival and entered sales at Cannes, drawing praise for her vulnerable, defiant portrayal that anchored the drama's emotional core.[27][50][51]References
- https://www.[imdb](/page/IMDb).com/title/tt15166808/
