Julie Delpy | Milestones
- 1974 Made stage debut at age five acting with her parents (date approximate)
- 1978 Feature film acting debut in "Guerres civiles en France"
- 1985 Met Jean-Luc Godard at age fourteen; played "the wise young girl" in his "Detective"
- 1986 First starring role as title character of feature film, "Beatrice/La Passion Beatrice", directed by Bertrand Tavernier
- 1987 English-language debut in Godard's "King Lear"
- 1989 Portrayed a nun, the Virgin Mary and a temptress in Carlos Saura's "The Dark Night"
- 1990 Moved to NYC
- 1991 Played bewitching Nazi sympathizer in Agnieska Holland's acclaimed "Europa, Europa"
- 1991 Starred opposite Sam Shepard in Volker Schlondorff's "Voyager"
- 1992 Moved to Los Angeles
- 1993 Appeared as Dominique in Krystof Kieslowski's triptych "Blue", "White" and "Red"
- 1993 First Hollywood feature role as the girlfriend to Chris O'Donnell's D'Artagnan in "The Three Musketeers"
- 1994 Played a Parisian prostitute hired by Eric Stoltz in "Killing Zoe", directed by Roger Avary, co-screenwriter of "Pulp Fiction"; Quentin Tarantino executive produced
- 1995 Directed and wrote 12-minute comedy short "Blah, Blah, Blah"; also co-starred; shown at 1996 Sundance Film Festival
- 1995 Starred opposite Ethan Hawke in "Before Sunrise"
- 1997 Portrayed a lycanthropy victim in "An American Werewolf in Paris"
- 1998 Co-starred in the NBC miniseries "Crime and Punishment"
- 1999 Cast as American Barbara Branden, the wife of Rand's younger lover, in the Showtime TV-movie "The Passion of Ayn Rand"; film debuted at the Sundance Film Festival
- 1999 Starred opposite Adam Goldberg in ABC pilot "True Love"
- 2000 Feature directorial debut, "Tell Me"; co-starring Goldberg, Giovanni Ribisi and Michael Rapaport
- 2001 Had recurring role on the NBC drama "ER"
- 2002 Helmed the feature "Looking for Jimmy"
- 2004 Reunited with director Richard Linklater and Ethan Hawke for "Before Sunset" once again portraying Jesse (Hawke) and Celine (Delpy) who are reunited nine years after they first met; also co-wrote screenplay; received an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Screenplay; received an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay
- Cast as Richard Gere's mistress in Lasse Hallstrom's drama "Hoax" (lensed 2005)










