Biography - A Short Wiki
Connie Nielsen’s height and other measurements are visible in the table below. Check it out!
Short Bio
Connie was born 3 July 1965 in Frederikshavn, Denmark. She was raised in Mormon faith. At the age of 18, young Nielsen moved to Paris, France, and started hr professional career as a model and actress. She appeared in a couple French movies. Her first American film was The Devil’s Advocate. Her other important roles include characters in Mission to Mars, Gladiator, Battle in Seattle, and 2013’s Three Days To Kill.
Body Measurements Table
Look below and behold the body statistics of Connie Nielsen. The table covers bra size, height, weight, shoe size, and more!
Body shape: | Hourglass |
---|---|
Dress size: | 6 |
Breasts-Waist-Hips: | 36-27-36 inches (91-69-91cm) |
Shoe size: | 8.5 |
Bra size: | 34B |
Cup size: | B |
Height: | 5’10” (178 cm) |
Weight: | 130 pounds (59 kg) |
Natural breasts or implants: | Natural |
Quotes
"If you asked somebody, 'what do you wish for in life?' they wouldn't say 'happiness.' I would have answered 'excitement, knowledge,' God knows - I mean, many, many different things, but certainly not 'happiness'. It seemed like a foreign concept to wish for something that specific and that singular."
Connie Nielsen
"You think once you've shown what you can do, and your movies have been successful, that snap, you work. So to discover the difference between guys' roles and girls' roles made me plain mad. It's unjust."
Connie Nielsen
"If Copenhagen were a person, that person would be generous, beautiful, elderly, but with a flair. A human being that has certain propensities for quarrelling, filled with imagination and with appetite for the new and with respect for the old - somebody who takes good care of things and of people."
Connie Nielsen
"Often when you get a really good script, and you receive the new pages, you see that the entire thing has been dumbed down. Films in the '30s and '40s, that were huge blockbusters, were very sophisticated in their language, and the ideas they brought. There were no questions about whether the audience would get it or not."
Connie Nielsen
"I don't think I can remember a moment in my life where people didn't discuss politics. People discuss politics at the table."
Connie Nielsen