Ranking the Top 10 Performances of Helen Mirren

It was fortuitous that, right before I started working on this list, I came across a video of The Late Late Show host James Corden’s recent hilarious rap battle with Helen Mirren on social media. I was struggling with finding the right words to summarize the importance of such a powerful, intimate, strong, versatile, and all-around legendary actress whose body of work spans a whopping five decades, and shows no sign of slowing down. Right then, the sight of a crowd of millennials screaming with joy and losing their shit after simply laying eyes on what would appear to be a posh and classy septuagenarian lady to those somehow still uninitiated with “The Mighty Mirren,” gave me the best possible introduction. In five seconds, the image of these kids genuinely bowing to the queen and expressing their loud love for this “prestige” actress as if she’s a rock star succinctly expressed how beloved and respected Mirren is across many generations.
During the battle, as she effortlessly makes mincemeat out of Corden, Mirren raps, “I played the queen, but also warriors and witches. Crime lords and wizards, bosses and bitches. Detective and whores, to all kinds of Shakespeare.” There you have it, ladies and gentlemen, all hail the queen! Since Mirren is gracing the silver screen once again with her role as a haunted heiress in Hollywood’s PG-13 Jump Scare Ghost Flick #2584, a.k.a. Winchester, it’s a good time to remind readers of Dame Mirren’s remarkable career via a Top 10 Performances list. There are plenty of great performances to choose from, so in compiling this list, we’ve sought to create a balance of titles from every decade.
10. Caroline, The Comfort of Strangers (1990)
In Paul Schrader’s lush and sensual relationship drama with a gorgeous Venetian backdrop, Mirren has a rather small supporting role, but she makes an indelible mark nevertheless. She plays the sexually repressed and spiritually rambunctious wife to Christopher Walken’s pompous bar owner, her reverence for the youthful couple (Rupert Everett and Natasha Richardson) she just met materializing itself into a rather unsettling but logically inevitable obsession. Mirren’s role in The Comfort of Stangers is a testament to her ability to seriously impact the tone of a film even with a minor role.
9. Cora, Age of Consent (1969)
Two giants in their professions crossed paths in Age of Consent. With his second-to-last film, Scorsese-muse Michael Powell was on his way out, and in her breakthrough role, a young Helen Mirren’s cinematic adventure was just beginning. This coastal dramedy about an artist (James Mason) finding new inspiration at an old age through his infatuation with a friendly and inexperienced young girl (Mirren) is pretty much the usual wistful wish fulfillment story about how men of a certain age can be reinvigorated via young and hot innocence, like the underrated Clint Eastwood drama Breezy. Yet Mirren shows her range even this early in her career as her character matures from a doe-eyed youngster to a self-assured woman.
8. Morgana, Excalibur (1981)
In John Boorman’s acid trip fever dream take on the Arthurian legend, Mirren plays the cunning witch pulling the strings behind the scenes as she conspires to take revenge on King Arthur (Nigel Terry). As Morgana, Mirren blisters with sex appeal and graceful sensuality. You might also want to check out the messy as hell Caligula for some more sexy soft focus ancient period action that also has Mirren in the cast, but let’s face it, Excalibur’s flighty craziness trumps Caligula’s soft-core eroticism.
7. Mrs. Wilson, Gosford Park (2001)
In Robert Altman’s always-engaging and astute “ensemble drama skewering the norms of social hierarchy disguised as an old-fashioned murder mystery.” perhaps the last great work from the master, Mirren plays Mrs. Wilson, the always-loyal, stiff-upper-lip head servant of a giant English country house. Even as the murder of one of the guests threatens to rip apart the social construct of the house, Mrs. Wilson always finds a way to maintain that “Keep Calm and Carry On” old school British spirit, even though Mirren’s subtle and layered performance delightfully hints at the panic that’s stewing under the façade of forced normalcy.