Alison Newman | |
Birth Date: | 1968 1, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Bournemouth, Hampshire, England |
Occupation: | Actress |
Spouse: | Hugh Williams |
Alison Newman (born 25 January 1968) is a British actress, best known for her role in the hit ITV1 television series Footballers' Wives as Hazel Bailey, and as DCI Samantha Keeble in the BBC soap opera EastEnders.
Alison Newman was born in Bournemouth, Hampshire, to David and Jenny Newman.[1] She has one sister called Sarah. Both her parents were schoolteachers who encouraged her to take up acting as a hobby but discouraged her from attending stage school when she was younger, a decision she subsequently agreed was probably sensible. Instead, she joined the National Youth Theatre when she was sixteen.[2] Her father died in October 2002, while she was filming the second series of Footballers' Wives. The producers allowed her to take time off from filming some of her last scenes in the series finale so she could be with her family.[3]
Despite studying drama at the University of Manchester Alison Newman did not work as an actress for almost ten years after graduating. She says that she hated the experience of being at drama school and lost her confidence.[3] During this time, she worked in a variety of professions, including publishing, catering, barwork and spent a number of years working in the music industry.[2]
She returned to acting when she was almost 30 after being offered a part in a play written by Anthony Neilson, with whom she had previously worked as an assistant director.[2] This was followed by a role playing a psychotic serial killer in Touching Evil III (1999) with Robson Green (who she would later appear with in RocketMan), and the film Butterfly Collectors (1999), alongside Pete Postlethwaite.
In 2002, Newman was cast in the role of ruthless lesbian football agent, and later club chair, Hazel Bailey in Footballers Wives. Newman was allegedly awarded the role on the strength of a two-episode guest appearance in the series Bad Girls, in which she played Renee Williams who set out to secure revenge on nemesis Top Dog Yvonne Atkins (Linda Henry).[4] Both programmes were made by Shed Productions. The part of Hazel Bailey required Newman to have her naturally blonde hair dyed red. Newman left the show at the end of series 4, when her character decided to return to sports representation, after becoming romantically involved with a professional tennis player.
After Footballers Wives, Newman played Diane Scott in Rocket Man for BBC One in the autumn of 2005. In 2008, she appeared as Lynette Hopkins in Rock Rivals,[5] another Shed Productions drama for ITV1, and later that year she appeared as Detective Inspector Samantha Keeble in several episodes of the BBC soap EastEnders.[6] She played the part of a back-street abortionist in an episode of the popular BBC One drama Call the Midwife, as well as appearing in the short film Father in 2013.[7] In July 2014 Newman resumed the role of DI Samantha Keeble in EastEnders when her character was put in charge of the Lucy Beale murder case. She departed the role again in June 2016. She returned to the series once again in January 2022 and is currently still in the role.
Newman has extensive theatre experience, including Loveplay by Moira Buffini; Luminosity by Nick Stafford; Night of the Soul by David Farr and The Big Lie by Anthony Neilson, all for the RSC, as well as The Censor and The Lying Kind, both by Anthony Neilson, for the Royal Court Theatre, London. Between 2003 and 2006, she appeared in Vagina Monologues, both on tour and in the West End. Her most recent theatre work was in Two Women, by Martina Cole, and performed at the Theatre Royal Stratford East between February and March 2010.[8]
She co-created the TV series Harlots with Moira Buffini.
Newman is married to Hugh Williams, a graphic designer.[3] They live in Glasgow.
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1998 | The Bill | Maria Scanlon | Episode: "Love's Labours Lost" | |
1999 | Touching Evil | Lynn Southy | Episodes: "Fiery Death", Parts One and Two | |
Great Expectations | Supplicant Mother | |||
2000 | Bad Girls | Renee Williams | Episodes: "Facing Up", and "Rough Justice" | |
The Bill | Kim Palmer | Episode: "Streetwise" | ||
2001 | Family Affairs | Linda Renshaw | ||
2002–2005 | Footballers Wives | Hazel Bailey | Series 1–4 | |
2003 | Holby City | Janet Boyd | Episode: "Going it Alone" | |
2004 | Hex | Reverend George | Pilot episode | |
This Morning | Herself | |||
Liquid News | ||||
2005 | Rocket Man | Diane Scott | ||
The New Paul O'Grady Show | Herself | |||
Open Wide | Rose | |||
GMTV | Herself | |||
Favouritism | Episode: "Boy George's Queerest TV Moments" | |||
Loose Women | ||||
2006 | Doctors | Monica Greely | Episode: "Regular Fare" | |
Casualty | Jocelyn Pike | Episode: "Family Matters" | ||
2008 | TV's 50 Hardest Men | Herself | ||
Rock Rivals | Lynette Hopkins | |||
The Wright Stuff | Herself | |||
2008, 2014–2016, 2022–2023 | EastEnders | Regular role; 51 episodes | ||
2010 | Trinny & Susannah From Boom to Bust | Clodagh Malone | ||
2011 | New Tricks | Karen Chapman | Episode: "Only the Brave" | |
Silk | Sue Crocker | |||
2012 | Casualty | Sian Brothwick | Episode: "Hero Syndrome" | |
Whitechapel | Judy Miles | 3 episodes | ||
2013 | Call the Midwife | Mrs. Pritchard | ||
By Any Means | Assistant Commissioner | |||
2014 | Holby City | Angela Doyle | "Affair of the Mind" | |
2019 | Endeavour | Viv Wall | Series 6 | |
2020–present | Dun Breedin | Wanda Walker | Online series; main role |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1999 | The Butterfly Collectors | Sandra Hollins | |
2000 | The Prince and the Pauper | Ann Canty | |
2003 | Ashes and Sand | Hayley's Mother | |
2006 | Kidulthood | Claire's Mum | |
2007 | i | The Eye | Short |
2013 | Father | Margherita |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1990 | The Tempest | Spirit[9] | Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester | |
1997 | The Censor | Wife | Finborough Theatre and Royal Court Theatre London | |
1998 | Electronic Dark Age | Edinburgh Festival | ||
2001 | Loveplay | Various[10] | ||
Luminosity | Betty Mercer/Midwife | |||
Epitaph for the Official Secrets Act | The One Who Stays | RSC Playreading | ||
2002 | Night of the Soul | Liz Chappell[11] | RSC | |
2002 | The Lying Kind | Gronya | Royal Court Theatre London | |
2003–2006 | Vagina Monologues | UK tour, and West End | ||
2008 | The Big Lie | RSC/Latitude Festival | ||
The Long Road | Elizabeth[12] | Synergy Theatre Project in association with The Forgiveness Project, Soho Theatre, London | ||
2010 | Two Women | Doreen | Theatre Royal Stratford East |