Anne-Marie Duff Explained

Anne-Marie Duff
Birth Date:8 October 1970[1]
Birth Place:London, England[2]
Education:Drama Centre London (BA)
Years Active:1997–present
Children:1

Anne-Marie Duff (born 8 October 1970) is an English actress and narrator.

After graduating from Drama Centre London, Duff made television appearances in Trial & Retribution, Amongst Women and Aristocrats in the late 1990s. She made her breakthrough as Fiona Gallagher on the Channel 4 drama series Shameless and as Queen Elizabeth I in The Virgin Queen; both earned her BAFTA nominations for Best Actress. She was awarded the BAFTA Cymru Award for Best Actress for her work in the 2007 television film The History of Mr Polly. Further television roles include Claire Church in From Darkness (2015), Ma Costa in the BBC and HBO series His Dark Materials (2019), Erin Wiley in Sex Education (2020–2021), Tracy Daszkiewicz in The Salisbury Poisonings (2020) and Grace Williams in Apple TV+ series Bad Sisters (2022–present); earning her a British Academy Television Award for Best Supporting Actress for the latter.

In film, Duff has had roles in Enigma (2001), The Magdalene Sisters (2002), Notes on a Scandal (2006), French Film (2008), The Last Station (2009) and Nowhere Boy (2009), alongside Shameless co-star David Threlfall; the latter earned her a nomination for the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role. She later appeared in Before I Go to Sleep (2014) and Suffragette (2015).

Early life and education

Duff was born in London on 8 October 1970, the younger of two children of Irish immigrants: her father, a painter and decorator at Fuller's Brewery in Chiswick, was from County Meath and her mother was from County Donegal and worked in a shoe shop.[3] [4] The family lived in Southall, London, and Duff attended Mellow Lane School. While at school, she joined the school choir, where she discovered she could 'really sing'. She paid for singing lessons with a woman who taught classical singing, who made a huge impact. Duff initially thought about pursuing a career as a singer and talked about it in great depth with her teacher, who looked at her and said, 'I think you have the soul of an actor.'[5] At an early age, Duff attended a local youth theatre, Young Argosy, linked to the Argosy Players, in order to battle her shy nature; she soon became hooked on the stage. After further study of Film and Theatre, at the age of 19, she attended the Drama Centre in London, alongside John Simm, Anastasia Hille and her good friend Paul Bettany.[6]

Career

Screen work

Duff made her first television appearance in ITV drama Trial & Retribution as Cathy Gillingham for two episodes in 1997. She later made appearances in series such as Amongst Women, in Aristocrats as Lady Louisa Lennox and in 2003 BBC television film as Henrietta of England. She first came to the attention of the British public in 2002 for her work playing Margaret in The Magdalene Sisters.[7] She also had a minor role in Holby City as Alison McCarthy. Duff played Holly in the first series of Simon Nye sitcom, Wild West, alongside Dawn French and Catherine Tate in 2002. In 2002, Duff appeared in her first major film role as Margaret McGuire in The Magdalene Sisters.

Duff's first critical acclaim came for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth I in the lavish 2005 BBC television miniseries The Virgin Queen, which also starred Tom Hardy, Emilia Fox and Sienna Guillory. For Elizabeth I, she was nominated for the British Academy Television Award for Best Actress in both 2006 and 2007.

Following her breakthrough, Duff ventured into films, first appearing in Notes on a Scandal, alongside Judi Dench. After film roles in Irish film Garage and The Waiting Room, she next appeared in a main role in comedy film French Film and Is Anybody There? in 2008. In 2009, Duff received further attention when she played the mother of John Lennon, Julia Stanley, a role for which she won British Independent Film Award for Best Supporting Actress in Nowhere Boy. She also appeared in The Last Station, a biopic about Leo Tolstoy's later years, in which she played his devoted daughter Sasha. She appeared in less known film roles following this before her appearance in 2014 film Before I Go to Sleep. Throughout this time, Duff continued to appear on mainstream television in Parade's End, a five-part BBC/HBO/VRT television serial adapted from the tetralogy of eponymous novels (1924–1928) by Ford Madox Ford as Edith Duchemin and in BBC One crime drama From Darkness which premiered in October 2015, appearing in the starring role. Of Duff's performance, Metro stated "Not a fan of police procedural dramas? Good, because this ain't that. From Darkness is a character-driven tale of one women's journey and resolve and it includes a bloody brilliant performance by Duff."[8]

In 2015, she played Violet Miller in the film Suffragette, a working-woman who introduces Maud Watts (Carey Mulligan) to the fight for women's rights in east London. "Violet is extraordinary, she's a firebrand - a tornado that comes into Maud's life and changes it forever. I found her thrilling," says Duff.In 2016, Duff was cast in a new BBC animated miniseries of Watership Down, alongside her former husband James McAvoy. It premiered in December 2018; Duff appeared as Hyzenthlay. In 2019, Duff once again appeared with McAvoy in the BBC One and HBO adaption of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials.

In 2020, Duff portrayed Erin Wiley, the estranged heroin addict mother of established character Maeve in the second season of critically acclaimed Netflix original series Sex Education. She later returned to the role for the third season. In June 2020, Duff appeared in a main role as Tracy Daszkiewicz in three-part drama The Salisbury Poisonings. The series portrays the 2018 Novichok poisoning crisis in Salisbury, England, and the subsequent Amesbury poisonings.

Duff narrated the BBC Two documentary Hospital in 2017. The series followed the National Health Service in unprecedented times.

Stage work

An accomplished theatre actor, she has worked extensively with the Royal National Theatre, including its 1996 production of Helen Edmundson's adaptation of Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace, and also in London's West End (Vassa, Collected Stories). Credits at the National Theatre include Collected Stories, King Lear and the title character in Marianne Elliott's production of George Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan to great acclaim.[9] [10] In 2011 she played Alma Rattenbury in Terence Rattigan's final play Cause Célèbre at The Old Vic, directed by Thea Sharrock.[11]

Duff was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award in 2000.

Personal life

Duff married Scottish actor James McAvoy in 2006, and gave birth to their son in 2010.[12] On 13 May 2016, Duff and McAvoy announced they were divorcing.[13] To minimise disruption to their son's life, they initially shared a home in North London when not working elsewhere.[14]

She admits to being "a hopeless romantic. And that means sometimes I'll burn with pain as well as burn with desire, I will. 'Cos that's the nature of opening your heart up to someone else ... This sounds ironic, of course, but sometimes in a marriage you are never closer than the moment at which the two of you decide it's time to finish."[15]

Duff's father called her by the nickname Smudge when she was growing up.[16]

Activism

In 2007 she was one of nine female celebrities to take part in the What's it going to take? campaign promoting awareness of domestic abuse in the United Kingdom.[17]

Filmography

Film

YearProductionRoleNotes
1998Mild and BetterThe WomanShort film
2001EnigmaKay
2002The Magdalene SistersMargaret
2006Notes on a ScandalAnnabel
2007GarageCarmel
The Waiting RoomAnna
2008French FilmSophie
2009Is Anybody There?Mum
The Last StationSasha Tolstoy
Nowhere BoyJulia Lennon
2012SanctuaryMaire
2013Closed CircuitMelissa
2014Before I Go to SleepClaire
2015Molly Moon and the Incredible Book of HypnotismLucy Logan the Librarian
SuffragetteViolet Miller
2016Miranda's LetterMotherShort film
2017On Chesil BeachMarjorie Mayhew

Television

YearProductionRoleNotes
1997Trial & RetributionCathy Gillingham2 episodes
1998Amongst WomenSheila2 episodes
1999AristocratsLouisa4 episodes
2000Reach for the MoonCath Bird
2001The Way We Live NowGeorgiana4 episodes
2002Doctor ZhivagoOlya
Holby CityAlison McCarthy1 episode
Wild WestHolly6 episodes
SinnersAnne Marie/TheresaTV film
2003Princess Henrietta of England1 episode
2004–2005, 2013ShamelessFiona GallagherMain role
2006The Virgin QueenQueen Elizabeth I4 episodes
Born EqualMichelleTV film
2007The History of Mr PollyMiriam
2008Pop BritanniaNarrator
2009MargotMargot FonteynTV film
2012AccusedMo Murray1 episode
Parade's EndEdith Duchemin4 episodes
2015From DarknessClaire ChurchAll 4 episodes
2016Murder[18] DCI Mirella Goss1 episode
2017HospitalNarratorAll 6 episodes
2018Watership DownHyzenthlayMiniseries
2019His Dark MaterialsMa CostaTV series
2020–2021Sex EducationErin WileyNetflix Original series
2020The Salisbury PoisoningsTracy DaszkiewiczTV series[19]
2022 Olivier Awards Guest Presenter 1 episode
SuspectSusannah2 episodes
2022–presentBad SistersGrace WilliamsApple TV+ series
TBAReunionChristineFilming[20]

Radio and audio

YearProductionRoleNotes
1997The Playboy of the Western WorldSarah TanseyRadio drama
1998Twelfth NightViola
2000The Art of LoveCypassis
Diary of a Provincial LadyMamselleRadio series
2001A Time That WasSimRadio drama
2003Stranges and BrothersRosalind
CarmillaLaura
2004Life Half SpentJoanneRadio Play
Jane EyreNarratorRadio drama
2005Ears Wide OpenDiane
OthelloDesdemonaAudiobook
2006The Queen at 80NarratorRadio series
The PossessedLiza/MaryaRadio drama
Look Back in AngerAlisonRehearsed reading
2007Kingdom of the Golden DragonNarratorRadio drama
2008Twenty Chickens for a Saddle
2009The Little Mermaid
2010Thumbelina
2011Cause CelebreAlma Rattenbury
2015Kingdom of CloudJuliet
The Master and MargaritaMargarita
2017A Streetcar Named DesireBlanche DuBois
2020Tess of the D'UrbervillesNarratorAudiobook
The Mill on the Floss
2021The Absolute Book
2022Unmade Movies: Dennis Potter's The White Hotel

Theatre

YearProductionRoleNotes
1994Uncle SilasMaud Ruthyn
The Mill on the FlossFirst Maggie
1995La Grande MagiaAmelia
1995–1996Peter PanWendy
1996War and PeaceNatasha
1997–1998King LearCordelia
1999VassaLyudmila
1999–2000Collected StoriesLisa
2000A Doll's HouseNora
2002The Daughter in LawMinnie
2004The Playboy of the Western WorldPegín maidhc
2005Days of Wine and RosesMona
2007The Soldier's FortuneLady Dunce
Saint JoanJoanOlivier Theatre, London[21]
2011Cause CélèbreAlma RattenburyOld Vic, London
2012BereniceBereniceDonmar Warehouse, London
2013Strange InterludeNina LeedsNational Theatre, London[22]
MacbethLady MacbethBroadway debut, Lincoln Center Theater
2015Husbands & SonsLizzie HolroydCo-production between National Theatre, London and Royal Exchange, Manchester
2016Oil[23] MayAlmeida Theatre
2017Common[24] MaryRoyal National Theatre, London
Heisenberg[25] GeorgieWyndhams Theatre, London
2018Macbeth[26] Lady MacbethRoyal National Theatre, London
2019Sweet Charity Charity Hope ValentineDonmar Warehouse, London
2022The House of Shades[27] Constance WebsterAlmeida Theatre, London

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryNominated workResult
2001Shanghai Television FestivalBest Actress
2004Irish Film and Television AwardsBest Actress in a TV Drama
2005
Broadcasting Press GuildBest Actress
British Academy Television AwardsBest Actress
2006
Royal Television SocietyBest Female Actor
2007British Academy Television AwardsBest Actress
Evening Standard Theatre AwardsBest Actress
Irish Film and Television AwardsBest Actress in a Lead Role in Television
2008Laurence Olivier AwardsBest Actress in a Supporting Role
Best Actress
BAFTA CymruBest Actress
Irish Film and Television AwardsBest Actress in a Supporting Role
2010Evening Standard British Film AwardsBest ActressNowhere Boy[28]
BIFA AwardBest Supporting Actress
London Film Critics' Circle AwardBritish Supporting Actress of the Year
BAFTA AwardBest Actress in a Supporting Role
Empire AwardBest Actress
Irish Film and Television AwardsBest Actress in a Supporting Role in a Film
Satellite AwardBest Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
2012Irish Film and Television AwardsBest Actress in a Film
2015BIFA AwardBest Supporting Actress
2019Evening Standard Theatre AwardsBest Musical Performance
2022Peabody AwardEntertainmentBad Sisters
2023British Academy Television AwardBritish Academy Television Award for Best Supporting Actress

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Famous birthdays for Oct. 8: Bella Thorne, Chevy Chase. October 8, 2022. UPI. 2023-03-05.
  2. News: Lane . Harriet . Real-life romance . . 8 February 2004 . 31 July 2009.
  3. News: Anne-Marie Duff on starting over, divorce and her sexually charged role. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/theatre/actors/anne-marie-duff-starting-divorce-sexually-charged-role/ . 12 January 2022 . subscription . live. The Telegraph. 20 May 2017. Day. Elizabeth.
  4. Web site: Desert Island Discs - Anne-Marie Duff - BBC Sounds. 2022-01-26. www.bbc.co.uk. en-GB.
  5. Web site: Desert Island Discs - Anne-Marie Duff - BBC Sounds. 2022-01-26. www.bbc.co.uk. en-GB.
  6. News: Lane . Harriet . Harriet Lane meets Shameless star Anne-Marie Duff . . 8 February 2004 . 28 December 2022.
  7. Web site: Anne-Marie Duff . 2022-11-05 . IMDb.
  8. Web site: Lewis. Rebecca. Everything you need to know about Anne-Marie Duff's BBC thriller from Darkness. Metro.co.uk. 1 September 2016. 4 October 2015.
  9. News: Billington . Michael . Saint Joan . . 12 July 2007 . 31 July 2009.
  10. News: Brown . Peter . Saint Joan . LondonTheatre.co.uk . 13 July 2007 . 31 July 2009.
  11. News: Anne-Marie Duff on Rattigan revival . Tim . Masters . . 27 March 2011. 27 March 2011.
  12. Web site: Mcdonald . Toby . Doting mum Anne-Marie Duff reveals toddler's name . Sunday Mail . 13 November 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120113141628/http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/showbiz/celebrity-news/2011/04/24/doting-star-anne-marie-duff-reveals-tot-s-name-86908-23083943/ . 13 January 2012 . 24 April 2011 . live . dmy .
  13. Web site: James McAvoy and Wife Anne-Marie Duff to Divorce: See Their Statement . US Weekly . Marquina . Sierra . 13 May 2016 . 13 May 2016.
  14. https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/movies/james-mcavoy-man-of-many-faces-adds-another-23-in-split-20170110-gtotrt.html Andrew Purcell
  15. Web site: Desert Island Discs - Anne-Marie Duff - BBC Sounds. 2022-01-26. www.bbc.co.uk. en-GB.
  16. Web site: Desert Island Discs - Anne-Marie Duff - BBC Sounds. 2022-01-26. www.bbc.co.uk. en-GB.
  17. Web site: Women's Aid official collectable card by philropy. 2021-10-22. Women's Aid. en-GB.
  18. Web site: BBC Two - Murder . 2022-08-16 . BBC . en-GB.
  19. Web site: McIntosh . Steven . TV drama revisits Salisbury poison attack 'horror' . BBC News . 14 June 2020 . 14 June 2020.
  20. Web site: Doncaster film set: This Is England producer starts work shooting his latest film in locations across city. Doncaster Freepress. David. Kessen. 16 May 2024. 16 May 2024.
  21. Web site: Theatre review: Saint Joan / Olivier Theatre, London. Billington. Michael. 2007-07-12. the Guardian. en. 2018-03-30.
  22. News: Strange Interlude – review . London . The Guardian . Michael . Billington . 5 June 2013.
  23. Web site: Oil. 24 August 2018.
  24. Web site: Common - National Theatre. www.nationaltheatre.org.uk. 23 January 2017. 24 August 2018.
  25. Web site: Heisenberg: The Uncertainty Principle - About the Show - Delfont Mackintosh Theatres . 24 June 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171011041318/https://www.delfontmackintosh.co.uk/tickets/heisenberg/ . 11 October 2017 . dead .
  26. News: Macbeth at the National Theatre with Rory Kinnear and Anne-Marie Duff – in pictures. Tristram. Kenton. The Guardian. 5 March 2018. 24 August 2018. www.theguardian.com.
  27. Web site: The House of Shades . 2022-08-16 . Almeida Theatre . en.
  28. News: Duff and Serkis scoop Standard film awards. Masters. Tim. BBC News. 9 February 2010 . 8 February 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20100211145247/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/8504400.stm. 11 February 2010 . live.