Dakota Blue Richards Explained

Birth Date:11 April 1994
Birth Place:Chelsea, London, England
Occupation:Actress
Years Active:2006–present

Dakota Blue Richards (born 11 April 1994) is an English actress. Her film debut at the age of 13 was in The Golden Compass, as the lead character Lyra Belacqua.[1] [2] Other lead roles include the wayward teenager April in Dustbin Baby and Maria in the 2009 film The Secret of Moonacre.[3] In 2011 she played Franky Fitzgerald in the third generation cast of British teen drama Skins. She has also played roles in television, film and on stage.

Early life and education

Richards was born on 11 April 1994 at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in the Fulham Road, London. The family moved to Sussex, where she attended Newlands School. She attended St Paul's Primary School in Brighton,[4] and later Blatchington Mill School in Hove and KBis Theatre School in Brighton.[4]

Career

The Golden Compass

After seeing the stage adaptation of His Dark Materials at the National Theatre, she says she "just wanted to be Lyra".[5] The audition process had ten thousand applicants, and Philip Pullman (author of the books) said, "As soon as I saw Dakota's screen test, I realised that the search was over."[6] Chris Weitz, the director, added that Richards "made what should have been an extremely difficult decision quite easy." The Golden Compass with Richards as Lyra was released worldwide in December 2007 and grossed $372 million.

Richards' performance in The Golden Compass was variously described as "efficient",[7] "a decent job",[8] "nicely played",[9] and "enchanting." One review called the selection of Richards for the role of Lyra "terrific casting".[10] Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian commented "Lyra is nicely played by 13-year-old newcomer Dakota Blue Richards, though with an Artful Dodger-ish 'urchin' accent that comes and goes a bit", while Empire noted that she "struggles with lumpy dialogue". Roger Ebert was more effusive, calling Richards "a delightful find" who was "pretty, plucky, forceful, self-possessed, charismatic and just about plausible as the mistress of an armored bear and the protector of Dust."[11]

Skins

Richards appeared in series 5 and 6 of the E4 teen drama Skins, which premiered on 27 January 2011. She played the character of Franky Fitzgerald with her androgynous looks, wacky dress sense, two gay dads (one played by John Sessions) and a tragic cyber-bullying backstory.[12] Originally she auditioned for the role of Liv, and in an interview explained "only became Franky right at the very end of the audition process".[13] As a member of the third generation of its young cast, Richards said "It's crazy to be part of this Skins phenomenon, it's as much a lifestyle choice as anything because of the attention that comes with it."[14]

ChickLit

In this full-length film, Richards plays a protagonist's sister-in-law, cajoled into acting the role of author of a chick-lit novel written by four patrons of a local pub in Norfolk. The character, Zoe, demands £500 a week for as long as the four true authors need her. The film is an erotic British comedy.

Other roles

Before The Golden Compass was released, Richards had already been cast as the lead in another film, The Secret of Moonacre, her second book-to-film adaptation, in which she would play Maria Merryweather from the book The Little White Horse. Principal photography began in October 2007[15] [16] and the film was eventually released February 2009.

In December 2008, Richards played April Johnson in Dustbin Baby, the BBC dramatisation of the Jacqueline Wilson novel of the same name. She described April as a difficult character to play, "she is a really different person to me. On the one hand, she does go through normal things that I can relate to, such as fighting with your parents or getting presents you don't like; but on the other, she has had such a hard life."[17]

In April 2012, she performed a British indie feature The Fold in Bristol and Cornwall, playing Eloise, the daughter of an Anglican priest. The film is written by Poppy Cogan, winner of the Harpers/William Morris Short Script Award, and directed by John Jencks. It commercially opened in limited release in UK on 24 March 2014. The movie won best screenplay at the Women's Independent Festival in LA, Best Picture at the Independent Film Makers Showcase and was nominated for best drama at the National Film Awards.[18]

Richards played a title role in ITV thriller Lightfields alongside Jill Halfpenny and Kris Marshall. It is a supernatural five-part drama which follows on from the ITV drama Marchlands and tells the story of three families living in the same house with a ghost during different time periods.[19]

In 2013, she appeared in French filmmaker Stéphanie Joalland's sci-fi thriller The Quiet Hour, about a brother and sister trying to survive in a post-apocalyptic England. During the same year she filmed a short film entitled Girl Power.[20]

Richards made her stage debut in English Touring Theatre's 2015 revival of Tom Stoppard's Arcadia.[21]

Between 2016 and 2018 she was cast in the part of WPC Shirley Trewlove in the Endeavour television series. In 2018, she was cast for the part of Margaret Osborne in the ITV drama Beecham House.[22] It began airing in 2019.

Personal life

Richards revealed that as a young actress, she "suffered at the hands of school bullies because of her ginger hair".

In 2008, she attended the "Our Space" camp of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (in the Lake District), which gathered "teenagers from different backgrounds to discuss human rights and discrimination". Since 2010 she has supported Action for Children, a charity in the United Kingdom helping vulnerable young people overcome injustice and deprivation. In 2011, she fronted their advertising campaign to promote a new charity project.[23]

Richards also backs The Young Actors Group, an acting school in Brighton opened in 2014 that gives children and teenagers the training to work professionally in stage and screen.[24]

Richards describes herself as "quite into modern art and abstract stuff" and a fan of photographer Christian Coigny, artists Tracey Emin and Damien Hirst, and films from Studio Ghibli.

Filmography

Film

Film appearances of Dakota Blue Richards
YearTitleRoleNotes
2007The Golden Compass Debut role
2008The Secret of Moonacre Maria Merryweather
2009Five Miles Out Cassey Short film
2014The Fold Eloise Ashton
The Quiet Hour Sarah
Girl PowerCassey Short film
2016ChickLit Zoe Feature film

Television

Television appearances of Dakota Blue Richards
YearTitleRoleNotes
2008Dustbin Baby April Johnson Television film
2011–2012Skins 18 episodes
2013Lightfields Eve 5 episodes
2016–2018Endeavour WPC Shirley Trewlove 13 episodes
2019Beecham House Margaret Osborne 6 episodes
2023Celebrity Mastermind Herself episode #21.11

Stage

YearTitleRoleNotes
2015ArcadiaThomasinaEnglish Touring Theatre
A Streetcar Named DesireStellaCurve, Leicester
2017What The Butler SawGeraldine
2023AnthropologyAngieHampstead Theatre, London[25]

Awards and nominations

YearOrganisationAwardWorkResult
2007Broadcast Film Critics AssociationCritics' Choice Award[26] The Golden Compassrowspan="6"
London Film Critics CircleBreakthrough Award[27]
2008Young Artist AwardBest Performance in a Feature Film – Leading Young Actress[28]
Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror FilmsSaturn Award
2011TV Choice AwardsBest Actress[29] [30] Skins
Royal Television Society (RTS)

Notes and References

  1. News: Lyra cast in Dark Materials film . 29 June 2006. CBBC Newsround.
  2. News: Dark Materials film gets green light . 30 June 2006. The Guardian . London . Charlotte . Higgins.
  3. Web site: Richards Returns in Moonacre . 3 December 2007. SciFi Wire . https://web.archive.org/web/20080203093713/http://www.scifi.com/scifiwire/index.php?category=3&id=45952 . 3 February 2008 . dead.
  4. Acford, Louise . 16 January 2009 . Star bullied for her ginger hair . . London .
  5. News: The calm before the storm . 30 November 2007. The Guardian . London.
  6. News: Lyra found for $150m Dark Materials film . 29 June 2006. The Guardian . London . Lindesay . Irvine.
  7. News: The Golden Compass . 2 December 2007. The Sunday Times . London . Cosmo . Landesman.
  8. The Golden Compass . 5 December 2007. Empire magazine.
  9. News: The Golden Compass. 30 November 2007. The Guardian. London. Peter. Bradshaw.
  10. News: The Golden Compass . 27 November 2007. The Times . London . James . Christopher.
  11. Web site: Roger. Ebert. The Golden Compass. Chicago Sun-Times. 7 December 2007. 10 April 2012. 31 October 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20101031093653/http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=%2F20071206%2FREVIEWS%2F712060302. dead.
  12. News: Thursday's TV: Skins. Chater. David. . 2020-02-01. en. 0140-0460.
  13. News: Dakota Blue Richards plays Franky. Channel 4 Press Info. Jan 2011.
  14. Book: Molloy, Kate . 2012 . Skins A-Z . D is for... . 2 (of chapter) . John Blake Publishing . 9781857826982 .
  15. News: Dakota Blue Richards: The 13-year-old poised to conquer the world . 30 November 2007. The Telegraph . London . Will . Lawrence.
  16. News: Lyra actress Dakota gets new role . 2 October 2007. CBBC Newsround.
  17. News: Bernadette. McNulty. Dustbin Baby. The Telegraph. 19 December 2008. London.
  18. Web site: Poppy Cogan. 2017-02-02. JTM. en-GB.
  19. News: Jill Halfpenny to star in ITV's Lightfields. thestage. 29 August 2012.
  20. News: Interview with Dakota Blue Richards. 9 April 2014. ASFF. 25 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160925111645/http://www.asff.co.uk/interview-with-dakota-blue-richards/. dead.
  21. Web site: Dakota Blue Richards to make stage debut in touring Arcadia revival. 17 December 2014. The Stage News. David. Hutchison.
  22. News: Ling . Thomas . ITV announces star-studded period drama Beecham House . Radio Times . 20 August 2018 . en.
  23. News: Action for Children Launch. Action for Children. 8 February 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140809155111/http://www.actionforchildren.org.uk/news/archive/2011/february/my-action-for-children-launch. 9 August 2014.
  24. News: Dakota Blue Richards Helps New Brighton Acting School To Search for the Next 'Golden' Star. Mike. Cobley. The Brighton Magazine. 8 July 2014.
  25. Web site: Interview: Dakota Blue Richards on anthropology, 'Entirely unlike anything I’ve ever worked on before'. The Understudy. Jim. Keaveney. 8 September 2023. 19 October 2023.
  26. Web site: 13th Annual Critics Choice Awards - Best Young Actress . https://web.archive.org/web/20071214172052/http://www.vh1.com/shows/events/critics_choice_awards/_2008/nominees_detail.jhtml?id=bestyoungactress . dead . 14 December 2007 . 16 May 2008 . .
  27. News: Atonement film up for more awards . 14 December 2007. BBC News. https://web.archive.org/web/20071216180911/http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7144127.stm. 16 December 2007. 5 June 2022.
  28. Web site: 2008 nominees and winners . 16 May 2008 . Young Artist Awards . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131204224322/http://www.youngartistawards.org/noms29.html . 4 December 2013.
  29. Web site: 2011 TVChoice Awards 2011 . 20 May 2011 . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110523072633/http://www.e4.com/blog/skins-news/post/cjmhs7beelsqnbeg9fjle/view.e4 . 23 May 2011.
  30. Web site: RTS Awards - Best Actress . 17 February 2012. Bristol Business .