Nancy Carroll | |
Birth Date: | 29 September 1973 |
Occupation: | Actress |
Alma Mater: | London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art |
Height: | 5 ft 5 in |
Years Active: | 1999–present |
Children: | 2 |
Nancy Carroll (born 29 September 1973) is a British actress. She has worked extensively in theatre productions, particularly with the Royal Shakespeare Company and has won Best Actress at the Olivier Awards and the Evening Standard Awards. She also has numerous film and television credits, including a long-running feature role as Lady Felicia in the BBC series Father Brown.
Nancy Carroll grew up in Herne Hill in south London and attended Alleyn's School where she was an enthusiastic participant in student theatre.[1] Before training in theatre, she worked at a hat shop in Lavender Hill.[2] She trained at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art,[1] from which she graduated in June 1998.
Right after graduation, she landed a small part in the film An Ideal Husband and then joined the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC).[1] Her first professional stage role was as Ophelia in Hamlet at the Bristol Old Vic in 1999.[3] She has appeared onstage in productions of George Etherege's The Man of Mode (2007), Harley Granville-Barker's The Voysey Inheritance (2006), as Emma Jung in The Talking Cure, and Pierre de Marivaux's The False Servant (2004) at the Royal National Theatre. She has also appeared at the Almeida Theatre in Jonathan Kent's King Lear (also at The Old Vic) and in another Granville-Barker play, Waste (2008).
Her "Lady Croom" in the 2009 London revival of Stoppard's Arcadia received favourable reviews,[4] as did her successful run as the psychologist Dr. Ford in David Mamet's House of Games at the Almeida Theatre.[5]
She has appeared onstage with her husband Jo Stone-Fewings several times, in See How They Run (2006) and in the Noël Coward double bill at the Liverpool Playhouse in March 2004 (The Astonished Heart and Still Life). In 2009, she appeared as Viola opposite her husband's Orsino in an RSC production of Twelfth Night directed by Gregory Doran.
Carroll appeared alongside Benedict Cumberbatch and Adrian Scarborough in Thea Sharrock's revival of Terence Rattigan's play, After the Dance, at the Royal National Theatre in 2010. Her "heartbreaking performance"[6] won her the Best Actress award in the Evening Standard drama awards and Olivier awards for 2010.[7]
Carroll appeared alongside John Lithgow, Joshua McGuire and Nicholas Burns in Arthur Wing Pinero's Victorian farce The Magistrate at the Royal National Theatre in 2012. In 2013 she played the lead role of Felicity Houston in The Duck House by Dan Patterson and Colin Swash,[8] starring alongside Ben Miller and Diana Vickers.[9] The show was a political satire based on the UK parliamentary expenses scandal and toured for 5 weeks before transferring to London's Vaudeville Theatre.[8]
On television, she played the part of aristocratic Nazi sympathiser Frances Doble in the BBC2 miniseries Cambridge Spies (2003).[10] Other credits include guest appearances on The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, Silent Witness, Lewis, and episodes of Midsomer Murders. From 2013, she was a regular cast member on the BBC detective series Father Brown, playing wealthy socialite Lady Felicia Montague.[11] In 2017 she was in 4 episodes of Prime Suspect 1973 playing Mary Collins.
In March 2022, Carroll debuted in the lead role of Marine Bonnet in Murder in Provence, a BritBox cosy crime drama based on the Verlaque and Bonnet detective novels by M. L. Longworth, alongside Endeavour actor Roger Allam as her romantic partner, Antoine Verlaque.[12] [13]
She is married to actor Jo Stone-Fewings; the couple have two children.[3] They met as part of an RSC company that went on tour for a week and a half, providing material for Michael Wood's documentary series In Search of Shakespeare (broadcast 2003), and became engaged nine days after first meeting.[3]
Appearances include: