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Victoria Hamilton

English actress (born 1971) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Victoria Hamilton (born Victoria Sharp; 5 April 1971) is an English actress known for her roles in theatre and period dramas. Training at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, Hamilton began appearing in productions with the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre. She starred alongside Clive Owen, and later Eddie Izzard, in the London stage play A Day in the Death of Joe Egg (2002), making her Broadway debut a year later, and earned a Tony Award nomination for Best Actress in a Play.

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Hamilton has found success working in the costume drama genre. In the 1990s, she had supporting roles in three Jane Austen adaptations including Pride and Prejudice (1995), Persuasion (1995) and Mansfield Park (1999). She also played Queen Victoria in the miniseries Victoria & Albert (2001), and had roles in the series Lark Rise to Candleford (2008–2011), Doctor Foster (2015–2017), The Crown (2016–2017) and Cobra (2020–2023).

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Early life and education

Hamilton was born in Wimbledon, London into a non-theatrical family.[1][2] She attended St Hilary's School, an independent school in Surrey, from 1974 to 1982, then Prior's Field School, Godalming, until 1987.[3]

She initially intended to read English at Bristol University, before opting to train at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art from which she graduated.[4][5][2]

Career

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She began her acting career in classical theatre, spending the first five years appearing in productions by companies such as the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre.[6] She stayed with the Royal Shakespeare Company for eighteen months.[7] She commented in 2001 that it was "very unfashionable" to begin a career in classical theatre, but she had sought to emulate the careers of actors like Judi Dench and Ian Holm who "started in rep and slowly built themselves into the position where they could juggle theatre and film".[2]

Stage

In 1995, Hamilton appeared in Ibsen's The Master Builder directed by Peter Hall, starring Alan Bates and Gemma Jones and performed at the Haymarket Theatre in the West End of London. The Independent described Hamilton as a "formidable talent" despite being a newcomer, and noted that she had previously appeared in two performances held at the Orange Tree Theatre in London, one of them being an adaptation of a play by James Saunders.[8] The Master Builder earned Hamilton the London Critics Circle Theatre Award for Most Promising Newcomer. In 2000 she received the Critics' Circle Theatre Award for her performance in As You Like It, Crucible Theatre.[1]

She made her Broadway debut in the 2003 play A Day in the Death of Joe Egg, co-starring alongside the comedian Eddie Izzard.[9] She had starred with Clive Owen, and later Izzard, in a successful London production of the play the previous year, in which she and Izzard portray the parents of a girl with severe brain damage who attempt to save their marriage through jokes and black comedy.[6][10][2] For her performance in the Broadway adaptation, Hamilton received a nomination for Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play.[11]

The following year she appeared in Suddenly, Last Summer (2004), an adaptation of the Tennessee Williams play, performed at the Lyceum Theatre in Sheffield.[12] For her performance, she was honoured as Best Actress by winning the Critics' Circle Theatre Award and Evening Standard Theatre Award.[13][14] Her success led some of the media to brand her as "the next Judi Dench".[2][15]

Hamilton took a three-year break from the stage before returning as Viola in the Shakespearean comedy Twelfth Night (2008), staged at Wyndham's Theatre in the West End of London.[15][16]

Television and film

Hamilton is known for working in the costume drama genre.[17][18] In 2001, she joked that she had been in corsets for the preceding seven years.[19]

During the 1990s, she had supporting roles in three adaptations of Jane Austen's novels. These include the 1995 serial Pride and Prejudice as Mrs Forster,[20] the 1995 film Persuasion as Henrietta Musgrove,[21] and the 1999 film Mansfield Park as Maria Bertram.[22]

She won the role of Queen Victoria in the 2001 BBC TV production Victoria & Albert, despite facing strong competition and being relatively unknown at the time. She auditioned with the director John Erman in a London hotel suite, and after reading lines from several more scenes at his prompting, was offered the part immediately.[23] Noting that the monarch is typically depicted as stern and stout, Hamilton desired to show a younger version who "loved parties and balls and theatre and opera and new dresses" after a childhood spent in a "forbidding environment".[24]

In 2005, she appeared in the three-part miniseries To the Ends of the Earth alongside Benedict Cumberbatch and Jared Harris. The production, an adaptation of the novels of the same name by William Golding, featured various self-absorbed characters who are forced to remain in close quarters while sailing on a ship to Australia during the Napoleonic Wars.[25] Hamilton described the production as having "some of the most beautiful scripts I've seen", and called her character Miss Granham "one of the strongest people on the boat".[7]

From 2008 to 2011, she appeared in the BBC1 series Lark Rise to Candleford as Ruby Pratt, one of two spinster sisters who run a high fashion shop in a small 19th-century town.[26] The Guardian deemed Ruby's rivalry with her sister Pearl (played by Matilda Ziegler) as a highlight of the series, believing both actresses portrayed their characters with "infectious relish".[27] In 2013, Hamilton played Peggy in the BBC drama series What Remains.[28]

In 2015, she appeared in the BBC1 drama, Doctor Foster, playing Anna Baker, a woman who lived across the road from the central characters, Gemma and Simon Foster. She reprised her role in the second series of the drama in 2017. By the final episode, her character had moved away.[citation needed]

In 2016 and 2017, she appeared in the first two seasons of the Netflix series The Crown as Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother.[29] The series, which was about the life and reign of Queen Elizabeth II, spanned six seasons[30] between November 2016[31] and 16 September 2024.[32]

Since 2020, she has starred in the Sky drama Cobra as Anna Marshall, the Downing Street Chief of Staff.[33]

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Personal life

Hamilton met actor Mark Bazeley while co-starring in a 2005 production of Tennessee Williams' Suddenly Last Summer. They became engaged on a beach in Greece, and married in 2008. They have two sons.[34]

Filmography

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Selected theatre credits

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Awards and nominations

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References

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