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Encyclopedia > Suzanna Hamilton

Suzanna Hamilton is a British actress born in 1960 in London. She is most famous for her role as Julia in the modern film adaptation of George Orwell's classic novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four. Actors in period costume sharing a joke whilst waiting between takes during location filming. ... 1960 (MCMLX) was a leap year starting on Friday (the link is to a full 1960 calendar). ... } London is the capital city of the United Kingdom and of England and is the most populous city in the European Union. ... Julia is the name of a fictional character from George Orwells dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. ... DVD cover for 1984 1984 (sometimes Nineteen Eighty-Four) is a British film based upon the George Orwell novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, released in the eponymous year in the United Kingdom, although not until 1985 in the United States. ... Eric Arthur Blair (June 25, 1903 – January 21, 1950), much better known by the pen name George Orwell (pronounced ), was a British author and journalist. ... Nineteen Eighty-Four is a political novel which George Orwell wrote in opposition to totalitarianism. ...

Suzanna Hamilton in Nineteen Eighty-Four
Suzanna Hamilton in Nineteen Eighty-Four

She is often cast as beguiling, enigmatic characters who tend to combine an appearance of childlike tenderness and vulnerability with a hint of provocative sexuality. Her mysterious, dark-haired looks and sensual poise are faintly reminiscent of the early performances of Swedish actress, Harriet Andersson, while her understated -- and very English -- gamine beauty is somewhat comparable to that of a young Rita Tushingham. In the 1985 film Wetherby, Hamilton's elusive character is succinctly described as "the kind of girl people become obsessed with". Image File history File links 1984_0004. ... Image File history File links 1984_0004. ... Harriet Andersson (born 14 February 1932) is a Swedish actress, best known for being one of Ingmar Bergmans regular actresses. ... Rita Tushingham is an English actress. ...

Contents


Early career

Suzanna Hamilton was discovered by filmmaker, Claude Whatham, at age 12 in a children's experimental theater in north London in the early 1970s. She starred in her first feature, based on the popular Arthur Ransome children's book, Swallows and Amazons, in 1974. Billed as Zanna Hamilton, she was cast in the role of Susan Walker, one of four young siblings collectively known as "the Swallows", who go on a boating excursion in the Lake District during the summer of 1929. Whatham also directed her as Princess Alexandra in the BBC miniseries, Disraeli (1978), which was later broadcast to North American audiences as a featured program on Masterpiece Theater in 1980. Arthur Ransome (January 18, 1884 – June 3, 1967), was a British author and journalist, best known for writing the Swallows and Amazons series of childrens books, which tell of school-holiday adventures of children, mostly in the Lake District and the Norfolk Broads areas of England. ... Swallows and Amazons is a series of childrens books by English author Arthur Ransome, named after the title of the first book in the series. ... The panorama across Eskdale from Ill Crag. ... Her Royal Highness Princess Alexandra of Edinburgh and Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (September 1, 1878 - April 16, 1942) was a member of the British Royal Family. ... The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is the largest publicly-funded radio and television broadcasting corporation of the United Kingdom (see British television) and the world. ... Disraeli is a 1929 film that was adapted by Julien Josephson and De Leon Anthony from a play by Louis N. Parker. ... Masterpiece Theatre (also known as ExxonMobil Masterpiece Theater and earlier Mobil Masterpiece Theater) is the title of a long-running television series that premiered on PBS on January 10, 1971 and is produced by WGBH. The show has allowed a large number of award-winning television miniseries and made-for...


Suzanna Hamilton received her acting training at the Anna Scher Theatre School and the Centre School of Speech and Drama in London.


For her first appearance in a big-budget motion picture, she played Izz Huett, the lovesick Dorset dairymaid, in Roman Polanski's 1979 film, Tess -- based on the classic Thomas Hardy novel, Tess of the d'Urbervilles -- which starred Nastassja Kinski in the title role. She also appeared as one of the boarding school girls who organize a strike against the Ministry of Education in The Wildcats of St. Trinian's (1980) -- a queasy, heavy-handed updating of Ronald Searle's satirical St. Trinian's cartoons, which was intended to mirror the actual and widespread wildcat strikes that had plagued Britain's Labour government during the Winter of Discontent only two years earlier. Dorset (pronounced Dorsit, sometimes in the past called Dorsetshire) is a county in the southwest of England, on the English Channel coast. ... Roman Polański at Cannes with Adrien Brody, 2002 Roman Polański (born August 18, 1933) is a Franco-Polish film director and actor. ... Tess is a 1979 romance and drama film based on the novel Tess of the dUrbervilles by Thomas Hardy and directed by Roman Polański. ... Thomas Hardy, OM (2 June 1840 – 11 January 1928) was a novelist, short story writer, and poet of the naturalist movement, who delineated characters struggling against their passions and circumstances. ... Tess of the dUrbervilles is a novel by Thomas Hardy, first published in 1891. ... Nastassja Kinski photographed by Helmut Newton on the cover of Playboy, May 1983. ... A boarding school is a school where some or all students not only study but also live, amongst their peers but away from their home and family. ... Ronald William Fordham Searle (born March 3, 1920) is a British cartoonist. ... St Trinians is a fictional girls school created by Ronald Searle, a British cartoonist. ... Strike action (or simply strike) describes collective action undertaken by groups of workers in the form of a refusal to perform work. ... The Labour Party has since its formation in the early 20th century been the principal left wing political party in the United Kingdom (see British politics). ... The Winter of Discontent is a nickname given to the British winter of 1978–79, during which there were widespread strikes by Trade unions demanding larger pay rises for their members. ...


Her next significant role was in Richard Loncraine's 1982 film, Brimstone and Treacle, based on Dennis Potter's play of the same name. In this film, Hamilton starred as Patricia Bates, the traumatized, catatonic daughter of a devoutly religious, middle-aged Home Counties couple (Denholm Elliott and Joan Plowright) whose lives are changed by a demonic drifter and con man played by Sting. The film caused much consternation in the UK press for its shifting and contradictory overtones of religious parable, suspense potboiler, and domestic satire -- all of which were conveyed through several confusing dream sequences and multiple plot twists that included an explicit and disturbing portrayal of Hamilton's helpless, disabled character being molested and eventually raped by the Sting character. The following year, Hamilton was featured in BBC-TV's paranormal mystery, A Pattern of Roses, with a young Helena Bonham Carter. Brimstone and Treacle is a 1970s play by Dennis Potter about a middle-aged middle-class couple living in a North London suburb who are unfortunate enough to have their beautiful undergraduate daughters life reduced to a severely handicapped existence by a hit-and-run driver. ... Liber Amoris Dennis Christopher George Potter (17 May 1935—7 June 1994) was a controversial British dramatist who is best known for several widely acclaimed television dramas which mixed fantasy and reality, the personal and the social. ... The phrase Home Counties is used to designate the group of English counties which border or surround London. ... Elliott in The Signal-Man Denholm Mitchell Elliott (May 31, 1922 – October 6, 1992) was a distinguished British actor, well known for his appearances on stage, film and television. ... Dame Joan Ann Plowright, The Lady Olivier DBE (born October 28, 1929 in Brigg, North Lincolnshire, England) is a British actress, and the widow of Laurence Olivier. ... Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner, CBE (born 2 October 1951), usually known by his stage name Sting, is an English musician from Newcastle upon Tyne. ... An ill digested lesson The Governess. ... A potboiler is an artistic work (usually written) created for the sole purpose of making money quickly or to maintain a steady income for the artist, thus implying that artistic values were subordinate to saleability. ... Satire is a literary technique of writing or art which exposes the follies of its subject (for example, individuals, organizations, or states) to ridicule, often as an intended means of provoking or preventing change. ... This article is an overview article about the Crown chartered British Broadcasting Corporation formed in 1927. ... Anomalous phenomena are phenomena which are observed and for which there are no suitable explanations in the context of a specific body of scientific knowledge, e. ... Helena Bonham Carter Helena Bonham Carter (born on May 26, 1966) is an English actress. ...


Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984)

Suzanna Hamilton's next major screen appearance stands as her most well-known and accomplished motion picture performance. In Nineteen Eighty-Four, she was cast as Julia opposite John Hurt's Winston Smith in writer/director Michael Radford's film of George Orwell's classic dystopian novel. Her uncommonly bold, affecting and physically revealing appearance garnered critical praise, particularly from Vincent Canby in The New York Times. But her work was largely overshadowed by the death of legendary fellow cast member, Richard Burton, who delivered his final screen performance in the role of O'Brien, as well as the post-release controversy regarding the film's soundtrack. DVD cover for 1984 1984 (sometimes Nineteen Eighty-Four) is a British film based upon the George Orwell novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, released in the eponymous year in the United Kingdom, although not until 1985 in the United States. ... Julia is the name of a fictional character from George Orwells dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. ... John Hurt (Mississippi John Hurt is an early American folk and country blues singer, 1893–1966) John Vincent Hurt CBE (born January 22, 1940) is an Academy Award nominated English actor. ... Peter Cushing as Winston Smith in the 1954 BBC Television adaptation of Nineteen Eighty-Four, with Donald Pleasence as Syme. ... Michael Radford was born February 24, 1946 in New Delhi, India to a British father and Austrian mother. ... A dystopia (or alternatively cacotopia) is a fictional society, usually portrayed as existing in a future time, when the conditions of life are extremely bad due to deprivation, oppression, or terror. ... Vincent Canby (July 27, 1924 – September 15, 2000) was an American film critic. ... The New York Times is a newspaper published in New York City by Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr. ... Richard Burton in the movie Cleopatra (1963) Richard Burton CBE (November 10, 1925 – August 5, 1984) was a Welsh actor. ... André Morell as OBrien in the 1954 BBC Television adaptation of Nineteen Eighty-Four. ...


Her unabashed and casual manner while playing scenes completely nude for nearly two thirds of her screen time in Nineteen Eighty-Four earned the 23-year-old actress some notoriety as well as a bit of a minor cult following over the years as the film's reputation has grown. The frank and graphic display of her ungroomed pubic hair in many scenes also created a stir when the film was shown at the first annual Tokyo International Film Festival, as the image of the female pubis is considered taboo (hentai) in Japan and is usually censored for mainstream Japanese audiences. Pubic hair is hair in the frontal genital area, the crotch, and sometimes at the top of the inside of the legs; these areas form the pubic region. ... TIFF was established in 1985, and celebrates its 18th anniversary this year. ... Hentai magazines on display in Japan Hentai (変態) is a Japanese word that means transformation or aberration and is used in biology to refer to metamorphosis. ...


Film appearances in the late 1980s

Nineteen eighty-five proved to be a very active year for Suzanna Hamilton. She starred in British playwright David Hare's film, Wetherby, opposite Vanessa Redgrave. In this film, Hamilton's character, Karen Creasy, is the sullen former friend of a young man who committed suicide. Karen is meant to be a personification of the emotional void at the heart of contemporary British life with all its repressions, denials, and disaffection -- "a central disfiguring blankness" as one character calls it. David Hare (born June 5, 1947) is an English dramatist and director. ... Vanessa Redgrave during the 2004 season of Nip/Tuck. ...


Her next role was as the man-shy equestrienne, Felicity, in Sydney Pollack's Academy Award-winning Out of Africa, based on the memoirs of the famed Danish writer, Isak Dinesen. In one charming exchange, she steals a scene from the film's star, Meryl Streep. Sydney Pollack (born July 1, 1934 in Lafayette, Indiana) is an American actor, producer, and director. ... Academy Award The Academy Awards, popularly known as the Oscars, are the most prominent film awards in the United States and most watched awards ceremony in the world. ... For the African-origin theory of human evolution sometimes referred to as the Out of Africa theory, see single-origin hypothesis. ... Blixen in Kenya, 1918 Isak Dinesen (April 17, 1885-September 7, 1962) was a pen name for the Danish author Karen Blixen. ... Streep in Silkwood (1983) Meryl Streep (born Mary Louise Streep on June 22, 1949) is a two-time Academy Award-winning American actress who has received numerous accolades for her work in movies and television and who, from the 1980s to the present day, has been regarded as one of...


In the 1987 German film, Devil's Paradise, which was shot in Thailand and based on a Joseph Conrad story, Hamilton was cast opposite Jürgen Prochnow as a saxophonist in an all-woman band touring colonial dives in southeast Asia. In 1988, she starred opposite the British cult actor, Jon Finch, in another low-budget German film, a short called The Voice, about six individuals who are held captive overnight in a boat-cum-discotheque. Joseph Conrad. ... Jürgen Prochnow Jürgen Prochnow (June 10, 1941 in Berlin) is a German actor. ... Jon Finch (born March 2, 1941 in Caterham, Surrey) is an English actor noted for many Shakespearean roles. ... Discothèque redirects here. ...


At this point, Suzanna Hamilton's major film career was effectively over. In the October 1988 issue of Elle magazine, in a piece devoted to the fashion secrets of the current crop of British beauties, it was stated that she felt all of her ambitions had been realized at the age of 28. By the end of the decade, the majority of her screen roles were in obscure European films made in exotic locations as well as numerous British television dramas.


Television appearances and the 1990s

In 1986, Suzanna Hamilton starred in the well-received television drama, Johnny Bull, a movie developed at the National Playwrights Conference of the Eugene O'Neill Theatre Center and filmed in Tennessee. In this film, a period piece set in the mid-1940s just after VE day, she was cast as Iris Kovacs, a lighthearted Cockney bride who travels to rural Pennsylvania to live with her new American G.I. husband (Peter MacNicol) and his working-class Hungarian-immigrant coal-mining family. There she discovers that the hardscrabble life in America is not at all like the Doris Day movies she had seen, and encounters hostility from her gruff, overbearing father-in-law (Jason Robards). The production also featured distinguished supporting performances from Colleen Dewhurst as well as Kathy Bates in an early role. The Eugene ONeill Theater is a Broadway theatre. ... Official language(s) English Capital Nashville Largest city Memphis Area  - Total  - Width  - Length  - % water  - Latitude  - Longitude Ranked 36th 109,247 km² 195 km 710 km 2. ... Victory in Europe Day (V-E Day) was May 8, 1945, the date when the Allies during the Second World War formally celebrated the defeat of Nazi Germany and the end of Adolf Hitlers Reich. ... A Cockney, in the loosest sense of the word, is a working-class inhabitant of the East End of London. ... Official language(s) None Capital Harrisburg Largest city Philadelphia Area  Ranked 33rd  - Total 46,055 sq. ... Government Issue (often just GI) were an American straight edge hardcore punk band originating from the Washington DC scene, formed in 1980 and signed to Dischord Records. ... Peter MacNicol as Professor Lawrence Fleinhardt in the TV series NUMB3RS Peter MacNicol (born April 10, 1954 in Dallas, Texas) is probably best known among younger TV viewers for his role as the eccentric attorney John Cage on the show Ally McBeal, but is remembered by previous generations for his... Doris Day Doris Day (born April 3, 1924), is an American singer, actress, and animal welfare advocate. ... Robards in Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) Jason Nelson Robards Jr. ... Colleen Dewhurst (born June 3, 1924; died August 22, 1991) was a Canadian-born actress best known for playing Marilla Cuthbert in the various Anne of Green Gables productions from Sullivan Entertainment. ... Kathy Bates (right) with Frances Conroy in Six Feet Under. ...


That same year, Hamilton appeared as Emily Barkstone in Hold the Dream, the second of the three BBC miniseries based on Barbara Taylor Bradford's popular "Emma Harte" novels about the fortunes of a retail empire and the machinations of the business élite across three generations. In 1987, she played the winsome Anglo-French Special Operations Executive spy, Matty Firman, in Wish Me Luck -- yet another BBC miniseries, this one set in occupied France during World War II. Barbara Taylor Bradford (born May 5, 1933) is an English novelist. ... The Special Operations Executive (SOE), sometimes referred to as the Baker Street Irregulars after Sherlock Holmess fictional group of spies, was a World War II organization initiated by Winston Churchill and Hugh Dalton in July 1940 as a mechanism for conducting warfare by means other than direct military engagement. ... Wish Me Luck is a British television drama made by London Weekend Television for the ITV network between 1987 and 1990. ... Combatants Allies: Poland, British Commonwealth, France/Free France, Soviet Union, United States, China, and others Axis Powers: Germany, Italy, Japan, and others Casualties Military dead: 17 million Civilian dead: 33 million Total dead: 50 million Military dead: 8 million Civilian dead: 4 million Total dead: 12 million World War II...


She made a striking appearance as the inscrutable femme fatale, Anna Raven, in the 1989 BBC miniseries of Never Come Back, a murky, noirish conspiracy thriller based on the celebrated 1941 novel by John Mair, which takes place on the eve of the London Blitz during the so-called "Phony War" of 1939-40. Hamilton also turned in an admirable performance in the excellent 1990 British television film, Small Zones, as a strong-willed Russian poetess whose subversive writings have led to her indefinite imprisonment in a bleak Soviet holding cell. She appeared as Amelia, one of the five daughters placed under house arrest by their domineering mother, in the 1991 BBC adaptation of Spanish poet Federico García Lorca's play, The House of Bernarda Alba; Glenda Jackson starred in the title role. She also had a supporting role in a 1992 TV film of Barbara Cartland's Regency-period bodice-ripper, Duel of Hearts. To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... This still from The Big Combo (1955) demonstrates the visual style of film noir at its most extreme. ... The Blitz, a popular English contraction of the German word Blitzkrieg, was the sustained and intensive bombing of Britain, particularly London, from September 7, 1940 through to May 1941 by the German Luftwaffe in World War II. Although the Blitz is named after Blitzkrieg, it was not an example of... British Ministry of Home Security Poster The Phony War, or in Winston Churchills words the Twilight War, was a phase in early World War II marked by few military operations in Continental Europe, in the months following the German invasion of Poland. ... Federico García Lorca Federico García Lorca (June 5, 1898 – August 19, 1936) was a Spanish poet and dramatist, also remembered as a painter, pianist, and composer. ... La casa de Bernarda Alba (The House of Bernarda Alba) is a play by the Spanish playwright Federico García Lorca. ... Glenda May Jackson, CBE, (born May 9, 1936) is a two-time Academy Award-winning British actress and politician, currently Labour Member of Parliament for the constituency of Hampstead and Highgate in the London Borough of Camden. ... Autographed portrait photograph of Dame Barbara Cartland, 1992 Dame Barbara Cartland DBE (July 9, 1901 – May 21, 2000) was one of the most successful writers of romance novels of all time, specializing in historical love themes. ... The English Regency, or simply the Regency, is a name given to the period from 1811 to 1820 in the history of England. ...


Her next commercial film role came with 1992's low-budget Gothic horror romance, Tale of a Vampire. Written and directed by a 27-year-old Japanese-British film student, Shimako Sato, Hamilton made a dual appearance: first as Anne, a mousy librarian in present-day London grieving the untimely death of her boyfriend; then as Anne's 19th-century Doppelgänger, Virginia Clemm, the real-life wife of Edgar Allan Poe -- who coincidentally also happens to be (at least according to the film's fanciful literary premise) the long-lost mistress of a lonely, melancholic, centuries-old vampire played by Julian Sands. The gothic novel is an English literary genre, which can be said to have been born with The Castle of Otranto (1764) by Horace Walpole. ... A is the ghostly double of a living person. ... Edgar Allan Poe (January 19, 1809 – October 7, 1849) was an American poet, short story writer, editor, critic and one of the leaders of the American Romantic Movement. ... Julian Sands (born January 4, 1958) is an English actor. ...


In the early 1990s, she had a recurring role as Dr. Karen Goodliffe on the British TV hospital drama series, Casualty. When the actress became pregnant in early 1993, her character had to be written out of the show. Her last feature film of note was 1997's The Island on Bird Street, a Danish period drama made in the Dogme 95 style, about an 11-year-old Jewish boy who hides from the Nazis in occupied Poland during World War II before he is reunited with his father. In this film, Hamilton had a brief cameo as the mother of a girl whom the boy befriends. Most recently, she appeared as Vivienne in the 2005 short film, Benjamin's Struggle, described as "a compelling story set in 1930's Nazi Germany, about a nine year-old Jewish boy who attempts to steal the original manuscript of Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf, believing that it will topple the Third Reich and end the suffering of his family". Casualty is a long-running BBC television drama serial, first broadcast in 1986 and transmitted on BBC One. ... Dogme 95 (in English: Dogma 95) is an avant-garde filmmaking movement started in 1995 by the Danish directors Lars von Trier, Thomas Vinterberg, Kristian Levring, and Søren Kragh-Jacobsen. ... National Socialism redirects here. ... (April 20, 1889 – April 30, 1945) was Chancellor of Germany from 1933 and Führer (Leader) of Germany from 1934 until his death. ... Cover of Mein Kampf Mein Kampf (English: My Struggle or My Fight) is the fundamental political work of Adolf Hitler, combining elements of autobiography with an exposition of Hitlers political ideology of Nazism. ... Nazi Germany, or the Third Reich, commonly refers to Germany in the years 1933–1945, when it was under the firm control of the totalitarian and fascist ideology of the Nazi Party, with the Führer Adolf Hitler as dictator. ...


Theater Career

Suzanna Hamilton is also an accomplished theater and radio actress. She made her first West End appearance on the London stage in 1982 as part of the original cast production of Tom Stoppard's play, The Real Thing. In 1993, she played the lead as a Welsh maid who gets in over her head in the Bush Theater production of Lucinda Coxon's Waiting at the Water's Edge; in 2002, she was cast as Creusa in a Gate Theater production of Euripides' Ion; and in early 2005, she appeared as Dora, a tough, bereaved, guilt-ridden lesbian incarcerated in a 1920s asylum in the Salisbury Playhouse production of Charlotte Jones' chamber drama, Airswimming. She also lent her voice to a 1991 audiobook recording of Julian Barnes' novel about a love triangle called Talking It Over, playing the role of Gillian. // West End theatre is a popular term for mainstream professional theatre in London, or sometimes more specifically for shows staged in the large theatres of Londons Theatreland . Along with New Yorks Broadway Theatre, West End theatre is usually considered to represent the highest level of theatre in the... Sir Tom Stoppard OM, CBE is a British playwright born in Czechoslovakia on 3 July 1937. ... The Real Thing is a play by Tom Stoppard, first performed in 1982. ... In Greek mythology, four people had the name Creusa. ... A statue of Euripides Euripides (Greek: Ευριπίδης) (c. ... Ion is an ancient Greek play by Euripides, thought to be wrtten between 414 and 412 BC. It follows the orphan Ion in the discovery of his origins. ... An audio book is a recording of the contents of a book read aloud. ... Barnes as Francophile and Francophone in Bernard Pivots Double je (France 2, March 2005) Julian Patrick Barnes (born January 19, 1946 in Leicester) is a contemporary British writer whose novels and short stories have been seen as examples of postmodernism in literature. ...


Current Activities

Suzanna Hamilton has since retired from acting in major motion pictures to raise her son, Lowell, who was born 5 October 1993. However, she still makes the occasional television appearance and continues to do theater and voice work.


Trivia

She practices the Alexander Technique for relaxation and posture. The Alexander Technique teaches how to recognize and overcome habituated limitations within a persons manner of movement and thinking. ...


Personal Quotes

About playing a doctor on Casualty:


"I would like to have trained as a doctor, it's a completely different way of life from mine. I found I wasn't squeamish and I watched operations. It was fascinating."


About events on the set of the BBC hospital series, Casualty:


"There's a strange moment that everyone experiences, it comes when you sit in the canteen and see an atrocious head wound opposite you eating curry and chips."


On wearing no make-up for her role in Casualty:


"I thought at first that would be a relief, but starting work at 8:30am, some days looking like death, I could do with make-up -- the works."


Film and Television Credits

  • Benjamin's Struggle (2005) - Vivienne
  • "Jane Hall's Big Bad Bus Ride" (2005) TV Series - Helen Gillsepie
  • "New Tricks": Episode #1.3 (2004) TV Episode - Imogen Hoult
  • "The Bill": 'Follow Through' (1999) TV Episode - Jo Merton
  • "Jonathan Creek": 'Black Canary' (1998) TV Episode - Hannah
  • The Island on Bird Street (1997) - Stasya's Mother
  • A Virtual Stranger (1996) (TV) - Jenny Bell
  • "McCallum" (1995) TV Series - Joanna Sparks
  • A Relative Stranger (1995) (TV) - Jenny Bell
  • "Casualty" (1986) TV Series - Karen Goodliffe (1993-1994)
  • "Inspector Morse": 'Absolute Conviction' (1992) TV Episode - Emma Cryer
  • Duel of Hearts (1992) (TV) - Harriet Wantage
  • Tale of a Vampire (1992) - Anne/Virginia
  • A Masculine Ending (1992) (TV) - Veronica Puddephat
  • The House of Bernarda Alba (1991) (TV) - Amelia
  • "Boon": 'Cab Rank Cowboys' (1991) TV Episode - Judy Simpson
  • A New Lease of Death (1991) (TV) - Elizabeth Crilling
  • "TECX": 'The Sea Takes It All' (TV Episode) - Ingrid Hauptmann
  • Small Zones (1990) (TV) - Irina Ratushinskaya
  • Murder East - Murder West (1990) (TV) - Regine Kleinschmidt
  • Never Come Back (1989) (TV) - Anna Raven
  • "Saracen": 'Starcross' (1989) TV Episode
  • "Streetwise" (1989) TV Series
  • The Voice (Die Stimme) (1988) - Julia
  • Wish Me Luck (1987) TV - Matty Firman
  • Devil's Paradise (Des Teufels Paradies) (1987) - Julie
  • Hold the Dream (1986) (TV) - Emily Barkstone
  • Johnny Bull (1986) (TV) - Iris
  • Out of Africa (1985) - Felicity
  • Wetherby (1985) - Karen Creasy
  • Nineteen Eighty-four (1984) - Julia
  • Goodie-Two-Shoes (1984) - Veronica
  • A Pattern of Roses (1983) (TV) - Rebecca
  • Brimstone & Treacle (1982) - Patricia Bates
  • The Wildcats of St. Trinian's (1980) - Matilda
  • Tess (1979) - Izz
  • One Fine Day (1979) (TV) - Linda
  • Disraeli (1978) (TV) - Princess Alexandra
  • Swallows and Amazons (1974) (as Zanna Hamilton) - Susan Walker, Swallow

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