Pauline Collins | |
---|---|
Born | Exmouth, Devon, England | 3 September 1940
Alma mater | Royal Central School of Speech and Drama |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1963–present |
Spouse | |
Children | 4 |
Pauline Collins OBE (born 3 September 1940)[1] is a British actress who first came to prominence portraying Sarah Moffat in Upstairs, Downstairs (1971–1973) and its spin-off Thomas & Sarah (1979). In 1992, she published her autobiography Letter to Louise.[2]
Collins played the title role in the play Shirley Valentine for which she won the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress, and the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play. She reprised the role in the 1989 film adaptation of the play, winning the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role and receiving a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. She also starred in the television dramas Forever Green (1989–1992) and The Ambassador (1998–1999). Her other film appearances include City of Joy (1992), Paradise Road (1997), Albert Nobbs (2011), Quartet (2012), and The Time of Their Lives (2017).
Early life and career
Collins was born in Exmouth, Devon, the daughter of Mary Honora (née Callanan), a schoolteacher, and William Henry Collins, a school headmaster.[1] She is of Irish extraction, and was brought up as a Catholic in Wallasey, Cheshire.[3] Her great-uncle was Irish poet Jeremiah Joseph Callanan.[4]
Collins was educated at Sacred Heart High School and studied at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London.[5] Before turning to acting, she worked as a teacher until 1962. She made her stage debut at Windsor in A Gazelle in Park Lane in 1962 and her West End debut in Passion Flower Hotel in 1965. During the play's run, she made her first film, titled Secrets of a Windmill Girl, released in 1966. More stage roles followed.
Collins played Samantha Briggs in the 1967 Doctor Who serial The Faceless Ones and was offered the chance to continue in the series as a new companion for the Doctor, but declined the role.
Other early TV credits include the UK's first medical soap Emergency Ward 10 (1960), and the pilot episode and first series of The Liver Birds, both in 1969.
Collins first became well-known for her role as the maid Sarah in the 1970s drama series Upstairs, Downstairs. The character appeared regularly throughout the first two series, the second of which starred her actor husband John Alderton, with whom she later starred in the spin-off Thomas & Sarah (1979); the sitcom No, Honestly, written by Terence Brady and Charlotte Bingham; and a series of short-story adaptations titled Wodehouse Playhouse (1975–1978). She co-narrated the animated British children's TV series Little Miss with Alderton in 1983.
In connection with her role on Upstairs, Downstairs, Collins recorded the 1973 single "What Are We Going to Do with Uncle Arthur?" (performed by her character several times during the series) backed with "With Every Passing Day" (a vocal version of the show's theme).[6]
She was a subject of the television programme This Is Your Life in April 1972, when she was surprised by Eamonn Andrews.
Shirley Valentine and recent years
In 1988, Collins starred in the one-woman play Shirley Valentine in London, reprising the role on Broadway in 1989 and in the 1989 film version. The film won a number of awards and nominations; Collins was nominated for the Oscar as Best Actress and won the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Comedy or Musical. Both the play and the feature film used the technique known as breaking the fourth wall as the character Shirley Valentine directly addresses the audience throughout the story.
After Shirley Valentine, Collins starred with her husband in the popular ITV drama series Forever Green, created and written by Terence Brady and Charlotte Bingham in which the fictitious couple escape the city with their children to start a new life in the country. It ran from 1989 to 1992 over 18 episodes. Collins was voted sexiest woman in Britain in 1990.
Collins' film credits include 1992's City of Joy, 1995's My Mother's Courage, 1997's Paradise Road, and 2002's Mrs Caldicot's Cabbage War, which also featured Alderton. In 1999 and 2000, Collins starred as Harriet Smith in the BBC television drama Ambassador. Other television credits include The Saint, The Wednesday Play, Armchair Theatre, Play for Today, Tales of the Unexpected, Country Matters, and The Black Tower.
In 2002, she guest-starred in Man and Boy, the dramatisation of Tony Parsons' best-seller. In 2005, she appeared as Miss Flite in the BBC production of Charles Dickens' Bleak House.
In 2006, she became the third actor to have been in both the original and new series of Doctor Who, appearing in the episode "Tooth and Claw" as Queen Victoria.
Later in 2006, she appeared in Extinct, a programme where eight celebrities campaigned on behalf of an animal to save it from extinction. Collins campaigned to save the Bengal tiger and won the public vote.
In December 2007, she appeared as the fairy godmother in the pantomime Cinderella at the Old Vic in London.
In 2011, she was cast as part of the comedy-drama Mount Pleasant. She played the role of Sue, Lisa's mother, in the first two series running into 2012. She did not return to the third series in 2013, and her character was killed off in the fourth series in 2014.
In late 2015, she appeared as Mrs Gamp in the BBC TV series Dickensian.
Collins was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the 2001 Birthday Honours for services to drama.[7][8][9]
Personal life
Collins married actor John Alderton in 1969 and lives in Hampstead, London with her husband and their three children Nicholas, Kate, and Richard.[1] She also has an older daughter, Louise, with actor Tony Rohr. Collins gave Louise up for adoption in 1964 when she was a penniless single mother.[10] They were reunited when Louise was 22 years old.[10] Collins's book, Letter To Louise, documents these events.[11]
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1963 | Emergency – Ward 10 | Nurse Elliott | Phil Brown | TV series (1 episode) |
1966 | Secrets of a Windmill Girl | Pat Lord | Arnold L. Miller | |
The Marriage Lines | Jean | Robin Nash | TV series (1 episode : "Big Business") | |
Pardon the Expression | Miss Wainwright / Val | Michael Cox | TV series (3 episodes) | |
The Corridor People | Syrie's maid | David Boisseau | TV series (1 episode : "Victim as Black") | |
Theatre 625 | Clara | James Ferman | TV series (1 episode : "Amerika") | |
The Saint | Marie-Therese | Gordon Flemyng | TV series (1 episode : "The Better Mousetrap") | |
Blackmail | Freida Straker | TV series (1 episode : "Please Do Not Disturb") | ||
The Three Musketeers | Kitty | Peter Hammond | TV (1 episode : "Branded") | |
The Making of Jericho | TV film | |||
1967 | Doctor Who | Samantha Briggs | Gerry Mill | The Faceless Ones (5 episodes) |
Softly, Softly | Marilyn | Bill Hays | TV series (1 episode : "Somebody Important") | |
1968 | B and B | Chantal | TV series (1 episode : "Pilot: B and B") | |
Armchair Theatre | Betty / Mary Murtagh | Guy Verney Marc Miller |
TV series (2 episodes) | |
1969 | The Old Campaigner | Winnie Haldane | TV series (1 episode : "French Farce") | |
Comedy Playhouse | Dawn / Marjorie | TV series (2 episodes) | ||
The Liver Birds | Dawn | TV series (5 episodes) | ||
The Wednesday Play | Angelina / Joan Percival | Marc Miller (X2) John Mackenzie |
TV series (2 episodes) | |
Parkin's Patch | Doreen Ashworth | Raymond Menmuir | TV series (1 episode : "A Pair of Good Shoes") | |
1970 | The Mating Machine | Elizabeth | Howard Ross | TV series (1 episode : "Who Sleeps on the Right?") |
1972 | Thirty-Minute Theatre | The Girl | Gilchrist Calder | TV series (1 episode : "King's Cross Lunch Hour") |
Country Matters | Ruby | TV miniseries (1 episode : "Crippled Bloom") | ||
1971–1973 | Upstairs, Downstairs | Sarah Moffat | Various directors | TV series (13 episodes) nominated – British Academy Television Award for Best Actress |
1973 | Armchair 30 | Carol | Piers Haggard | TV series (1 episode : "Carol's Story") |
1974 | No, Honestly | Clara Burrell-Danby | David Askey | TV series (13 episodes) |
1975 | BBC Play of the Month | Lady Teazle | Stuart Burge | TV series (1 episode : "The School for Scandal") |
1975–1976 | Wodehouse Playhouse | various characters | various directors | TV series (13 episodes) |
1979 | Thomas & Sarah | Sarah Moffat | various directors | TV series (13 episodes) |
Play for Today | Eileen | Stephen Frears | TV series (1 episode : "Long Distance Information") | |
1980 | Tales of the Unexpected | Pat Lewis | Graham Evans | TV series (1 episode : "A Girl Can't Always Have Everything") |
1983 | Little Misses and the Mr. Men | Narrator, various female characters | Trevor Bond Terry Ward |
TV series |
1984 | Knockback | Sylvia | Piers Haggard (X2) | TV movie nominated – CableACE Awards for Best Actress in a Theatrical or Dramatic Special |
1985 | Tropical Moon Over Dorking | Myra | Robert Chetwyn | TV movie |
The Black Tower | Maggie Hewson | Ronald Wilson | TV miniseries (5 episodes) | |
1988 | Tales of the Unexpected | Eve Peregrine | Barry Davis | TV series (1 episode : "The Colonel's Lady") |
1989–1992 | Forever Green | Harriet Boult | David Giles Sarah Hellings Christopher King |
TV series (18 episodes) |
1989 | Shirley Valentine | Shirley Valentine-Bradshaw | Lewis Gilbert | BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role Evening Standard British Film Awards – Best Actress Golden Apple Award – Female Discovery of the Year nominated – Academy Award for Best Actress nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy |
1992 | City of Joy | Joan Bethel | Roland Joffé | |
1995 | My Mother's Courage | Elsa Tabori | Michael Verhoeven | |
1996 | Flowers of the Forest | Aileen Matthews | Michael Whyte | TV movie |
1997 | Paradise Road | Daisy 'Margaret' Drummond | Bruce Beresford | |
1998–1999 | The Ambassador | Harriet Smith | various directors | TV series (13 Episodes) |
2000 | Little Grey Rabbit | Jean Flynn | TV series | |
One Life Stand | Karaoke Crowd | May Miles Thomas | ||
2002 | Mrs Caldicot's Cabbage War | Thelma Caldicot | Ian Sharp | |
Man and Boy | Betty Silver | Simon Curtis | TV movie | |
2003 | Sparkling Cyanide | Dr. Catherine Kendall | Tristram Powell | TV movie |
2005 | Bleak House | Miss Flite | Justin Chadwick Susanna White |
TV series (10 episodes) |
2006 | Doctor Who | Queen Victoria | Euros Lyn | TV series (1 episode : "Tooth and Claw") |
What We Did on Our Holiday | Lil Taylor | Jeremy Webb | TV movie | |
2009 | From Time to Time | Mrs. Tweedie | Julian Fellowes | |
2010 | Agatha Christie's Marple | Thyrza Grey | Andy Hay | TV series (1 episode : "The Pale Horse") |
Merlin | Alice | Alice Troughton | TV series (1 episode : "Love in the Time of Dragons") | |
You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger | Cristal | Woody Allen | ||
2011 | Albert Nobbs | Margaret 'Madge' Baker | Rodrigo García | |
2011–2012 | Mount Pleasant | Sue | Dewi Humphreys Ian Barnes Dermot Boyd |
TV series (14 episodes) |
2012 | Quartet | Cissy Robson | Dustin Hoffman | |
2015 | Dough | Joanna | John Goldschmidt | |
The Time of Their Lives | Priscilla | Roger Goldby | ||
2015–2016 | Dickensian | Mrs Gamp | Tony Jordan various Tony Jordan |
TV series (20 episodes) |
2017 | The Time of Their Lives | Priscilla | Roger Goldby | |
2017 | Byrd and the Bees | Beatrice | Finola Hughes |
Awards and nominations
- Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress (winner)
- Tony Award in 1989 for Best Actress in a Play (winner)
- Theatre World Award for Outstanding Broadway Debut (winner)
- Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actress in a Play (winner)
- Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Actress (winner)
- Academy Award for Best Actress (nominee)
- Golden Globe Award for Best Actress, Comedy or Musical (nominee)
- BAFTA for Best Film Actress (winner)
References
- 1 2 3 "Pauline Collins Biography (1940–)". filmreference.com.
- ↑ Collins, Letter to Louise. Retrieved 1 December 2016
- ↑ Pauline, Collins. (28 March 1999). "Pauline Collins – My secret for a good marriage? Give", Interviewed by Sharon Feinstein, Sunday Mirror. Retrieved 13 May 2010. "But I was very worried about taking it on because I'm not Jewish. I'm a Liverpool Irish Catholic and this role was such a responsibility because it involved a huge and emotive part of the history of the Jewish race."
- ↑ Pauline Collins biography Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 21 July 2015
- ↑ "Actress Pauline Collins, age 75, and husband John Alderman, married since 1969, planning something special for their 50th anniversary??". 14 January 2016.
- ↑ "Upstairs, Downstairs - Lyrics". Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 27 July 2011.
- ↑ "Pauline Collins receives OBE". BBC News. 30 October 2001. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
- ↑ "Pauline Collins in pictures: A look at the life of The Time of Their Lives actress". Express.co.uk. 10 March 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2021.
- ↑ "No. 56237". The London Gazette (Supplement). 16 June 2001. p. 10.
- 1 2 "A SPECIAL LOVE LETTER". Chicago Tribune. 13 December 1992.
- ↑ Letter to Louise