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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lindsay Duncan









Lindsay Duncan



Lindsay Duncan cent.[1] As of 2011, her only role with a Scottish accent is

AfterLife (2004).[4]

Duncan’s father died in a car accident when she was

15. [4] Her mother was affected by Alzheimer’s disease and

died in 1994; she inspired Sharman Macdonald to write

the play The Winter Guest (1995), which was later adapt-

ed as a film by Alan Rickman.[5] Duncan is married to fel-

low Scottish actor Hilton McRae, whom she met in 1985

at the Royal Shakespeare Company.[6] They live in north

London. They have one son, Cal McRae, born September

1991.[7]

Duncan was appointed Commander of the Order of

the British Empire (CBE) for services to drama in the 2009

Birthday Honours.[8]





Duncan after a performance of John Gabriel Borkman at the Career

Brooklyn Academy of Music

Duncan’s first contact with theatre was through school

Born Lindsay Vere Duncan productions.[2] She became friends with the future play-

7 November 1950 (1950-11-07) wright Kevin Elyot, who attended the neighbouring King

Edinburgh, Scotland, UK Edward’s School for boys, and followed him to Bristol,

Occupation Actress where he read Drama at University.[2] She did a number

of odd jobs while staging her own production of Joe Or-

Years active 1975–present

ton’s Funeral Games.[2]

Spouse Hilton McRae Duncan joined London’s Central School of Speech and

Drama at the age of 21.[7] After her training she started

Lindsay Vere Duncan CBE (born 7 November 1950) is a

Duncan, out in summer weekly rep in Southwold to gain her

Scottish stage, television and film actress. On stage she Equity card.[1] She appeared in two small roles in

won two Olivier Awards and a Tony Award for her per- Molière’s Dom Juan at the Hampstead Theatre in 1976,

formance in Les Liaisons dangereuses (1985–1986) and Pri- and she joined the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester

vate Lives (2001–2002), and she starred in several plays by when it opened. In 1978 she returned to London in Plenty

Harold Pinter. Her most famous roles on television in- by David Hare at the National. She appeared on the tele-

clude: Barbara Douglas in Alan Bleasdale’s G.B.H. (1991), vision in small roles in a special episode of Up Pompeii! and

Servilia of the Junii in the HBO/BBC/RAI series Rome in The New Avengers, and a commercial for Head & Shoul-

(2005–2007), and Adelaide Brooke in the Doctor Who spe- ders shampoo.[9] She made her breakthrough on Top Girls

cial ‘The Waters of Mars’ (2009). On film she voiced the by Caryl Churchill, created at the Royal Court in Lon-

android TC-14 in Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace don and later transferred to The Public Theater in New

(1999), and she played Alice’s mother in Tim Burton’s York: her performance as Lady Nijo, a 13th century Ja-

Alice in Wonderland (2010). She was awarded a CBE in 2009 panese concubine, won her an Obie, her first award.[10]

for services to drama. The next year she took her first major role on film in

Richard Eyre’s Loose Connections with Stephen Rea.[2] At

Personal life the same time her television work included a filmed ver-

sion of Frederick Lonsdale’s On Approval (1982), Reilly, Ace

Duncan was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in a working of Spies (1983) and Dead Head (1985).

class family;[1] her father had served in the army for In 1985 she joined the Royal Shakespeare Company

21 years before becoming a civil servant.[2] Her parents for the production of Troilus and Cressida, in which she

moved to Leeds, then Birmingham when she was still played Helen of Troy.[11] The year after she created the

a child. Duncan attended King Edwards VI High School role of the Marquise de Merteuil in Les Liaisons Dan-

for Girls in Birmingham through a scholarship.[3] Despite gereuses, the play by Christopher Hampton after the

her origins, she speaks with a Received Pronunciation ac- French novel by Choderlos de Laclos. The play opened



1

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lindsay Duncan





at The Other Place in Stratford-upon-Avon, then trans- Alan Bleasdale asked for Duncan to feature in his first

ferred to the Ambassadors in the West End, and later to work for television after ten years of absence, The Sinking

Broadway. For her performance she was nominated for of the Laconia, aired on January 2011; she plays an upper-

a Tony and won the Olivier Award for Best Actress and class passenger in the two-part drama based on a true

a Theatre World Award. She was however replaced by story of World War II.[21] She also played the mother of

Glenn Close for Dangerous Liaisons, the film adaptation of Matt Smith in the telefilm Christopher and His Kind written

the play; similarly John Malkovitch was selected for the by Kevin Elyot after Christopher Isherwood’s autobiogra-

role of Valmont instead of Duncan’s co-star Alan Rick- phy of the same title. In October–November 2011, Dun-

man.[12] can read extracts of the King James Bible at the National

In 1988 Duncan won an Evening Standard Award for Theatre, London as part of the 400th anniversary celebra-

her role of Maggie in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof by Tennessee tions of the translation.[22] She played Queen Annis, ruler

Williams. At the same time she became a regular in the of Caerleon and antagonist of Merlin, in the 5th episode

plays of Harold Pinter and the television work of Alan of the fourth series of BBC1’s Merlin.[23]

Bleasdale and Stephen Poliakoff.[13] She performed for a Duncan started 2012 as a guest in the New Year spe-

second season with the RSC in 1994–1995, in A Midsum- cial of Absolutely Fabulous, playing the part of a French

mer Night’s Dream in which she played the double role of actress, ’Jeanne Durand’. Later in 2012, Duncan will fea-

Hippolyta and Titania.[14] She went on tour in the Unit- ture in four BBC2 productions of Shakespeare’s history

ed States with the rest of the cast, but back and neck plays.[24] She is to play the Duchess of York in the first

pains forced her to be replaced by Emily Button from Jan- film, Richard II, with David Suchet as the Duke of York and

uary to March 1997.[15] Impressed by her performance Patrick Stewart as John of Gaunt.[25] She will also return

in David Mamet’s The Cryptogram (1994), Al Pacino asked to the West End in Noel Coward’s Hay Fever with Kevin

Duncan to play the role of his wife in City Hall (1996) by McNally, Jeremy Northam and Olivia Colman.[26]

Harold Becker.[4]

To please her young son, a Star Wars fan, Duncan ap-

plied for the role of Anakin Skywalker’s mother in Star

Theatre

Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace (1999), but was not

cast; she finally accepted to voice an android TC-14.[2] Film

She reunited with Alan Rickman in a revival of Noel

Coward’s Private Lives (2001–2002), and won a Tony

Award for Best Actress and a second Olivier Award for Television

her performance as Amanda Prynne — she was also nom-

inated the same year for her role in Mouth To Mouth by

Kevin Elyot.[16]

References

Duncan played Servilia Caepionis in the 2005 [1] ^ John Walsh (18 January 1997). "The stainless steel

HBO-BBC series Rome and she starred as Rose Harbinson queen". The Independent.

in Starter for 10. Aged by make-up, she played Lord Long- http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/the-

ford’s wife, Elizabeth, in the TV film Longford. In February stainless-steel-queen-1283664.html. Retrieved 20

2009, she played British Prime Minister Margaret Thatch- June 2011.

er in Margaret. In November 2009, Duncan played Ade- [2] ^ Kevin Jackson (23 October 2005). "Lindsay

laide Brooke, companion to the Doctor, in the second of Duncan: When in Rome". The Independent (London).

the 2009 Doctor Who specials.[17][18] Duncan played Alice’s http://arts.independent.co.uk/film/features/

mother in Tim Burton’s 2010 film Alice in Wonderland, article321917.ece. Retrieved 7 May 2010.

alongside Mia Wasikowska, Johnny Depp and Helena [3] Tony Collins (7 May 2009). "Actress Lindsay Duncan

Bonham Carter. She also starred in the original London helps Birmingham school celebrate". Birmingham

run of Polly Stenham’s play That Face at the Royal Court Mail. http://www.birminghammail.net/news/top-

co-starring Matt Smith and directed by Jeremy Herrin. stories/2009/05/07/actress-lindsay-duncan-helps-

She did the narration for the Matt Lucas and David Wal- birmingham-school-celebrate-97319-23560980/.

liams 2010/2011 fly-on-the-wall mockumentary series Retrieved 20 June 2011.

Come Fly with Me on the BBC. In October–November 2010, [4] ^ Anna Burnside (26 June 2005). "The rose who

Duncan starred in a new version by Frank McGuinness of showed her thorns". The Sunday Times.

Ibsen’s John Gabriel Borkman at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/

alongside her Liaisons dangereuses co-stars Alan Rickman scotland/article536862.ece. Retrieved 20 June

and Fiona Shaw.[19] The production transferred in Jan- 2011.

uary–February 2011 to the Brooklyn Academy of Mu- [5] Clare Bayley (January 2005). "Listening to the

sic.[20] teenager within". The Independent.

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-



2

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lindsay Duncan





Year Title Role Notes

1976 Dom Juan, Molière Charlotte/ Hampstead Theatre, London

Violetta

1976 Script, TheThe Script Hampstead Theatre, London

1976 Zack, Harold Brighouse Sally Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester

Teale

1976 Rivals, TheThe Rivals, Lucy Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester

Sheridan

1976 Prince of Homburg, TheThe Natalie Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester. British premiere of the play.

Prince of Homburg, Hein-

rich von Kleist

1977 Deep Blue Sea, TheThe Deep Anne Cambridge Arts Theatre

Blue Sea, Terence Ratti-

gan

1977 Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold, Margaret Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester. After a novel by Evelyn

TheThe Ordeal of Gilbert Waugh.

Pinfold, Ronald Harwood

1977 What the Butler Saw, Joe Geraldine Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester

Orton Barclay

1977 Skin of Our Teeth, TheThe Gladys Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester

Skin of Our Teeth, Thorn-

ton Wilder

1977 Present Laughter, Noel Daphne Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester

Coward

1977 Twelfth Night, William Viola Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester

Shakespeare

1978 Plenty, David Hare Dorcas National Theatre, London

1978 Comings and Goings, Mike Hilary Hampstead Theatre, London

Stott

1979 Recruiting Officer, TheThe Sylvia Bristol Old Vic/Edinburgh Festival

Recruiting Officer, George

Farquhar

1980 Julius Caesar, William Portia Riverside Studios, London

Shakespeare

1980 Provoked Wife, TheThe Pro- Belinda National Theatre, London

voked Wife, John Van-

brugh

1981 Incident at Tulse Hill, Rosemary Hampstead Theatre, London. Directed by Harold Pinter.

Robert East

1982 Top Girls, Caryl Churchill Lady Nijo/ Royal Court Theatre, Londres then Jo Papp’s Public Theater, New

Win York

Won – Obie Award.

1984 Progress, Doug Lucie Ronnie Bush Theatre, London

1985–1986 Troilus and Cressida, Wil- Helen Royal Shakespeare Company: Stratford-upon-Avon/Barbican

liam Shakespeare Theatre









3

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lindsay Duncan





1985–1986 Les Liaisons dangereuses, Marquise Royal Shakespeare Company: Ambassadors Theatre, Londres then

adapted by Christopher de Mer- Music Box Theatre, New York.

Hampton teuil Won – Olivier Award for Best Actress and a Theatre World Award;

nominated – Tony Award for Best Actress.

1985–1986 Merry Wives of Windsor, Mistress Royal Shakespeare Company: Stratford-upon-Avon/Barbican

TheThe Merry Wives of Ford Theatre

Windsor, William Shake-

speare

1988 Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Ten- Maggie National Theatre, London

nessee Williams Won – Evening Standard Theatre Award

1988 Hedda Gabler, Henrik Ib- Hedda Hampstead Theatre, London

sen Gabler

1990 Bérénice, Jean Racine Bérénice National Theatre, Londres

1993 Three Hotels, Jon Robin Barbara Tricycle Theatre, Londres

Baitz Boyle

1994 Cryptogram, TheThe Cryp- Donny Ambassadors Theatre, Londres

togram, David Mamet

1995 Midsummer Night’s Dream, Titania/ Royal Shakespeare Company: Barbican Theatre, Londres then The

AA Midsummer Night’s Hippolyta Lunt Fontanne, New York, afterwards adapted to film

Dream, William Shake-

speare

1996 Ashes to Ashes, Harold Rebecca Gramercy Theater, New York

Pinter

1997 Homecoming, TheThe Ruth National Theatre, London

Homecoming, Harold Pin-

ter

2000 Celebration/The Room, Prue/Rose Almeida Theatre, London, then the Pinter Festival New York

Harold Pinter (double

bill)

2001 Mouth to Mouth, Kevin Laura Albery Theatre, London

Elyot Won – Critics’ Circle Theatre Award; nominated – Evening Stan-

dard Award

2001 Private Lives, Noel Amanda Albery Theatre, London, then Broadway

Coward Prynne Won – Olivier Award for Best Actress, Tony Award for Best Ac-

tress, Critics’ Circle Theatre Award, Drama Desk Award and Vari-

ety Club Showbusiness Award; nominated – Evening Standard

Award

2007 That Face, Polly Stenham Martha Royal Court Theatre/Duke of York’s Theatre

Nominated – Oliver Award for Best Actress

2010 John Gabriel Borkman, Ella Ren- Abbey Theatre, Dublin, then Brooklyn Academy of Music, New

Henrik Ibsen theim York

2012 Hay Fever, Noel Coward Judith Noël Coward Theatre, London

Bliss



entertainment/listening-to-the-teenager- buzz/156300/hilton-mcrae-on-sharing-the-

within-1569660.html. Retrieved 20 June 2011. london-stage-with-judy-garland-in-end-of-the-

[6] Matt Wolf (5 May 2011). "Hilton McRae on Sharing rainbow/. Retrieved 20 June 2011.

the London Stage with Judy Garland in End of the [7] ^ Harriet Lane (23 April 2007). "Bad girl. Lindsay

Rainbow". Broadway.com. Duncan talks to Harriet Lane about her new play".

http://www.broadway.com/shows/end-rainbow/





4

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lindsay Duncan





Year Title Role Notes

1985 Loose Connections, Richard Eyre Sally

1985 Samson and Delilah, Mark Peploe Alice Short, after a novel by D.H. Lawrence

Nankervis

1987 Prick Up Your Ears, Stephen Frears Anthea Lahr

1988 Manifesto (film), Dušan Makavejev Lily Sachor After a novel by Émile Zola

1989 Child Eater, TheThe Child Eater, Jonathan Eirwen Short

Tammuz

1990 Reflecting Skin, TheThe Reflecting Skin, Dolphin Blue Catalonian International Film Festival Award for Best

Philip Ridley Actress

1991 Body Parts, Eric Red Dr Agatha- After a novel by Boileau-Narcejac

Webb

1996 City Hall, Harold Becker Sydney Pap-

pas

1996 Midsummer’s Night Dream, AA Midsum- Hippolyta / From the 1994–1995 Royal Shakespeare Company

mer’s Night Dream, Adrian Noble Titania stage production

1999 Ideal Husband, AnAn Ideal Husband, Oliv- Lady Markby After the An Ideal Husband by Oscar Wilde

er Parker

1999 Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, TC-14 Voice

George Lucas

1999 Expelling the Demon, Devlin Crow Women Voice, short

1999 Mansfield Park, Patricia Rozema Mrs. Price / After the novel by Jane Austen

Lady Bertram

2003 Under the Tuscan Sun, Audrey Wells Katherine After the novel by Frances Mayes

2004 AfterLife, Alison Peebles May Brogan Bratislava International Film Festival Award for Best

Actress, Bowmore Scottish Screen Award

2004 Queen of Sheba’s Pearls, TheThe Queen of Audrey Pretty

Sheba’s Pearls, Colin Nutley

2006 Starter for Ten, Tom Vaughan Rose Harbin- After the novel by David Nicholls

son

2010 Burlesque Fairytales, Susan Luciani Ice Queen

2010 Alice in Wonderland, Tim Burton Helen After Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass

Kingsleigh by Lewis Carroll

2012 Last Passenger, Omid Nooshin Elaine Middle-

ton



The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/ http://www.rscshakespeare.co.uk/

2007/apr/23/theatre3. Retrieved 20 June 2011. troilusAndCressida.html. Retrieved 25 June 2011.

[8] London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 59090. p. 7. 13 [12] Brian Viner (May 2001). "Lindsay Duncan: The

June 2009. thinking man’s femme fatale". The Independent.

[9] "Thames Adverts, 25th January 1979 (1)". http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/

http://www.youtube.com/ profiles/lindsay-duncan-the-thinking-mans-

watch?v=yZzOLmM3aao. Retrieved 26 July 2010. femme-fatale-685762.html. Retrieved 25 June 2010.

[10] "Lindsay Duncan". Masterclass, Theatre Royal [13] Emine Saner (14 February 2009). "Saturday

Haymarket. http://www.masterclass.org.uk/ Interviews – Lindsay Duncan". The Guardian.

masters.php?ar_id=35. Retrieved 25 June 2010. http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2009/feb/14/

[11] "The Tragedy of Troilus and Cressida". Royal lindsay-duncan-interview-thatcher. Retrieved 26

Shakespeare Company. June 2011.





5

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lindsay Duncan





Year Title Role Notes

1975 Up Pompeii! Scrubba Series (BBC), special episode ‘Further Up Pompeii!’

1976 One-Upmanship Series (BBC), episode ‘Woomanship’

1977 New Avengers, TheThe New Jane Series, episode ‘The Angels of Death’

Avengers

1979 The Winkler Diane ITV Playhouse

1980 Dick Turpin Catherine Series, episode ‘Deadlier Than the Male’

Langford

1980 Grown-Ups Christine BBC2 Playhouse, directed by Mike Leigh

Butcher

1982 Muck and Brass Jean Tor- Series, episodes ‘Public Relations’ and ‘Our Green and Pleasant

rode Land’

1982 On Approval Helen Filmed production of Frederick Lonsdale’s On Approval, BBC Play

Hayle of the Month

1983 Reilly, Ace of Spies The Plug- Mini series, episode ‘After Moscow’

ger

1984 Rainy Day Women Karen BBC Play for Today

Miller

1984 Travelling Man Andrea Series, episodes ‘First Leg’, ‘The Collector’, ‘The Watcher’, ‘Grass-

er’, ‘Moving On’, ‘Sudden Death’

1986 Dead Head Dana Series, episodes ‘Why me?’, ‘Anything for England’, ‘The Patriot’

1986 Kit Curran Pamela Series, all episodes

Scott

1989 These Foolish Things Gutrune BBC The Play on One

Day

1989 Traffik Helen Mini-series, written by Simon Moore, all episodes

Rosshalde

1988–1990 Colin’s Sandwich Rosemary Series, episodes ‘Enough’ (1988) and ‘Zanzibar’ (1990)

1990 TECX Laura Series, épisode ‘Getting Personnel’

Pellin

1991 Storyteller: Greek Myths, Medea Series, episode ‘Theseus & the Minotaur’

TheThe Storyteller: Greek

Myths

1991 Screenplay Kath Series, episode ‘Redemption’

Peachey

1991 G.B.H. Barbara Mini-series, witten by Alan Bleasdale, episodes ‘Only Here on a

Douglas Message’, ‘Send a Message to Michael’, ‘Message Sent’, ‘Message

received’, ‘Message Understood’, ‘Over and Out’

Nominated – TV BAFTA for Best Actress

1993 Year in Provence, AA Year Annie Miniseries, all episodes. After Peter Mayle’s book.

in Provence Mayle

1994 Rector’s Wife, TheThe Rec- Anne Bou- Series, all episodes. After the novel by Joanna Trollope.

tor’s Wife verie

1995 Just William Lady Wal- Series, episode ‘William Clears the Slums’

ton

1995 Jake’s Progress Monica Miniseries, episodes 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.6







6

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lindsay Duncan





1999 History of Tom Jones, A Lady Bel- Miniseries, episodes 1, 3, 4, 5. After the novel by Henry Fielding.

Foundling, TheThe History laston

of Tom Jones, A Foundling

1998 Get Real Louise Series, all episodes

1999 Shooting the Past Marilyn Telefilm (BBC), written and directed by Stephen Poliakoff

Truman Nominated – TV BAFTA for Best Actress

1999 Oliver Twist Elizabeth Miniseries, all episodes. Adapted by Alan Bleasdale after Charles

Leeford Dickens’ novel.

2000 Dirty Tricks Alison Telefilm

2000 Victoria Wood with All The Pam Christmas special, segment ‘Women Institute’

Trimmings

2001 Perfect Strangers Alice Series, all episodes. Written and directed by Stephen Poliakoff

Nominated — TV BAFTA for Best Actress

2001 Witness of Truth: The Rail- Narrator’s Telefilm

way Murders Voice

2005 Agatha Christie’s Poirot Lady Tam- Series, episode ‘The Mystery of the Blue Train’

plin

2005–2006 Spooks Angela Episodes ‘Diana’ and ‘Gas and Oil, Part One’

Wells

2005–2007 Rome Servilia of Series, 18 episodes

the Junii

2006 Longford Lady Telefilm

Longford

2007 Frankenstein Professor Telefilm

Jane Pre-

torius

2008 Criminal Justice Alison Miniseries, episodes 3–5

Slaughter

2008 Lost in Austen Lady Miniseries, episodes 3 and 4

Catherine

de Bourgh

2009 Margaret Margaret Nominated – Scottish BAFTA Award for Best Actress

Thatcher

2009 Doctor Who Adelaide Special episode: ‘The Waters of Mars’

Brooke

2009 Margot Ninette de Telefilm (BBC)

Valois

2010 Agatha Christie’s Marple Marina Episode: ‘The Mirror Crack’d from Side to Side’

Gregg

2010 Mission: 2110 Cybele Children game show

2010–2011 Come Fly with Me Narrator Series, all episodes

(voice)

2011 Sinking of the Laconia, Elisabeth Miniseries (BBC), all episodes. Written by Alan Bleasdale.

TheThe Sinking of the Laco- Fullwood

nia

2011 Christopher and His Kind Kathleen Telefilm, written by Kevin Elyot after Christopher Isherwood’s au-

Isherwood tobiography





7

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lindsay Duncan





2011 Merlin Queen An- Series (BBC1), 4th season

nis

2011 Black Mirror Home Miniseries, first episode: ‘The National Anthem’ (Channel 4). Writ-

Secretary ten by Charlie Brooker.

Alex

Cairns

2012 Absolutely Fabulous Jeanne New Year’s Day ’Special’ (BBC1)

Durand

2012 Richard II Duchess Telefilm (BBC2) – filmed production of Shakespeare’s play

of York



[14] "A Midsummer Night’s Dream". Royal Shakespeare [23] Morgan Jeffery. "James Callis, Lindsay Duncan for

Company. http://www.rscshakespeare.co.uk/ ’Merlin’ roles". Digital Spy.

midSummerNightsDream.html. Retrieved 26 June http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/s53/merlin/news/

2011. a340762/james-callis-lindsay-duncan-for-merlin-

[15] "The Royal Shakespeare Company’s U.S. Tour - roles.html. Retrieved 16 September 2011.

Robert Gillespie’s Diary". Jane Network [24] Vanessa Thorpe (29 May 2011). "Shakespeare gets

Productions. http://www.janenightwork.com/ the starring role in cultural celebration alongside

recollections/the-royal-shakespeare-companys-us- Olympics". The Observer.

tour---roberts-diary/. Retrieved 26 June 2010. http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2011/may/

[16] "Lindsay Duncan’s double-nomination triumph". 29/shakespeare-olympic-games-culture. Retrieved

Officiallondontheatre.co.uk. January 2002. 20 June 2011.

http://www.officiallondontheatre.co.uk/news/ [25] Mike Watkins (May 2011). "BBC Two to air

interviews/view/item72320/ Shakespeare works Richard II, Henry IV Parts I and

Lindsay%20Duncan%27s%20double- II and Henry V". ATV Guide.

nomination%20triumph/. . http://www.atvtoday.co.uk/

[17] "Lindsay Duncan: I’m thrilled to be Doctor Who’s index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1237;bbc-

new assistant". The Daily Record. 18 February 2009. two-to-air-shakespeare-works-richard-ii-henry-iv-

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/entertainment/ parts-i-and-ii-and-henry-v. Retrieved 20 June

2009/02/18/lindsay-duncan-i-m-thrilled-to-be- 2011.

doctor-who-s-new-assistant-86908-21133282/. [26] Staff. "Lindsay Duncan and Jeremy Northam Will

Retrieved 18 February 2009. Headline Hay Fever in London". Broadway.com.

[18] "Lindsay Duncan to star in second Doctor Who http://www.broadway.com/buzz/158122/lindsay-

Special of 2009.". http://www.bbc.co.uk/ duncan-and-jeremy-northam-will-headline-hay-

doctorwho/s4/news/090219_news_01. Retrieved fever-in-london/. Retrieved 14 October 2011.

18 February 2009.

[19] Fintan Walsh. "John Gabriel Borkman". The Irish

Theatre Magazine.

External links

http://www.irishtheatremagazine.ie/Reviews/ • Lindsay Duncan at the Internet Movie Database

Ulster-Bank-Dublin-Theatre-Festival--10/John- • Lindsay Duncan’s resume on her agent’s website

Gabriel-Borkman. Persondata

[20] "John Gabriel Borkman". BAM. Name Duncan, Lindsay

http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=2649.

[21] Robert Chalmers (12 December 2010). "In from the Alternative Duncan, Lindsay Vere

cold: Alan Bleasdale on his return to television names

after a decade in the wilderness". The Independent. Short descrip- Actress

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts- tion

entertainment/tv/features/in-from-the-cold-alan- Date of birth 7 November 1950

bleasdale-on-his-return-to-television-after-a-

Place of birth Edinburgh, Scotland, United King-

decade-in-the-wilderness-2155707.html.

dom

[22] "King James Bible: In the Beginning — Cast and

credits". National Theatre. Date of death

http://www.nationaltheatre.org.uk/ Place of death

?lid=66137&dspl=castcreds.





8

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lindsay Duncan









Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lindsay_Duncan&oldid=474575198"



Categories:

• 1950 births

• Living people

• People from Edinburgh

• People educated at King Edward VI High School for Girls, Birmingham

• Alumni of the Central School of Speech and Drama

• Audio book narrators

• Drama Desk Award winners

• Laurence Olivier Award winners

• Commanders of the Order of the British Empire

• Royal National Theatre Company members

• Royal Shakespeare Company members

• Scottish film actors

• Scottish radio actors

• Scottish stage actors

• Scottish television actors

• Scottish voice actors

• Shakespearean actors

• Tony Award winners





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