British actress (born 1946)
Alison Steadman (born 26 August 1946) is an English actress. She received the 1977 Evening Standard Theatre Award for Best Actress for Abigail's Party , the 1991 National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress for the Mike Leigh film Life Is Sweet and the 1993 Olivier Award for Best Actress for her role as Mari in the original production of The Rise and Fall of Little Voice . In a 2007 Channel 4 poll, the '50 Greatest Actors' voted for by other actors, she was ranked 42.[ 1]
Steadman made her professional stage debut in 1968 and went on to establish her career in Mike Leigh's 1970s TV plays Nuts in May (1976) and Abigail's Party (1977).[ 2] She received BAFTA TV Award nominations for the 1986 BBC serial The Singing Detective and in 2001 for the ITV drama series Fat Friends (2000–2005). Other television roles include Pride and Prejudice (1995), Gavin & Stacey (2007–2010, 2019, 2024) and Here We Go (2022–present). Her other film appearances include Clockwise (1986), Blame It on the Bellboy (1992), Confetti (2006), Burn Burn Burn (2015) and Better Man (2024).
Early life and education
Steadman was born in Liverpool , the youngest of three sisters born to Marjorie (née Evans) (1912–1996) and George Percival Steadman (1912–1991),[ 3] who worked as a production controller for Plessey , an electronics firm.
Steadman was educated at Childwall Valley High School for Girls, a state grammar school in the Liverpool suburb of Childwall , followed by East 15 Acting School , at which she secured a place in the autumn of 1966 and where she met Mike Leigh during her second year.[ 4]
Career
Stage work
Having left the East 15 Acting School in Loughton , Essex , Steadman worked in various regional repertory theatres, starting at Lincoln in 1968, where her first role was the schoolgirl Sandy in The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie . She created the role of the monstrous Beverly in Mike Leigh's Abigail's Party , which she reprised with the original cast on television. She won an Olivier Award for The Rise and Fall of Little Voice and also appeared in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof , Entertaining Mr Sloane , Hotel Paradiso , and others in locations as diverse as the Royal Court , the Theatre Royal , the Old Vic , the Hampstead Theatre , the Nottingham Playhouse , the Everyman Liverpool and the National Theatre . She starred as Elmire in the 1983 RSC production of Molière 's Tartuffe , which was adapted for BBC television. [citation needed ] 2002 saw her play the role of Hillary in Debbie Isitt's The Woman Who Cooked Her Husband at the West End's Ambassadors Theatre to widely positive reviews.[ 5] In 2010 Steadman played Madame Arcati in a revival of Noël Coward 's Blithe Spirit .[ 6] [ 7] In 2014 Steadman appeared as Madame Raquin in Helen Edmundson's adaptation of Emile Zola's Thérèse Raquin .[ 8] [ 9]
Film
Steadman has appeared in many films, including P'tang, Yang, Kipperbang (1982), Champions (1983), A Private Function (1984), Number One (1984), Clockwise (1986), Stormy Monday (1988), The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988), Shirley Valentine (1989), Wilt (1989), Life Is Sweet (1990), Blame It on the Bellboy (1992), Topsy-Turvy (1999), The Life and Death of Peter Sellers (2004), Confetti (2006), Burn Burn Burn (2015), Dads Army (2016) and 23 Walks (2020),
Television
Steadman is credited with sharing the first lesbian kiss on British television with Myra Frances . Broadcast on 25 February 1974, Girl is the story of the love affair of two WRAC soldiers. “When I was first offered the part I felt quite nervous,” she said and was relieved that her “mum said it was great and was very moved by it.”[ 10]
An early television appearance came in 1976 which saw Steadman cast as Cheryl Baker in the Granada Television daytime series Crown Court. Her character was the secretary of a confidence trickster found guilty of fraud .
Other television work includes Fat Friends as Betty, Grumpy Old Women , Stressed Eric , Let Them Eat Cake , The Singing Detective , No Bananas , The Caucasian Chalk Circle , Adrian Mole: The Cappuccino Years as Pauline Mole, opposite James Bolam in the television film The Missing Postman , and Pride and Prejudice as Mrs. Bennet . In 1991, she also appeared as Edda Göring in Selling Hitler and as Lauren Patterson in Gone to the Dogs , which was then followed up by Gone to Seed .
Television productions directed by Leigh in which she has appeared include Nuts in May , Hard Labour and Abigail's Party . She also appeared in the BBC comedy The Worst Week of My Life . In 2007 she featured in the BBC Wales programme Coming Home about her Welsh family history, with roots in Trefarclawdd and Ruabon .
In October 2007 Steadman appeared in Fanny Hill on BBC Four .
From May 2007 to January 2010 Steadman starred in the BBC comedy Gavin & Stacey as Pam Shipman . She returned to the role for the Christmas specials in 2019 and 2024 respectively.[ 11] [ 12] She appeared in Lewis as the Reverend Martha Steadman in 'Intelligent Design' in 2013.
In 2014 Steadman starred as Joyce in the first series of the BBC comedy Boomers , followed by a Christmas special in 2015 and a second series in 2016.[ 13] In 2016 she presented the three-part series Little British Islands with Alison Steadman on Channel 4. The series visited Gigha, Jura, Colonsay and Oronsay in episode 1, Jersey, Alderney and Sark in episode 2 and the Isles of Scilly in episode 3. In 2016 she appeared as Abigail in the Midsomer Murders episode 'The incident at Cooper Hill'.
In 2018 Steadman made a return to BBC1 with John Cleese in Hold the Sunset . On 9 December 2018 Steadman appeared in the BBC1 Drama 'Care' in the role of Mary. Also in 2018 she featured in ITV1 mini series Butterfly where she played Maxine Duffy’s Grandmother
Radio
On radio, Steadman's talent for mimicry and character voices was given full rein in the 1970s, mainly at BBC Manchester, in comedy sketch shows including Week Ending , Castle's on the Air and The Worst Show on the Wireless . In the second and third of these she played the over-protective mother to Eli Woods 's long-suffering Bunty/Precious . From 1982 to 1984, also at BBC Manchester, she joined Eli Woods and Eddie Braben (Morecambe and Wise ' s scriptwriter) in 13 episodes of the radio comedy The Show with No Name , written by Braben, which can best be described as an updated version of the comedy sketch show Round the Horne . In the early to mid 1980s Steadman also had a spell in Roy Hudd's long-running comedy sketch series The News Huddlines . From 2002 she co-starred as Mrs Naughtie in the situation comedy series Hamish and Dougal . In December 2009 she starred in Mike Stott's My Mad Grandad on BBC Radio 4 .[ 14] From 2012 she played Ginny Fox, a parody of Virginia Woolf , in the sitcom Gloomsbury . In 2018 she made a guest appearance in Radio 4's The Archers as Olwen, a friend of Jill Archer.
Personal life
In 1972 director Mike Leigh drove to Liverpool to see Ted Whitehead 's play The Foursome , which featured Steadman. He asked her to be in his film Hard Labour , during which, both said, they "got together".[ 15] They married in 1973 and had two sons.[ 16] The couple lived with their sons in Wood Green , London.[ 17] They separated in 1995 and divorced in 2001.
Steadman's partner is actor Michael Elwyn .[ 18] The couple live in Highgate , London.[ 19]
She is a birdwatcher [ 20] and in November 2016 became an ambassador for London Wildlife Trust .[ 21]
Filmography
Film
Television
Year
Title
Role
Notes
1971
Bel Ami
Fencer
Episode: "Madeleine"
1973
Z-Cars
WPC Bayliss
2 episodes: "Suspicion" and "Nuisance"
1973–1974
Frost's Weekly
Various roles
7 episodes
1973–1981
Play for Today
Various roles
9 episodes
1974
Crown Court
Mary Chatham
3 episodes: "Good and Faithful Friends: Parts 1–3"
Second City Firsts
Jackie
Episode: "Girl"
1975
Helen
Episode: "Early to Bed"
Tarbuck and All That!
Various roles
Series regular
Oil Strike North
Paula Webber
Episode: "First Lion"
The Wackers
Bernadette Clarkson
7 episodes
1976
Crown Court
Cheryl Baker
3 episodes: "Scard: Parts 1–3"
Red Letter Day
Margaret Hudson
Episode: "Bag of Yeast"
1977
Esther Waters
Sarah
3 episodes
1978
ITV Playhouse
Norma Hardy
Episode: "Ten Days That Shook the Branch"
1979
Two's Company
Pamela
Episode: "The Silence"
1985–1987
Nature in Focus
Helen
12 episodes
1986
The Singing Detective
Mrs. Lili Marlow
Mini-series, 5 episodes
In Sickness and in Health
Mother
Episode: "Christmas Special"
1989
Screen Two
Brenda Ogdon
Episode: "Virtuoso"
The Jim Henson Hour
Perriwinkle
Episode: "Monster Maker"
Screenplay
Marjorie
Episode: "A Small Mourning"
1990
Screen One
Jackie Johns
Episode: "News Hounds"
1991
Selling Hitler
Edda Goering
Mini-series, 1 episode
Gone to the Dogs
Lauren Patterson
Mini-series, 6 episodes
1992
Gone to Seed
Hilda
Series regular, 6 episodes
1994
The Wimbledon Poisoner
Elinor Farr
Mini-series, 2 episodes
1995
Kavanagh QC
Evelyn Marie Kendall
Episode: "Nothing But the Truth"
Pride and Prejudice
Mrs. Bennet
Mini-series, 6 episodes
Coogan's Run
Annette
Episode: "The Curator"
1995–1998
Crapston Villas
Marge Stenson
Series regular, 20 episodes
1996
Karaoke
Mrs. Haynes
Mini-series, 2 episodes
Cold Lazarus
Mrs. Haynes
Mini-series, 1 episode
No Bananas
Evelyn Hamilton
Series regular, 10 episodes
1998–2000
Stressed Eric
Mrs. Perfect
Series regular, voice role, 13 episodes
1999
Let Them Eat Cake
Madame de Plonge
4 episodes
2000–2005
Fat Friends
Betty Simpson
Series regular, 23 episodes
2001
Adrian Mole: The Cappuccino Years
Pauline Mole
Series regular, 6 episodes
2002
Celeb
Grandma
Episode: "The Love Child"
2003
Lenny Henry in Pieces
Various roles
4 episodes
Comic Relief
Professor Minerva McGonagall
Sketch: "Harry Potter and the Chamberpot of Azerbaijan"
2004
Dalziel and Pascoe
Marion Mattis
Episode: "Soft Touch "
2004–2005
The Lenny Henry Show
Mrs. Twelvetrees
2 episodes
2004–2006
The Worst Week of My Life
Angela Cook
Series regular, 17 episodes
2005
Twisted Tales
Margery Faversham
Episode: "Fruitcake of the Living Dead"
Bob the Builder
Bunty Ferguson (The Mayoress)
Voice role (UK dub). Episode: "Bob's Big Plan"
2007
The Last Detective
Karen Horner
Episode: "The Man from Montevideo"
Agatha Christie's Marple
Kirsten Lindstrom
Episode: "Ordeal by Innocence"
Fanny Hill
Mrs. Brown / Madam
2 episodes: "#1.1" and "#1.2"
The Omid Djalili Show
Mrs. Dashett
Episode: "#1.2"
2007–2010, 2019, 2024
Gavin & Stacey
Pam Shipman
Main role; 22 episodes
2012
Playhouse Presents
Tina
Episode: "King of the Teds"
Inspector George Gently
Esther Dunwoody
Episode: "The Lost Child"
Little Crackers
Alison's Mum Mrs. O'Grady
Episode: "Alison Steadmans Little Cracker: The Autograph" Episode: "Paul O'Grady's Little Cracker: Boo! A Ghost Story"
2013
Lewis
Rev. Martha Seager
2 episodes: "Intelligent Design: Parts 1 & 2"
The Syndicate
Rose Wilson
Series regular, 6 episodes
Love and Marriage
Pauline Paradise
Series regular, 6 episodes
2014
Comedy Blaps
Mum
Episode: "A Liam Williams 'Blap': Episode 3 – Home"
The Great War: The People's Story
Hallie Miles
Mini-series, 3 episodes
The Secrets
Angela
Episode: "The Dilemma"
2014–2016
Boomers
Joyce
Series regular, 13 episodes
2015
Inside No. 9
'Madam Talbot' / Anne
Episode: "Séance Time "
2015–2016
Orphan Black
Kendall Malone
5 episodes
2016
Midsomer Murders
Abigail Tonev
Episode: "The Incident at Cooper Hill"
Yonderland
Barbara Maddox
Episode: "It's the Thought That Counts"
Comedy Playhouse
Brenda
Episode: "Broken Biscuits"
2017
Cath
Episode: "Static"
We Have Been Watching
Narrator
Series regular
2018
Butterfly
Barbara
Mini-series, 3 episodes
The Reluctant Landlord
Debbie
Episode: "Mama's Boy"
The Crystal Maze
Fairy God Mumsie
Episode: "Celebrity Christmas Special"
2018–2019
Hold the Sunset
Edith
Series regular, 13 episodes
2019
Moominvalley
Emma the Stage Rat
Voice role, 2 episodes: "Little My Moves In" and "Moominsummer Madness"
2020
Unprecedented
Liz's Mum
Episode: "#1.3"
Housebound
Jane
Episode: "#1.12"
Life
Gail Reynolds
Mini-series, 6 episodes
Pandemonium
Sue Jessop
BBC One comedy (pilot episode of Here We Go )[ 22]
2022
Rules of the Game
Anita Jenkins
Mini-series, 4 episodes[ 23]
2022–present
Here We Go
Sue Jessop
8 episodes (including pilot and 2023 Christmas Special)[ 22]
2023
Alison & Larry: Billericay to Barry
Herself
Gold celebrity travel show[ 24]
Awards and nominations
References
^ "The Stage Talk" . The Stage . Retrieved 17 September 2014 .
^ "Alison Steadman" Liverpool John Moores University Honorary Fellowship Award speech July 2010 Archived 16 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved 7 June 2011
^ "Alison Steadman Biography (1946–)" . www.filmreference.com .
^ Michael Coveney, The World according to Mike Leigh, p.90
^ "Theatre review: The Woman Who Cooked Her Husband at New Ambassadors" . British Theatre Guide . Retrieved 27 August 2023 .
^ "Review: Blithe Spirit by Noel Coward, Theatre Royal Bath" . Wiltshire Times . 12 November 2010. Retrieved 27 March 2024 .
^ Billington, Michael (10 March 2011). "Blithe Spirit – review" . The Guardian . ISSN 0261-3077 . Retrieved 27 March 2024 .
^ "Theatre Royal Bath – Main House" . Theatre Royal Bath . Archived from the original on 23 February 2017. Retrieved 30 October 2015 .
^ Cavendish, Dominic (8 August 2014). "Thérèse Raquin, Theatre Royal Bath, review: 'rudimentary' " . The Daily Telegraph . Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
^ Rennison, Nick (2022). 1974: Scenes from a Year of Crisis (1st ed.). London: Oldcastle Books, Limited. pp. 52– 53. ISBN 978-0-85730-582-4 .
^ Craig, David (10 May 2024). "Gavin & Stacey icon confirms return for final ever episode - but hasn't 'seen the script' " . Radio Times .
^ Weaver, Matthew (3 May 2024). "Gavin and Stacey to return for last-ever episode on Christmas Day, BBC confirms" . The Guardian . Retrieved 4 November 2024 .
^ Kelly, Steve (15 August 2014). "Who are the stars of Boomers? Veteran stars line up for new BBC comedy" . The Mirror . Retrieved 27 March 2024 .
^ "My Mad Grandad" , BBC , 28 December 2009
^ Coveney, p. 90
^ Michael Coveney, p. 18
^ "Profile: Mike Leigh" . The Guardian . 19 October 2002. Retrieved 12 November 2021 .
^ Steadman, Alison. "The Alison Steadman Page" . Pandp2.home.comcast.net. Archived from the original on 16 July 2007. Retrieved 23 May 2012 .
^ Woods, Judith (23 October 2016). "Alison Steadman: How my mum was mistreated by the NHS" . The Daily Telegraph . ISSN 0307-1235 . Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 27 October 2019 .
^ Kellaway, Kate (22 November 2009). " 'To a birdwatcher, one glimpse, one moment is happiness enough' " . The Observer . Retrieved 27 May 2020 .
^ "Actress Alison Steadman is standing up for London's wildlife as our latest ambassador" . www.wildlondon.org.uk .
^ a b "Here We Go: Meet the cast of the new BBC comedy series" . BBC Media Centre . 19 April 2022. Retrieved 4 November 2024 .
^ "Rules Of The Game" . bbc.co.uk . Retrieved 3 January 2022 .
^ Harrison, Phil; Seale, Jack; Verdier, Hannah (14 August 2023). "TV tonight: old friends from Gavin & Stacey take a ride from Billericay to Barry" . The Guardian . Retrieved 14 August 2023 .
External links
Awards for Alison Steadman
1976–1984 and 1988
1985 onwards (except 1988)
International National Artists People