Jane Horrocks
This article needs additional citations for verification. (April 2024) |
Jane Horrocks | |
---|---|
Born | Barbara Jane Horrocks 18 January 1964 Rawtenstall, Lancashire, England |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1986–present |
Notable work |
|
Television |
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Partner | Nick Vivian (until 2017) |
Children | 2 |
Barbara Jane Horrocks (born 18 January 1964)[1] is a British actress. She portrayed the roles of Bubble and Katy Grin in the BBC sitcom Absolutely Fabulous. She was nominated for the 1993 Olivier Award for Best Actress for the title role in the stage play The Rise and Fall of Little Voice, and received Golden Globe and BAFTA nominations for the role in the film version of Little Voice.
She is also known for her appearances in films, including The Dressmaker (1988), The Witches (1990), Second Best (1993), Life is Sweet (1990), Chicken Run (2000), Corpse Bride (2005), Sunshine on Leith (2013), Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie (2016), as well as the television series Fifi and the Flowertots (2005–2010), Little Princess (2006–2020), and the Sky One sitcom Trollied, as Julie Cook (2011–2015).
Early life
[edit]Horrocks was born in Rawtenstall, Lancashire, the daughter of Barbara (née Ashworth), a hospital worker, and John Horrocks, a sales representative.[citation needed][2] She was the youngest of three children.
She attended Balladen County Primary School and Fearns county secondary school. She trained at Oldham College, and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art with Imogen Stubbs and Ralph Fiennes,[3] and began her career with the Royal Shakespeare Company.[4]
Career
[edit]Stage
[edit]Horrocks has appeared on stage in Ask for the Moon (Hampstead, 1986), A Collier's Friday Night (Greenwich, 1987), Valued Friends (Hampstead, 1989), and The Debutante Ball (Hampstead, 1989). She appeared in Catherine Cookson's The Fifteen Streets, alongside Sean Bean and Owen Teale in 1989; Our Own Kind (Bush, 1991); Deadly Advice (Fletcher, 1993); Cabaret (Donmar Warehouse 1994); Macbeth (Greenwich Theatre, 1995); and Absurd Person Singular (Garrick Theatre, 2007).
While working on Road, a play directed by Jim Cartwright, Horrocks warmed up by doing singing impressions of Judy Garland, Shirley Bassey and Ethel Merman. Cartwright was so impressed with her mimicry he wrote The Rise and Fall of Little Voice for her.[citation needed] She was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress for her performance in the 1992 West End production, directed by her then-boyfriend Sam Mendes.[citation needed]
Her last West End appearance was in Sweet Panic, the 2003 Stephen Poliakoff drama in which she portrayed a neurotic mother locked in a battle of wills with her disturbed son's psychologist.[citation needed] She starred in Richard Jones's critically acclaimed production of The Good Soul of Szechuan at the Young Vic in 2008.[5] She was reunited with Jones in a new musical production of Annie Get Your Gun, which opened at the Young Vic in October 2009.[6] At London's Young Vic, in 2016's If You Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Horrocks revisited the songs of her youth to sing versions of tracks by the likes of Joy Division, The Smiths, Buzzcocks, and The Human League.[7]
In October 2014, Horrocks played Ella Khan in the London revival of East Is East at Trafalgar Studios as part of Jamie Lloyd's Trafalgar Transformed season.[8] In 2024, Horrocks joined the cast of the British premiere production of play Nachtland at the Young Vic theatre, directed by Patrick Marber.[9]
In August 2024, Horrocks starred as Meg in Harold Pinter's The Birthday Party at the Ustinov Studio.[10]
Screen
[edit]She drew critical notice for her performance in the film Life Is Sweet (1990), followed by her award-winning performance in the West End play The Rise and Fall of Little Voice in which she sang all the songs. Horrocks became well known on screen for her role as Bubble and Katy Grin in the sitcom Absolutely Fabulous (1992–2016).
She reprised her stage role in the 1998 screen adaptation, Little Voice, which earned nominations for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role, the Satellite Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role - Motion Picture, and the British Independent Film Award for Best Actress.[citation needed]
For 10 years, Horrocks appeared with Prunella Scales in commercials for the UK supermarket chain Tesco.[11] She narrated BBC Two's television series The Speaker in April 2009.
In 2009, Horrocks took the lead in the BBC TV production Gracie!, a drama portraying the life of Gracie Fields during World War II and her relationship with the Italian-born director Monty Banks (played by Tom Hollander).[12]
Other television credits include Absolutely Fabulous, Victoria Wood - We'd Quite Like to Apologise, Bad Girl, Boon, Heartland, Hunting Venus, La Nonna, Leaving Home, Never Mind the Horrocks, Nightlife, Wyrd Sisters, Foxbusters, Jericho, Red Dwarf, Some Kind of Life, Suffer the Little Children, The Storyteller, The Garden, Fifi & the Flowertots, Little Princess (the voice of the princess) and Welcome to the Times.[citation needed]
She was the subject of an episode of the genealogy series Who Do You Think You Are? in 2006. That year, she played the title role in The Amazing Mrs Pritchard, a drama about a woman elected prime minister.
On Tuesday 14 January 2014, Horrocks appeared as a contestant on The Great Sport Relief Bake Off on BBC Two— the celebrity version of The Great British Bake Off—hosted by Jo Brand and broadcast to help raise money for the charity Sport Relief. The other contestants were TV and radio presenter Kirsty Young, choreographer Jason Gardiner, and Olympic athlete Greg Rutherford.
On 9 May 2015, she gave a reading at VE Day 70: A Party to Remember in Horse Guards Parade, London that was broadcast live on BBC1.[13]
In 2015, she supplied the voice of the Tubby Phone in the reboot of the popular British children's television series Teletubbies. In 2021, she began starring in the Sky comedy series Bloods.[14]
Audio
[edit]Horrocks' voiceovers have been used on the films Chicken Run, Christmas Carol: The Movie, Corpse Bride, Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties, and Tinker Bell. She also did the voiceover of Fenchurch on radio and in the audio adaptation of Douglas Adams' science fiction series The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy for BBC Radio 4. She has voiced Donner in all three Robbie the Reindeer films in aid of Comic Relief.
In 2000, Horrocks made the CD Further Adventures of Little Voice, again singing in the style of favourite divas.[citation needed] The recording includes duets with Ewan McGregor, Robbie Williams and Dean Martin. Horrocks collaborated once more with Robbie Williams the following year, for a cover of the Bobby Darin song "Things" on Williams's album Swing When You're Winning.
Personal life
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (April 2024) |
Horrocks has two children with her former partner, playwright Nick Vivian. They were together for 21 years, parting ways in 2017. She currently lives in Brighton.[15]
She was previously in a relationship with director Sam Mendes. She was in a relationship with the singer and actor Ian Dury, about whom she devised the 2022 drama, Love Pants: Ian Dury & Jane Horrocks, for BBC Radio 4, based on her own diary entries and his love letters to her during their one-year relationship in the 1980s, when she was 23. The two remained friends until his death in 2000.[16][17][15] Horrocks' mother, Barbara, died in 2021. Her father died in 2013.[citation needed]
Filmography
[edit]Film
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Directed by |
---|---|---|---|
1988 | The Dressmaker | Rita | Jim O'Brien |
1989 | Getting It Right | Jenny | Randal Kleiser |
The Wolves of Willoughby Chase | Pattern | Stuart Orme | |
1990 | The Witches | Miss Susan Irvine | Nicolas Roeg |
Memphis Belle | Faith | Michael Caton-Jones | |
Life Is Sweet | Nicola | Mike Leigh | |
1993 | Second Best | Debbie | Chris Menges |
1994 | Deadly Advice | Jodie Greenwood | Mandie Fletcher |
1997 | Bring Me the Head of Mavis Davis | Mavis Davis / Marla Dorland | John Henderson |
1998 | Little Voice | LV | Mark Herman |
1999 | Faeries | Huccaby (voice) | Gary Hurst |
Hooves of Fire | Donner (voice) | ||
2000 | Chicken Run | Babs (voice) | Peter Lord & Nick Park |
Born Romantic | Mo | David Kane | |
Lion of Oz | Wimsik (voice) | Tim Deacon | |
2001 | Christmas Carol: The Movie | Ghost of Christmas Past (voice) | Jimmy T. Murakami |
2002 | Legend of the Lost Tribe | Donner (voice) | |
2005 | Corpse Bride | The Black Widow / Mrs. Plum (voice) | Tim Burton |
Brothers of the Head | Roberta Howe | Keith Fulton & Louis Pepe | |
2006 | Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties | Meenie (voice) | Tim Hill |
2007 | Close Encounters of the Herd Kind | Donner (voice) | |
2008 | Tinker Bell | Fairy Mary (voice) | Bradley Raymond |
2009 | Tinker Bell and the Lost Treasure | Klay Hall | |
2010 | No One Gets Off in This Town | ||
2011 | Arthur Christmas | Lead Elf (voice) | Sarah Smith |
2012 | Secret of the Wings | Fairy Mary (voice) | Bobs Gannaway & Peggy Holmes |
2013 | Sunshine on Leith | Jean | Dexter Fletcher |
2014 | The Pirate Fairy | Fairy Mary | Peggy Holmes |
2016 | Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie | Bubble/Shirley Bassey impersonator | Mandie Fletcher |
2018 | Swimming with Men | Heather | Oliver Parker |
2023 | Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget | Babs (voice) | Sam Fell |
Television series
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1987 | First Sight | Natalie | Episode: "Leaving Home" (1.3) |
Screenplay | Louise | Episode: "The Road" (2.13) | |
1988 | The Storyteller | Anja | Episode: "The True Bride" (1.9) |
The Ruth Rendell Mysteries | Pippa Bond | Episode: "No Crying He Makes" (2.7) | |
1989 | The Jim Henson Hour | Anja | Episode: "Musicians" (1.8) |
Victoria Wood | Cathy Warburton | Episode: "We'd Quite Like to Apologise" (1.4) | |
Smith & Jones | Episode: "The Unprepared Version" (5.6) | ||
1990 | Boon | Trisha Downey | Episode: "Best Left Buried" (5.11) |
1991 | Screen One | Gail | Episode: "Alive and Kicking" (3.7) |
Performance | Episode: "Nona" (1.2) | ||
1992 | Red Dwarf | Nirvanah Crane | Episode: "Holoship" (5.1) |
Screenplay | Maggie Hunt | Episode: "Bad Girl" (7.3) | |
Performance | Episode: "Roots" (2.3) | ||
1992–2012 | Absolutely Fabulous | Bubble (also played Katy Grin, Lola and radio voice) |
33 episodes |
1995 | Performance | Doll Tearsheet | Episode: "Henry IV" (5.5) |
1995–1998 | Crapston Villas | Flossie | 20 episodes (all episodes) |
1996 | Tales from the Crypt | Cammy | Episode: "Cold War" (7.6) |
Never Mind the Horrocks | Various roles | ||
1997 | Wyrd Sisters | Magrat Garlick (voice) | Television mini-series |
The Blobs | Various (voice) | 26 Episodes (all episodes) (S4C, Scottish Television, Siriol, DC Thomson, Taytel and Ragdoll Limited (live-action shoot)) | |
1997–1999 | The Forgotten Toys | Various roles (voice) | |
1999 | Foxbusters | Jeffries (voice) | 26 Episodes (all episodes) |
1999–2000 | Watership Down | Hannah | 14 episodes |
2000 | Mirrorball | Yitta Hilberstam | Television pilot |
Spot the Dog | Narrator | 26 Episodes were re-narrated over the originals that were done by Paul Nicholas. | |
2001 | Little Big Mouth | Krystan (voice) | |
2002 | Linda Green | Teresa Franklin | Episode: "Teresa" (2.2) |
2003–2004 | Wide-Eye | Flea (voice) Baby Komodo (voice) Natterjack Toads (voices) |
26 episodes (All episodes) |
2004 | Monkey Trousers | Various roles | |
2005 | Jericho | Sadie Swettenham | Episode: "To Murder and Create" (1.3) |
2005–2010 | Fifi and the Flowertots | Fifi Forget-Me-Not and Primrose (UK/US voice) | 40 episodes |
2006 | The Street | Angela Quinn | Episodes: "The Accident" (1.1) "Stan" (1.2) |
The Amazing Mrs Pritchard | Ros Pritchard | 6 episodes (all episodes) | |
2006–2020 | Little Princess | Little Princess (voice) | |
2011 | Coming Up | Felicity | Episode: "Magic" (6.5) |
Phineas and Ferb | Eliza (voice) | Episode: "My Fair Goalie" (3.11) | |
This is Jinsy | Mrs. Stenton | Episode: "Vel" (1.6) | |
Little Crackers | Hairdresser | Episode: "Jane Horrocks' Little Cracker: Barbara" (2.3) | |
Pixie Hollow Games | Fairy Mary (voice) | Television special | |
2011–2013, 2015 | Trollied | Julie Cook | 37 episodes |
2012 | Get Your House in Order | Narrator (voice) | Episode: "Stuart" (1.3) |
True Love | Sandra | Episode: "Sandra" (1.4) | |
2014 | Lily's Driftwood Bay | Wee Rabbit | |
2015 | Inside No. 9 | Liz | "Cold Comfort" (2.4) |
Long Live the Royals | Queen Elenor (voice) | UK version only | |
2015–2018 | Teletubbies | Tubby Phone (voice) | Darrall MacQueen, DHX Media and CBeebies |
2019-present | The Rubbish World of Dave Spud | Gran Spud (voice) | Except "Two Toots Spud", "An Honest Face" and "Night School" |
2020 | The Singapore Grip | Sylvia Blackett | TV series |
2021 | Hugo the Jungle Animal | Baby Hugo | Episode: "Baby Hugo" |
2021–2022 | Bloods | Wendy | Main role |
Television films
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | The Fifteen Streets | Christine Bracken | |
Heartland | Pam | ||
1991 | Came Out, It Rained, Went Back in Again | Learner Lesbian | |
1993 | Cabaret | Sally Bowles | |
1994 | Self Catering | Marilyn | |
Suffer the Little Children | Deborah Hayes | ||
1995 | Some Kind of Life | Alison | |
1996 | Nightlife | Helen | |
1999 | Hunting Venus | Cassandra | |
The Flint Street Nativity | Zoe | ||
2009 | Gracie! | Gracie Fields | |
2010 | The Road to Coronation Street | Margaret Morris |
Short film, television and video
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1994 | Butter | Beggar | Television |
1995 | Combination Skin | (voice) | Short film |
1999 | Hooves of Fire | Donner (voice) | Television |
2002 | Legend of the Lost Tribe | Donner / Arctic Fox (voice) | |
Last Rumba in Rochdale | Gran (voice) | Short film | |
2004 | Wheeling Dealing | Authentic Newsreader | |
2006 | Voices from the Underworld | Herself (voice) | Video Short |
2007 | Robbie the Reindeer in Close Encounters of the Herd Kind | Donner (voice) | Television |
2011 | The Itch of the Golden Nit | (voice) | Short film |
Music videos
[edit]Awards and honours
[edit]- BAFTA Awards (1999): Nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role for Little Voice (1998)
- British Independent Film Awards (1999): Nomination for Best Actress for Little Voice (1998)
- Chicago Film Critics Association Awards (1999): Nomination for Best Actress for Little Voice (1998)
- Golden Globes (1999): Nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture -Comedy/Musical, for Little Voice (1998)
- Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards (1991): Won Award for Best Supporting Actress for Life Is Sweet (1991)
- National Society of Film Critics Awards (1992): Won Award for Best Supporting Actress for Life Is Sweet
- Satellite Awards (1999): Nomination for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical for Little Voice (1998)
- Screen Actors Guild Awards (1999): Nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Cast, for Little Voice (1998), shared with Annette Badland, Brenda Blethyn, Jim Broadbent, Michael Caine, Philip Jackson and Ewan McGregor
- Screen Actors Guild Awards (1999): Nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role for Little Voice (1998)
- Sitges - Catalan International Film Festival (1994): Won Best Actress Award for Deadly Advice (1994)
References
[edit]- ^ Rose, Mike (18 January 2023). "Today's famous birthdays list for January 18, 2023 includes celebrities Kevin Costner, Dave Bautista". Cleveland.com. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
- ^ Ascher-Walsh, Rebecca (18 December 1994). "Impressive". Entertainment Weekly. p. 16.
- ^ "Jane Horrocks". The Guardian Unlimited Film. Guardian News and Media Limited. 2011. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
- ^ "People Index Jane Horrocks". BBC Drama. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
- ^ Nightingale, Benedict (16 May 2008). "The Good Soul of Szechuan at the Young Vic". Times Online. Times Newspapers Ltd. Archived from the original on 6 July 2008. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
- ^ "Official Young Vic announcement" (PDF). Young Vic. Retrieved 2 July 2019.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "why jane horrocks is singing the smiths". bellaafrica. Yahoo!. Oath Inc. Retrieved 1 July 2019.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Merrifield, Nicola (9 May 2014). "East is East starring Jane Horrocks to run at Trafalgar Studios". The Stage. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
- ^ Millward, Tom (7 December 2023). "Young Vic announces initial cast for Nachtland". WhatsOnStage. Retrieved 2 February 2024.
- ^ https://www.thetimes.com/culture/theatre-dance/article/birthday-party-review-jane-horrocks-theatre-royal-bath-vwccwxnp8
- ^ Jones, Paul. "Jane Horrocks: "I'm eternally grateful to Tesco"". Radio Times. Immediate Media Company Ltd. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
- ^ "Amazing Gracie: Jane Horrocks". Manchester Evening News. 27 April 2010. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
- ^ "Actress Jane Horrocks cries reading WW2 letter". BBC News Online. BBC Online. BBC. 10 May 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
- ^ "Jane Horrocks stars in new paramedic show Bloods". News&Star. 2 May 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
- ^ a b "'I don't like to dwell on the dark side': Jane Horrocks on life on her own, family and first love, Ian Dury". The Guardian. 14 December 2022. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
- ^ "Drama". Radio Times. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
- ^ "BBC Radio 4 - Drama, Love Pants: Ian Dury & Jane Horrocks". BBC. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
External links
[edit]- 1964 births
- Living people
- Actresses from Lancashire
- Alumni of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
- English film actresses
- English radio actresses
- English stage actresses
- English television actresses
- English voice actresses
- English women comedians
- English women writers
- People from Rawtenstall
- Royal Shakespeare Company members
- 20th-century English actresses
- 21st-century English actresses
- Comedians from Lancashire
- Actors from the Borough of Rossendale