Samantha Spiro

Samantha Spiro
Born (1968-06-20) 20 June 1968
Mill Hill, London, England
Occupation Actress
Years active 1994–present
Spouse(s) Mark Leadbetter (m. 2002; 2 children)
Awards Whatsonstage.com Award for Best Actress in a Musical, 2000, Joseph Jefferson Award for Actress in a Supporting Role in a Musical, 2004

Samantha Spiro (born 20 June 1968) is a double Olivier Award-winning English actress. She is best known for portraying Barbara Windsor in the stage play Cleo, Camping, Emmanuelle and Dick and the television film Cor, Blimey!, DI Vivien Friend in M.I.T.: Murder Investigation Team, and Melessa Tarly in the HBO series Game of Thrones.

Background

Born in Whitechapel, London, England,[1] Spiro grew up in Radlett, Hertfordshire.[2] She is Jewish.[3][4] Spiro decided to be an actress at the age of ten, after seeing a production of Androcles and the Lion at the Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park.[2] She joined the National Youth Theatre, and later trained at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art.[5]

Spiro married the actor Mark Leadbetter, whom she met at drama school, in February 2002.[6] They have two daughters and currently live in Queen's Park, London.[2]

Career

Theatre

Spiro's first acting job after graduating from drama school was with the Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park, in productions of A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Boys From Syracuse and Macbeth.[2] Her many theatre credits include As You Like It, Teechers, The Tragic Roundabout, Jumpers, On the Piste, Roots, How the Other Half Loves and Glyn and It, opposite Penelope Keith.[7]

Spiro played Barbara Windsor in Cleo, Camping, Emmanuelle and Dick at the National Theatre, a production she credits as her first big break, which "open[ed] a lot of doors".[5] She has also appeared in the Minerva Theatre production of Funny Girl and the first West End revival of Alan Ayckbourn's Bedroom Farce.[1][7]

Spiro played Rachel in Mike Leigh's production of Two Thousand Years at the National Theatre. This was the first Jewish role of her career. She said:

"For English/Jewish artists in this business, we’re English first and the Jewish thing comes down the line. Whereas in the United States, Jewishness is a much celebrated thing. Jewishness is a part of their very being.
"Here, I think, we repress it and, far from celebrating it, almost shy away from it. After Two Thousand Years, I suddenly felt that there is a place for people like me. Until that point I hadn’t had a career playing Jewish people. I had got that stuff out of the way by the time I came to play Fanny Brice [in Funny Girl] who is very much a Jewish character."[3]

In 2009, Spiro played Maria in the Donmar Warehouse production of Twelfth Night at the Wyndham's Theatre, alongside Derek Jacobi, and Beatrice in Much Ado About Nothing at the Open Air Theatre.[5][8] Most recently, she appeared in the acclaimed Open Air Theatre production of Hello, Dolly!, playing Dolly Levi.[2][5]

In 2013, Spiro played Lady Macbeth in Macbeth at Shakespeare's Globe, alongside Billy Boyd and Joseph Millson.

Discussing whether she prefers acting in the theatre to television or film, Spiro said: "I think theatre prefers me. These days you have to do both, but it never feels as if the TV casting people are beating down my door to offer me work. I just feel that in this business you are lucky if you’re doing something you enjoy."[5]

Television, film and radio

Spiro reprised the role of Barbara Windsor in the television adaptation of Cleo, Camping, Emmanuelle and Dick, Cor, Blimey!, starring opposite Geoffrey Hutchings.[9]

Her other television credits include The Bill, Cold Feet, Coupling, After You've Gone and M.I.T.: Murder Investigation Team, in which she played the lead role of DI Vivien Friend. She described the role of Friend as "quite an unusual departure for me...I've done quite a bit of comedy and I've played characters who are light-hearted and characters who are tarts with hearts. In M.I.T. there is no tart or heart!"[10] In order to research the part, Spiro spent time with a female Detective Inspector with the real-life Murder Investigation Team.[10] From 9 August 2010, Spiro starred in the BBC comedy Grandma's House. She plays the part of Simon Amstell's aunt Liz. In 2012 she also appeared in Playhouse Presents "Psychobitches" where she played Judy Garland and Mary Whitehouse.

In September 2013, Spiro joined the cast of Jack Whitehall's BBC Three sitcom Bad Education as Professor Celia Green, the new deputy headmaster and adversary to Jack Whitehall's character.

In December 2013 the television channel Sky Atlantic aired a new comedy series called Little Cracker. This was the second programme in the series and was an autobiographical story written by Rebecca Front and her brother Jeremy Front about Front's life as a child. The story centres around the time Front witnessed a serious incident when her father, Charles, was nearly drowned in a lake. In the drama Spiro played the part of Front's mother, Sheila. The role of Front's father was played by the actor Richard Lumsden.

In 2016 she joined the HBO series Game of Thrones in Season 6 as Melessa Tarly, the mother of Samwell Tarly.[11]

Spiro has appeared in the films Beyond Bedlam (1994), as WPC Foster, and Tomorrow La Scala! (2002), as Janey. She also played Martha Tabram in From Hell (2001), opposite Johnny Depp. She also appears impersonating many historical female figures in Psychobitches.

Her radio drama credits include The Casebook of Inspector Steine, Gospel According to Mary, Little Cinderellas, Beside the Seaside, Show Boat in which she played Magnolia Hawks, Sarah Kahn in Chicken Soup with Barley and the Guy Meredith play Spring Forward, Fall Back for BBC Radio 7.[12]

Awards

In 2001, Spiro was awarded the Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical for her performance in the 2000 season Donmar Warehouse production of Merrily We Roll Along. She won a Whatsonstage.com award for Best Actress in a Musical for the same production.[1] In 2010, Spiro was once again awarded the Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical for her performance in Hello, Dolly! at the Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park.

Spiro won a 2004 Joseph Jefferson Award for Actress in a Supporting Role in a Musical, for the production of A Little Night Music at the Chicago Shakespeare Theater in Chicago, Illinois.[13]

In the 2011 British Comedy Awards she won the Best Female Comedy Breakthrough Artist award[14] for her performance in Grandma's House.

Credits

Television

Year Show Role Notes
1994 The Bill Cherie
- Dealer Wins (1994)
Police drama
2000 Cor, Blimey! Barbara Windsor Television film
2001 Cold Feet Ruth
- Episode 4.2 (2001)
- Episode 4.4 (2001)
- Episode 4.5 (2001)
Comedy drama
TV Go Home Sketch show
2003 M.I.T.: Murder Investigation Team DI Vivien Friend Police drama
2004 Coupling Jeffina
- Nine and a Half Months (2004)
Sitcom
2007 After You've Gone Ann Venables
- Stuck in the Middle with You (2007)
- When She Came Back (2007)
Sitcom
2010–2012 Grandma's House Auntie Liz Sitcom
2011 Rock & Chips Beryl Bird 1 episode
2012 Panto! Di Jenkins Comedy
2013 Bad Education Professor Celia Green Comedy
2013 Little Cracker Sheila Front Comedy drama
2014 The Wrong Mans Maria Black comedy
2016 Tracey Ullman's Show Birgit Sketch show, 3 episodes
Game of Thrones Melessa Tarly Episode: "Blood of My Blood"

Film

Year Film Role Notes
1994 Beyond Bedlam WPC Foster
2001 From Hell Martha Tabram
2002 Tomorrow La Scala! Janey
2016 Me Before You (film) Josie Clark

Theatre

References

  1. 1 2 3 Paddock, Terri (8 April 2002). "20 Questions With...Samantha Spiro". What's On Stage. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Why Samantha Spiro loves Regent's Park". Times Series. 5 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  3. 1 2 Nathan, John (4 December 2008). "Interview: Samantha Spiro". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  4. Logan, Brian (2012-03-11). "Samantha Spiro: 'I was never an ingenue'". The Guardian. London.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Smurthwaite, Nick (26 June 2009). "Spiro's inspired roles". The Stage. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  6. Marlow, Will (7 December 2002). "Go directly to jail". Edinburgh Evening News. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  7. 1 2 Bosanquet, Theo (19 May 2008). "Samantha Spiro On...Playing Funny Girls". What's on Stage. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  8. Open Air Theatre | Much Ado About Nothing
  9. Lockyer, Daphne (2 April 2000). "I became Babs so completely even now I can't stop doing her wiggle". Sunday Mirror. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  10. 1 2 Interviews with the team from M.I.T. – Samantha Spiro – DI Vivien Friend Memorable TV. Retrieved on 2009-07-08.
  11. "Meet the Tarlys: Game of Thrones adds three more actors to season 6!". Watchers On The Wall. 16 September 2015.
  12. Chichester Festival Theatre: What's On: Samantha Spiro Retrieved on 2009-07-08.
  13. Samantha Spiro – Biography IMDB. Retrieved on 2009-07-08.
  14. British Comedy Awards Winners DigitalSpy 22-Jan-11
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