Georgina Hale (born 4 August 1943) is an English film, television and stage actress. She is best known for her roles in the films of director Ken Russell, including The Devils (1971), The Boy Friend (1971), and Mahler (1974), for which she received a BAFTA Film Award. An accomplished stage actress, she received an Olivier Award nomination for her leading performance in Steaming (1981). She has appeared in a number of television plays, and in 2010, The Guardian listed her as one of 10 great character actors in British television.[3] She remains active in film, television and theatre.
Georgina Hale | |
---|---|
![]() Hale and actor Murray Melvin at the Young Vic Theatre, October 2007 | |
Born | Georgina Hole (1943-08-04) 4 August 1943 (age 79) |
Education | Royal Academy of Dramatic Art |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1963–present |
Spouse | John Forgeham (1964 – c. 1969)[lower-alpha 1] |
Hale was born in Ilford, Essex to publicans Elsie (née Fordham) and George Robert Hole. She later said she had:
...a really bad education. I couldn't write, spell, or read, so it was a real problem, because that sort of thing wasn't acknowledged then. There was a real shame in it, and you were the dunce of the class, always getting whacked around the head. We were on the move a lot as well, so going to so many schools, always being the new girl, it was so frightening and so nerve-wracking as a kid, and it really affected me.[4]
As a teenager, she worked as an apprentice hairdresser and studied Stanislavski's method approach to acting at a fledgling studio, the Chelsea Actors' Workshop, in London,[5] then she was accepted into the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where she graduated in 1965.[6]
An accomplished stage actress, Hale made her professional debut at Stratford as a walk-on. She appeared in repertory theatre at Canterbury, Windsor and Ipswich, then at the Playhouse, Liverpool in 1967, where her parts included the title role in Gigi and Juliet in Romeo and Juliet. At the Thorndike Theatre in Leatherhead in October 1975, she played Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion, followed by an acclaimed portrayal of Nina in Chekhov's The Seagull at the Playhouse in July 1976, making her West End debut in the production when it transferred to the Duke of York's Theatre in August 1976.[7] Other roles included Marie Caroline David in The Tribades (Hampstead Theatre Club, May 1978); Melanie in Boo Hoo (Open Space Theatre, July 1978); and Bobbi Michele in Neil Simon's Last of the Red Hot Lovers (Royal Exchange, Manchester, April 1979 – transferring to the Criterion Theatre in November 1979).
In 1981, Hale played the leading role of Josie in Nell Dunn's play Steaming at the Comedy Theatre in London and received a nomination for a 1981 Olivier Award.[8] In 1982, she appeared with Annette Crosbie and Richard O'Callaghan in a production of Noël Coward's Star Quality at the Theatre Royal, Bath. In April 1983 she starred opposite Glenda Jackson and Gary Oldman in Summit Conference at the Lyric Theatre, London, playing Benito Mussolini's mistress Clara Petacci. Later that year, she starred with Colin Blakely, Jane Carr and Paul Eddington in the play Lovers Dancing, directed by Donald McWhinnie, at the Noël Coward Theatre. She followed with roles in two productions at The Old Vic: Aricia in Phédre (1984) and Crystal Allen in The Women (1985).
In 1991, Hale starred opposite Glenda Jackson in Mourning Becomes Electra by Eugene O'Neill,at the Glasgow Citizens Theatre. In 1993, she appeared in a production of Alan Ayckbourne's Absurd Person Singular at the Theatre Royal, Bath. In 1994, she appeared opposite Rupert Everett in a production of Tennessee Williams' The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore at the Glasgow Citizens Theatre. In 1997, she appeared opposite Alan Bates in Life Support by Simon Gray at the Aldwych Theatre in London. Critic Sheridan Morley wrote in The New York Times that Hale, as the bed-bound Gwen, was "supremely touching even in almost total paralysis".[9]
Other notable stage appearances include The Guardsman at the Noël Coward Theatre (2000), where critic Sheridan Morley noted that Hale added "superbly timed comic support",[10] Semi-Monde at the Lyric Theatre (2001), Britannicus and as Madame Ranevsky in The Cherry Orchard at the Glasgow Citizens Theatre (both 2002), and Chéri and Take a Chance on Me at the New End Theatre (both 2003).
Hale's most recent stage role was that of Nell in a production of Samuel Beckett's Endgame at the Gate Theatre, Dublin and then the Barbican Centre, London, as part of the Beckett Centenary Festival in May 2006.
Hale made her film debut in the historical drama Eagle in a Cage (1971) as Betsy Balcombe, opposite Kenneth Haigh as Napoléon Bonaparte. In his review for The New York Times, film critic Roger Greenspun noted that, at age 24, Hale displayed "a kind of mature intensity that argues for at least 30 years' experience on the stage".[11]
Hale appeared as Alma Mahler in Ken Russell's Mahler (1974), opposite Robert Powell as Gustav Mahler. Her performance was called "excellent" by both Time Out and Radio Times, and earned her the 1975 BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles.[12][13][14] In his review for Film Comment, critic Stephen Farber wrote:
Georgina Hale gives an electric performance as Alma. She is touchingly vulnerable in all the flashback sequences, while in the scenes on the train she presents a completely different side of Alma’s character-a supremely bitter, savagely sarcastic shrew. Alma’s imperious, ice-cold facade is the mask she has chiseled to conceal her frustration and disappointment over the stifling of her creative potential. The tension is palpable: We can feel the anger and pain seething beneath her sardonic exterior.[15]
Hale also made appearances in a number of Russell's other films, with roles in The Devils (1971), The Boy Friend (1971), Lisztomania (1975), Valentino (1977), and Treasure Island (1995). Russell later referred to Hale as "an actress of such sensitivity that she can make the hair rise on your arms".[16]
Hale played a supporting role in the romantic drama The World is Full of Married Men (1979), based on the novel of the same name by Jackie Collins. Variety noted that Hale was "effective as a laconic wife who’s come to terms with the sexcess scene".[17]
Hale had a small role in the film The Watcher in the Woods (1980), starring Bette Davis. Hale took the role of the younger version of Davis' character largely because of her admiration for Davis.[18]
Her other film appearances include supporting roles in Butley (1974), Sweeney 2 (1978), McVicar (1980), Castaway (1986), Preaching to the Perverted (1997), Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont (2005), and Cockneys vs Zombies (2011).
Hale's television career spans six decades. Her first major television appearances were supporting roles in plays filmed for The Wednesday Play, ITV Playhouse and ITV Play of the Week. Recurring roles in primetime series followed, first opposite Adam Faith in the second series of Budgie (1972) as his wayward wife, and then as Lili Dietrich in the miniseries The Strauss Family (1972).
In 1973, she starred in A.D.A.M. as a physically disabled woman who develops an unusual relationship with the sentient computer system that controls her home. Directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg, the drama was broadcast as part of the ITV Sunday Night Drama anthology strand. In 1975, Hale appeared in two television plays written by Simon Gray, broadcast as part of the ITV series Play for Today. These were Plaintiffs and Defendants and Two Sundays. In 1978, Hale appeared with Michael Gambon in the BBC Play of the Month adaptation of Anton Chekhov's The Seagull. In 1980, Hale portrayed Ruth Ellis, the last woman to be hanged in the UK, in an episode of the drama series Ladykillers.
In 1990, Hale succeeded Elizabeth Estensen in the eponymous role of T-Bag, the villainous, tea-drinking sorceress in a succession of children's adventure series produced by Thames Television. Hale played the role in four series and two Christmas specials broadcast between 1990 and 1992.
In December 1992, Hale appeared in two television plays produced by Simon Curtis, broadcast as part of the anthology series Performance. These were Luigi Pirandello's Six Characters in Search of an Author and Terence Rattigan's After the Dance.
In 1994, Hale appeared in the sitcom pilot The Honeymoon's Over, written by Paul Whitehouse and Charlie Higson, broadcast as part of the Comic Asides anthology strand on BBC Two.
In 2007, Hale made a guest appearance in the crime drama The Commander. Television critic Nancy Banks-Smith noted in The Guardian that Hale "was able to do wonders with a mere sliver of a scene".[19]
Other notable television appearances include guest starring roles in Upstairs, Downstairs (1975), Minder (1980), Hammer House of Horror (1980), the Doctor Who serial The Happiness Patrol (1988), One Foot in the Grave (1990), Murder Most Horrid (1994), The Bill (2002), Emmerdale (2006), Hollyoaks (2010–2011) and Holby City (2016).
Year | Title | Role | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1971 | The Devils | Phillippe Trincant | Ken Russell | |
The Boy Friend | Fay | Ken Russell | ||
1972 | Eagle in a Cage | Betsy Balcombe | Fielder Cook | |
1973 | The Love Ban | Joyce | Ralph Thomas | |
1974 | Mahler | Alma Mahler | Ken Russell | BAFTA Film Award for Newcomer to Leading Film Roles |
Butley | Carol Heasman | Harold Pinter | ||
1975 | Lisztomania | Ken Russell | uncredited appearance | |
1976 | Voyage of the Damned | Lotte Schulman | Stuart Rosenberg | |
1977 | Valentino | Ken Russell | uncredited appearance | |
1978 | Sweeney 2 | Switchboard Girl | Tom Clegg | |
1979 | The World Is Full of Married Men | Lori Grossman | Robert Young | |
1980 | The Watcher in the Woods | Young Mrs Aylwood | John Hough | |
McVicar | Kate | Tom Clegg | ||
1981 | The French Lieutenant's Woman | Actress at Wrap Party | Karel Reisz | |
Waiting Room | The Woman | Anwar Kawadri | short film | |
1986 | Castaway | Sister Saint Margaret | Nicolas Roeg | |
1988 | Dogplant | Professor | Joe Fordham | Short film |
1991 | A Future in Fish | Mother | Jon East | Short film |
1994 | Beyond Bedlam | Sister Romulus | Vadim Jean | |
1995 | Jackson: My Life... Your Fault | Josephine | Duncan Roy | |
1997 | Preaching to the Perverted | Miss Wilderspin | Stuart Urban | |
1998 | Gamal Abd El Naser | Lady Eden | Anwar Kawadri | |
2002 | AKA | Elizabeth of Lithuania | Duncan Roy | |
2003 | Photo Finish | Therapist | Douglas McFerran | |
2005 | Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont | Shirley Burton | Dan Ireland | |
2011 | Cockneys vs Zombies | Doreen | Matthias Hoene | |
2015 | Angel | Iris | Ray Burdis |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1966 | Way off Beat | Jill | The Wednesday Play |
1967 | Cross My Heart and Hope She'll Die | Ruth | Drama '67 |
Strike Pay | Maud Wharmby | ITV Play of the Week: Stories of D.H. Lawrence | |
1968 | The Judge | Pat Dean | ITV Playhouse |
Camille 68 | Nanine | ITV Playhouse | |
1969 | The Back of Beyond | Enid Clarke | W. Somerset Maugham (BBC series) |
Men of Iron | Mary Ann | Plays of Today (BBC) | |
1970 | Special Branch | Lisa | Episode: Love from Doris |
Menace | The Girl | episode: Who's Been Sleeping in My Bed? | |
1971-1972 | Budgie | Jean | episodes: Out, Brains, Dreaming of Thee, and And the Lord Taketh Away |
1972 | The Strauss Family | Lili Dietrich | miniseries |
1973 | A.D.A.M. | Jean Empson | ITV Sunday Night Theatre |
Only Make Believe | Sandra George | Play for Today (BBC) | |
1974 | Electra | Chrysothemis | Play of the Month (BBC) |
Notorious Woman | Solange Dudevant-Sand | ||
Occupations | Polya | ||
Affairs of the Heart | Lola Skinner | episode: Adela | |
1975 | Plaintiffs and Defendants | Joanna | Play for Today |
Two Sundays | Hilary | Play for Today | |
Children of the Sun | Fran | Play for Today | |
Upstairs, Downstairs | Violet Marshall | episode: An Old Flame | |
Affairs of the Heart | Daisy Miller | episode: Daisy | |
1976 | The Author of Beltraffio | Beatrice Ambient | |
East Lynne | Afy Halljohn | ||
1977 | The Late Wife | Andrea | ITV Sunday Night Drama |
1978 | The Seagull | Masha | Play of the Month |
1980 | Minder | Renee | episode: The Beer Hunter |
Lady Killers | Ruth Ellis | Episode: Lucky, Lucky Thirteen | |
Hammer House of Horror | Stella | episode: The Mark of Satan | |
1981 | Eden End | Lilian Kirby | Celebrity Playhouse |
1987 | Boon | Alison | episode: A Fistful of Pesetas |
1988 | Doctor Who | Daisy K | The Happiness Patrol, episodes 1, 2 and 3 |
Gems | Lynne | 36 episodes, series 3 | |
1989 | Murder by Moonlight | Allison Quinney | TV film |
1990 | T-Bag and the Pearls of Wisdom | Tabatha Bag | |
One Foot in the Grave | April Bluett | episode: Love and Death | |
T-Bag's Christmas Ding Dong | Tabatha Bag | ||
1991 | T-Bag and the Rings of Olympus | Tabatha Bag | |
Magic | Andrea Watson | ||
T-Bag's Christmas Turkey | Tabatha Bag | ||
1992 | The Count of Solar | Countess Solar | Screen Two |
T-Bag and the Sunstones of Montezuma | Tabatha Bag | ||
After the Dance | Moya Lexington | Performance | |
Take off with T-Bag | Tabatha Bag | ||
Six Characters in Search of an Author | Leading Actress | Performance | |
1993 | The Detectives | Irene Mazola | episode: Strangers in Paradise |
1994 | Murder Most Horrid | Lady Jamieson | episode: A Severe Case of Death |
The Bill | Julie Stone | episodes: Living Legend and Inquest | |
The Honeymoon's Over | Norma | sitcom pilot for BBC Two | |
1995 | Treasure Island | Mrs. Hawkins | TV film |
Crown Prosecutor | Maureen Sherman | 1 episode | |
1998 | A Rather English Marriage | Sabrina's Maid | TV film |
2000 | Casualty | Janet Henbury | episode: Choked |
2002 | Trial and Retribution | Tammy Delaney | 1 episode |
The Bill | Marilyn Costello | episodes: Code of Conduct, Seeing Red, and Little White Lies | |
2006 | Emmerdale | Beryl Chugspoke | 4 episodes |
2007 | The Commander | Vivienne Littlewood | episode: The Devil You Know |
2010–2011 | Hollyoaks | Blanche Longford | recurring role, 7 episodes |
2012 | Crime Stories | Sally Woods | 1 episode |
2016 | Holby City | Serephina Moore | episode: On the Ropes |
Year | Title | Role | Venue |
---|---|---|---|
1975 | Pygmalion | Eliza Doolittle | Thorndike Theatre, Leatherhead |
1976 | The Seagull | Nina | Duke of York's Theatre |
1978 | The Tribades | Marie Caroline David | Hampstead Theatre |
Boo Hoo | Melanie | Open Space Theatre | |
1979 | Last of the Red Hot Lovers | Bobbi Michele | Royal Exchange, Manchester and Criterion Theatre |
1981 | Steaming | Josie | Comedy Theatre |
1982 | Summit Conference | Clara Petacci | Lyric Theatre |
Star Quality | Theatre Royal, Bath | ||
1983 | Lovers Dancing | Cheryl | Albery Theatre |
1984 | Phèdre | Aricia | The Old Vic |
1985 | The Women | Crystal Allen | The Old Vic |
Copperhead | Lucille | Bush Theatre | |
1988 | Ear, Nose & Throat | Mavis | Theatre Royal, Brighton |
1991 | Mourning Becomes Electra | Lavinia Mannon | Glasgow Citizens Theatre |
1993 | Absurd Person Singular | Marion Brewster-Wright | Theatre Royal, Bath |
1994 | The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore | Witch of Capri | Glasgow Citizens Theatre |
1997 | Life Support | Gwen | Aldwych Theatre |
2000 | The Guardsman | Mother | Albery Theatre |
2001 | Semi-Monde | Suzanne Fellini | Lyric Theatre |
2002 | Britannicus | Albina | Glasgow Citizens Theatre |
The Cherry Orchard | Madame Ranevsky | Glasgow Citizens Theatre | |
2003 | Chéri | Mademoiselle Poussier | New End Theatre |
Take a Chance on Me | Lorraine | New End Theatre | |
2006 | Endgame | Nell | Gate Theatre and Barbican Centre |
Awards and achievements | ||
---|---|---|
BAFTA Award | ||
Preceded by | Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles for Mahler 1974 |
Succeeded by |
BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles | |
---|---|
Most Promising Newcomer to Film |
|
Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles |
|
Most Outstanding Newcomer to Leading Film Roles |
|
Most Outstanding Newcomer to Film |
|
General | |
---|---|
National libraries | |
Other |
|