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Away from work, Duff likes to spend time hiking, camping, and hill-climbing.<ref name="WondMag18">Mueller, Matt; [http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/features/duff_stuff/ "Duff Stuff"] ''WonderlandMagazine.com'', issue 18, April/May 2009 (Retrieved: 31 July 2009)</ref> She also enjoys baking cakes round at her brother's house, particularly as a way of dealing with stress.<ref name="WondMag18"/>
Away from work, Duff likes to spend time hiking, camping, and hill-climbing.<ref name="WondMag18">Mueller, Matt; [http://www.wonderlandmagazine.com/features/duff_stuff/ "Duff Stuff"] ''WonderlandMagazine.com'', issue 18, April/May 2009 (Retrieved: 31 July 2009)</ref> She also enjoys baking cakes round at her brother's house, particularly as a way of dealing with stress.<ref name="WondMag18"/>


She married Scottish actor [[James McAvoy]] on 18th October 2006 and gave birth to their first child, their son in 2010
She married Scottish actor and fellow former ''Shameless'' star [[James McAvoy]] on 18th October 2006 and gave birth to their first child, their son in 2010.


==Awards==
==Awards==

Revision as of 17:46, 1 August 2011

Anne-Marie Duff
Duff at the 60th British Academy Film Awards in February 2007
Born (1970-10-08) 8 October 1970 (age 54)
Chiswick,[1] London, England, UK
Years active1995–present
Spouse(s)James McAvoy
(2006–present) (1 Child - Boy)

Anne-Marie Duff (born 8 October 1970) is an English actress best known for playing Fiona Gallagher in Shameless, and Elizabeth I in The Virgin Queen.

Early life

Duff was born on 8 October 1970, the younger of two children of Irish immigrants – her father was a painter and decorator and her mother worked in a shoe shop. The family lived on the Southall estate in West London and Anne-Marie went to a comprehensive school. At an early age, Anne-Marie attended a local youth theatre in order to battle her shy nature and soon became hooked on the stage.

In her mid-teens, involved in an amateur theatre company, she began to think seriously about applying to drama schools. Her first application was rejected. “At the time, I was desperately unhappy about it, but I just wasn’t polished. I got too nervous in the audition. It wasn’t a world I was familiar with…” So she went away and did some more A levels and studied Film and Theatre Studies.

At the age of 19 she ended up alongside John Simm, Anastasia Hille and her good friend, Paul Bettany at the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design Drama Centre, London.[2]

Career

Duff was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award in 2000, but first became well known as Fiona in the television programme Shameless, and for her portrayal of Elizabeth I of England in the lavish 2005 BBC television miniseries, The Virgin Queen which also starred Joanne Whalley and Tara FitzGerald. In 2007 she was one of nine female celebrities to take part in the What's it going to take? campaign promoting awareness of domestic abuse in the United Kingdom.

She also played Julia Stanely in Nowhere Boy, playing John Lennon's mother. The film is about John Lennon's teenage years.

In The Last Station, a biopic about the events before Count Leo Tolstoy's death (the French title of the film being Tolstoy's last autumn), she played Sasha, the much devoted daughter.

An accomplished theatre actor, she has worked extensively with the Royal National Theatre and also in London's West End (Vassa, Collected Stories). Credits at the National Theatre include Collected Stories, King Lear and most recently the title character in Marianne Elliott's production of Bernard Shaw's Saint Joan to great acclaim.[3][4]

From March to June 2011, she will play Alma Rattenbury in Rattigan's final play Cause Célèbre at The Old Vic directed by Thea Sharrock.[5]

Personal life

Away from work, Duff likes to spend time hiking, camping, and hill-climbing.[6] She also enjoys baking cakes round at her brother's house, particularly as a way of dealing with stress.[6]

She married Scottish actor and fellow former Shameless star James McAvoy on 18th October 2006 and gave birth to their first child, their son in 2010.

Awards

BAFTA
  • 2010: Best Supporting Actress for Nowhere Boy — nominated
  • 2007: Best Actress for The Virgin Queen (2005) — nominated
  • 2006: Best Actress for Shameless (2004) — nominated
  • 2005: Best Actress for Shameless (2004) — nominated
BAFTA Cymru
Broadcasting Press Guild
  • 2005: Best Actress for Shameless (2004) — winner
Evening Standard British Film Awards
Irish Film and Television Awards
  • 2008: Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Feature Film for Garage (2007) — nominated
  • 2007: Best Actress in a Lead Role in Television for The Virgin Queen (2005) — nominated
  • 2005: Best Actress in Television for Shameless (2004) — nominated
  • 2004: Best Actress in a TV Drama for Shameless (2004) — winner
Royal Television Society
  • 2006: Best Female Actor for Shameless (2004) — nominated

Filmography

Film

Television

Theatre

  • Cause Célèbre … Alma Rattenbury; 2011
  • Saint Joan … Joan; 2007
  • The Soldier's Fortune … Lady Dunce; 2007
  • Days of Wine and Roses … Mona; 2005
  • The Playboy Of The Western World … Pegín maidhc; 2004
  • The Daughter In Law … Minnie; 2002
  • A Doll's House … Nora; 2000
  • Collected Stories … Lisa; 1999–2000
  • Vassa … Lyudmila; 1999
  • King Lear … Cordelia; 1997–98
  • War and Peace … Natasha; 1996
  • Peter Pan … Wendy; 1995–96
  • La Grande Magia … Amelia; 1995
  • The Mill on the Floss … First Maggie; 1994
  • Uncle Silas … Maud Ruthyn; 1994

Radio and audio

  • Kingdom of the Golden Dragon … narrator; 2007, radio drama
  • Look Back in Anger … Alison; 2006, rehearsed reading
  • The Possessed … Liza/Marya; 2006, radio drama
  • The Queen at 80 … narrator; 2006, radio series
  • Othello … Desdemona; 2005, audiobook
  • Ears Wide Open … Diane; 2005
  • Jane Eyre … narrator; 2004
  • Life Half Spent … 2004, radio play
  • A Time That Was … 2001, radio drama
  • The Diary of a Provincial Lady … 2000, radio series
  • The Art of Love … Cypassis; 23 May 2000, BBC Radio 4
  • Twelfth Night … Viola; 1998

References

  1. ^ Lane, Harriet; "Real-life romance" Guardian.co.uk, 8 February 2004 (Retrieved: 31 July 2009)
  2. ^ http://courses.csm.arts.ac.uk/drama/students.asp
  3. ^ Billington, Michael; "Saint Joan" Guardian.co.uk, 12 July 2007 (Retrieved: 31 July 2009)
  4. ^ Brown, Peter; "Saint Joan" LondonTheatre.co.uk, 13 July 2007 (Retrieved: 31 July 2009)
  5. ^ Masters, Tim (27 March 2011). "BBC News - Anne-Marie Duff on Rattigan revival". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  6. ^ a b Mueller, Matt; "Duff Stuff" WonderlandMagazine.com, issue 18, April/May 2009 (Retrieved: 31 July 2009)
  7. ^ Masters, Tim (8 February 2010). "Duff and Serkis scoop Standard film awards". BBC News. Retrieved 9 February 2010.
  8. ^ John Preston (4 December 2009). "Margot, BBC Four, review". The Daily Telegraph. London.

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