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Harriet Walter

Dame Harriet Mary Walter DBE (born 24 September 1950) is a British actress. She has performed on stage with the Royal Shakespeare Company, and received an Olivier Award, and nominations for a Tony Award, five Emmy Awards, and a Screen Actors Guild Award. In 2011, Walter was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) for services to drama.

Harriet Walter

Harriet Mary Walter

(1950-09-24) 24 September 1950
London, England, UK

Actress

1974–present

Guy Paul
(m. 2011)

Peter Blythe (1996–2004; his death)

Walter began her career acting with the Royal Shakespeare Company in productions of Twelfth Night (1987–88) and Three Sisters (1988), for which she received the Olivier Award for Best Actress. She received Olivier nominations for Life x 3 (2001), and Mary Stuart (2006). Her other notable work for the RSC includes leading roles in Macbeth (1999) and Antony and Cleopatra (2006).


She made her Broadway debut in the 1983 revival of the William Shakespeare play All's Well That Ends Well (1983). She returned to Broadway in Mary Stuart for which she was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play. She reprised her roles of Brutus in Julius Caesar (2012) and the title role in Henry IV (2014), as well as playing Prospero in The Tempest, as part of an all-female Shakespeare trilogy in 2016.


Walter has acted in the films Sense and Sensibility (1995), The Governess (1998), Atonement (2007), The Young Victoria (2009), A Royal Affair (2012), Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015), Denial (2016), The Sense of an Ending (2017), Rocketman (2019) and The Last Duel (2021). On television she starred as Harriet Vane in the 1987 BBC Wimsey dramatisations and as Natalie Chandler in the ITV drama series Law & Order: UK from 2009 to 2014. She has also acted in Downton Abbey (2013–15), London Spy (2015), The Crown (2016), Patrick Melrose (2018), Killing Eve (2020), and Silo (2023). She has earned Primetime Emmy Award nominations for her roles in Succession (2018–2023) and Ted Lasso (2020–2023).

Early life[edit]

Walter was born in London, England. She is the niece of British actor Sir Christopher Lee, being the daughter of his elder sister Xandra Lee. On her father's side, Walter is a great-great-great-great-granddaughter of John Walter, founder of The Times.[1][2] She was educated at Cranborne Chase School. After turning down a university education, she was rejected by five drama schools before being admitted to the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.[3] Following her training, she gained early experience with the Joint Stock Theatre Company, Paines Plough touring, and the Duke's Playhouse, Lancaster.[4]

Career[edit]

Walter worked with Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) productions Nicholas Nickleby (1980), A Midsummer Night's Dream (1981), All's Well That Ends Well (1981), The Castle (1985), A Question of Geography, Twelfth Night (1988), Three Sisters (1988), The Duchess of Malfi (1989), Macbeth (1999), Much Ado about Nothing (2002) and Death of a Salesman (2015).


In 1987, Walter was made an associate artist of the RSC. Additional theatre work includes Three Birds Alighting on a Field (1991), Arcadia (1993), Hedda Gabler (1996), Ivanov (1997) and Mary Stuart (2005).


Walter made her Broadway debut in 1983, when the RSC production of All's Well That Ends Well transferred there. In 1993, she starred as Biddy in the off-Broadway production of Three Birds Alighting on a Field, for which she received a Drama Desk Award nomination. She returned to the Broadway stage in 2009, when she reprised her role in Mary Stuart. In 2014, Walter starred as Brutus in an all-female off-Broadway production of Julius Caesar and received her second Drama Desk nomination.


Walter's films include Sense and Sensibility (1995), Bedrooms and Hallways (1998), The Governess (1998), Onegin (1999), Villa des Roses (2002) and Bright Young Things (2003). In 1987, she portrayed Harriet Vane in three instalments of the BBC's A Dorothy L. Sayers Mystery, and played Detective Inspector Natalie Chandler from 2009 to 2012 in the ITV drama series Law & Order: UK. Other television roles include Waking the Dead (2001), Little Dorrit (2008), A Short Stay in Switzerland (2009) and Lady Shackleton in four episodes of the series Downton Abbey (2013–15).[5]


In 2016, Walter played Clementine Churchill on the Netflix series The Crown, appeared in two episodes in 2017 in Call the Midwife and had a recurring role on the HBO series Succession (2018⁠–23). In 2020, Walter joined the series Killing Eve.[6][7]


Walter played Brutus in Julius Caesar in 2012, and the title role in Henry IV in 2014, in all-female productions at the Donmar Warehouse. Both productions transferred to Brooklyn's St. Ann's Warehouse in New York. She was set to reprise both roles, as well as playing Prospero in an all-female production of The Tempest, as part of director Phyllida Lloyd's Shakespeare trilogy at the Donmar's temporary, in-the-round, 420-seat theatre next to King's Cross station in 2016.

Personal life[edit]

Walter was in a relationship with actor Peter Blythe from 1996 until his death in 2004.[8] She married actor Guy Paul in 2011.[9]


At the age of 20, Walter became a feminist and went "into political theatre; to try and put as much feminism into the interpretation of parts I was playing".[10] She was conflicted on her damehood and nearly turned it down,[11] but eventually decided to accept because "there are many fewer women [than men] who can sustain a career to the point where they can be named a dame, and that's not through lack of talent. It was a slightly political gesture".[12] She supported the UK remaining in the European Union in the run-up to the 2016 EU referendum.[13]


Walter, who speaks Russian, performed a reading at the 2022 Poets for Ukraine event alongside the likes of Juliet Stevenson and Meera Syal.[14] In light of the 2023 Israel–Hamas war, Walter was one of over two thousand to sign an Artists for Palestine letter calling for a ceasefire and accusing western governments of "not only tolerating war crimes but aiding and abetting them."[15] She condemned the decision to rescind Caryl Churchill's 2022 European Drama Lifetime Achievement Award over Churchill's support of Palestine and alleged anti-semitism.[16]


Walter is a patron of the Shakespeare Schools Festival, a charity that enables school children across the UK to perform Shakespeare in professional theatres; Prisoners Abroad, a charity that supports Britons imprisoned overseas and their families; and Clean Break, a charity and theatre company dedicated to sharing the stories of imprisoned women and transforming the lives of female offenders through theatre education.[17]

1979, Royal Shakespeare Company,

A Midsummer Night's Dream

1981/82, Royal Shakespeare Company, Helena in

All's Well That Ends Well

1987/88, Royal Shakespeare Company, in Cymbeline

Imogen

1987/88, Royal Shakespeare Company, Viola in [20]

Twelfth Night

1987/88, Royal Shakespeare Company, Dacha in A Question of Geography

1988, Royal Shakespeare Company, Masha in 's Three Sisters

Chekhov

1989/90, Royal Shakespeare Company, Duchess in 's The Duchess of Malfi

John Webster

1991, Royal Court Theatre (and Broadway transfer), Biddy in 's Three Birds Alighting on a Field

Timberlake Wertenbaker

1993, Royal National Theatre, Lady Croom in by Tom Stoppard

Arcadia

1999 Royal Shakespeare Company, Lady Macbeth in

Macbeth

2002 Royal National Theatre Paige in by Moira Buffini, co-starring Nicholas Farrell and Catherine McCormack

Dinner

2005, and West End, Mary Stuart by Schiller[4]

Donmar Warehouse

2006, Royal Shakespeare Company,

Antony and Cleopatra

2009, Mary Stuart, Broadway transfer

2010, Royal National Theatre,

Women Beware Women

2012/13 , Brutus in Julius Caesar[21]

Donmar Warehouse

2014, Donmar Warehouse, King Henry IV in .

Henry IV

2015, Royal Shakespeare Company and the Noël Coward Theatre, Linda Loman in

Death of a Salesman

2016, Donmar Warehouse, Prospero in .[22]

The Tempest

Jeremy Hardy Speaks to the Nation

by Noël Coward, BBC Radio 3, 2 January 2000, as Florence Lancaster

The Vortex

, radio play written by Timberlake Wertenbaker and directed by Ned Chaillet, broadcast on BBC Radio 4 7 March 2005 – Catherine.[23]

Scenes of Seduction

(as herself), broadcast on BBC7 on 28 February 2007, episode 2 of 6, duration 30 minutes

Desmond Olivier Dingle

(as herself), broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between 4 April and 9 May 2007, episodes 1 and 6 out of 6, duration 30 minutes

The Arts and How they was done

, broadcast on BBC Radio 4 December 2010 – Livia, wife of Augustus.

I, Claudius

Guest in on BBC Radio 4 on 26 June 2011.

Desert Island Discs

as Mrs. Conway in BBC Radio 3's adaptation of J.B. Priestley's play, broadcast on 14 September 2014.

Time and the Conways

Clamorous Voices: Shakespeare's Women Today (1988). Women's Press,  0-7043-4145-X.

ISBN

Players of Shakespeare 3 (1994). Cambridge University Press,  978-0-521-47734-5.

ISBN

Macbeth (Actors on Shakespeare) (2002). Faber and Faber, London.  0-571-21407-X

ISBN

Other People's Shoes (2003). , London. ISBN 1-85459-751-5. Autobiography.

Nick Hern Books

Facing It, Reflections on Images of Older Women (2010). , London. ISBN 978-0-9566497-1-3

Self Published

Brutus and Other Heroines: Playing Shakespeare's Roles for Women (2016). , London. ISBN 978-1-84842-293-3

Nick Hern Books

at IMDb

Harriet Walter

at the Royal National Theatre

Company Members : Harriet Walter

Facingitpublications.co.uk