Ruth Gemmell
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (February 2021) |
Ruth Gemmell | |
---|---|
Born | 1967 (age 53–54) |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1991–present |
Known for | Utopia Home Fires EastEnders Tracy Beaker Bridgerton |
Spouse(s) |
Ruth Gemmell (born 1967) is an English actress, known for her role in the 1997 film Fever Pitch. She is also known for her work on the television show Utopia as Jen Dugdale and the role of Carly Beaker in the Tracy Beaker franchise. In 1996, Gemmell appeared in eight episodes of the television show Silent Witness as Detective Constable Kerry Cox, then as other characters in single episodes in 2006 and 2014. Gemmell has also guest starred in several shows, including Casualty during 2014 and an episode of Midsomer Murders in 2015. She has been a leading character in the ITV series Home Fires, playing the role of cleric's wife Sarah Collingbourne.
Early life[]
Ruth Katrin Gemmell[2][3] was born in Bristol but grew up in County Durham,[1] England, where she attended Polam Hall School in Darlington, a school for girls.[4] She has three brothers.[4]
Her parents divorced when she was a child and she moved with her mother to Darlington from Barnard Castle. She later moved to London to live with her father and pursue her acting dreams.[5] She trained at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in London.
Personal life[]
Gemmell was married in Westminster, London, in 1997 to actor Ray Stevenson, whom she met in 1995 during the filming of TV drama Band of Gold. The couple divorced in 2005.[6]
Career[]
Gemmell has played a variety of roles mainly in theatres plus TV dramas. She played the leading female role Fever Pitch, based on Nick Hornby's novel of the same name, starring opposite Colin Firth[7] and had another leading role in the comedy/drama 2 January (2006).
In 2004 she starred in Tracy Beaker's Movie of Me as the mother of the title character, who abandoned her when she was a baby, leading her to spend life in a children's home.
From January 2009 she became a recurring character in EastEnders as Debra Dean, the mother of a teenage girl who, identically to her role in Tracy Beaker's Movie of Me, abandoned her daughter when she was an infant.
In August 2009, she starred as Rebecca Sands in two episodes of The Bill.[8]
Gemmell has appeared three times in the BBC's police drama Waking the Dead, playing two different characters. Her first appearance was in 2002 in the episode Special Relationships as DI Jess Worral, a former lover of DSI Boyd. She next appeared in the episode Sins of seventh season in 2008 as Linda Cummings, an exceptionally intelligent serial killer. Gemmell reprised the role of Cummings in Endgame, the fourth episode of the eighth season of the show. The storyline had Cummings manipulating Boyd and revealed that Cummings' accomplice was responsible for the drugs overdose that killed Boyd's son Luke. The role reprisal of Cummings is a first in the show's history.
Gemmell's ex-husband Ray Stevenson has also appeared in the show as consultant child abductor in the episode Fugue State.
Gemmell starred in Episode 8 of Jimmy McGovern's BBC drama Moving On playing the role of Joanne, in November 2010.[9]
In November 2011, Gemmell played Lady Shonagon in the adaptation for BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour of The Pillow Book, by Robert Forrest. She appeared as Jen, the wife of an adulterous civil servant, in Channel 4 drama Utopia, in early 2013.
In 2015, Gemmell appeared in five episodes of the television series Penny Dreadful as Octavia Putney.
In the role of Violet, Dowager Viscountess Bridgerton, Gemmell was a member of the main cast of Netflix's Bridgerton, 2020, and will reprise the role in a second series.[10]
Filmography[]
Film[]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1991 | Who Needs a Heart | Abigail | |
1997 | Fever Pitch | Sarah Hughes | |
The Perfect Blue | Jo | ||
2006 | January 2nd | Claire | |
2008 | Good | Elisabeth | |
2010 | F | Sarah Balham | |
2012 | Storage 24 | Sarah | |
Offender | Cassie | ||
2019 | Cliffs of Freedom | Varvara Vakrinos |
Television[]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1995 | The Bill | Sue Latham | "Woman of Substance" |
Band of Gold | Gina Dickson | "Sold" | |
1996 | Kavanagh QC | Jenny Norris | "Men of Substance" |
Short Sharp Shocks | Kate | "Everywhere" | |
Silent Witness | Kerry Cox | Regular role (series 1) | |
1997 | Peak Practice | Christine Higson | "Home Truths" |
1998 | Macbeth | Lady Macduff | TV film |
1999 | The Bill | Jane Joyce | "Sex, Lies and Videotape" |
The Alchemists | Julia Bannerman | TV film | |
Four Fathers | Nicola Yallop | #1.1, #1.2, #1.3 | |
2001 | Holby City | Diana Calder | "Extra Time" |
2002 | Dalziel and Pascoe | Rachel Waller | "For Love Nor Money" |
Waking the Dead | DI Jess Worrall | "Special Relationship: Parts 1 & 2" | |
2003 | The Bill | Carol Evans | "144: Power Trip", "145: Ride the Tiger", "146: The Law of the Jungle" |
The Inspector Lynley Mysteries | Jeannie Waring | "Playing for the Ashes" | |
Murder in Mind | Liz Willis | "Landlord" | |
Spooks | Miranda | #2.6 | |
2004 | Tracy Beaker: The Movie of Me | Carly Beaker | TV film |
Blue Dove | Jenny Page | TV mini-series | |
2005 | Midsomer Murders | Anne Merrick | "The House in the Woods" |
2006 | The Afternoon Play | Rachel | "Are You Jim's Wife?" |
A Touch of Frost | Christine Harris | "Endangered Species" | |
Silent Witness | DI Beth Ashdown | "Terminus: Part 2" | |
2007 | Five Days | Dr. Tobolska | "Day 28", "Day 33", "Day 79" |
2008 | Agatha Christie's Poirot | Miss Sweetiman | "Mrs. McGinty's Dead" |
Summerhill | Rose | TV film | |
2008–2009 | Waking the Dead | Linda Cummings | Guest role (series 7–8) |
2009 | Trial & Retribution | Kay Satchell | "Shooter: Part 1" |
Primeval | Katherine Kavanagh | #3.3, #3.4 | |
EastEnders | Debra Dean | Recurring role | |
The Bill | Rebecca Sands | "Psychiatric Help", "Reaching Out" | |
2010 | Lewis | Robyn Strong | "Your Sudden Death Question" |
Casualty | Kate Margolin | "No Place Like Home" | |
Law & Order: UK | Mel Garvey | "Confession" | |
Moving On | Joanne | "Losing My Religion" | |
2011 | The Fades | Alice | TV mini-series |
2012 | Inside Men | Rebecca | TV mini-series |
2013 | Father Brown | Martha Quinton | "The Wrong Shape" |
Dancing on the Edge | Lady Winnet | #1.2 | |
Holby City | Amanda Layton | "Only Human", "The More Deceived" | |
Coming Up | Lynn | "Big Girl" | |
2013–2014 | Utopia | Jen Dugdale | Recurring role |
2014 | Silent Witness | Ellie Brooke | "Undertone: Parts 1 & 2" |
Inspector George Gently | Irene Seddon | "Gently Between the Lines" | |
Casualty | DC Monica Darling | "Deadfall" | |
2015 | Midsomer Murders | Diana Carnarvon | "A Vintage Murder" |
Penny Dreadful | Octavia Putney | Guest role (series 2) | |
2015–2016 | Home Fires | Sarah Collingborne | Main role |
2017 | Ransom | Laurie | "Girl on a Train" |
2018 | Doctors | DCI Gail Hargreaves | "Gone: Parts 1 & 2" |
2020 | Bridgerton | Lady Violet Bridgerton | Series regular |
2021 | My Mum Tracy Beaker | Carly Beaker |
Theatre[]
Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|
Betrayal | ||
The Weir | ||
Nabokov's Gloves | ||
The Turn of the Screw | ||
Othello | ||
Measure for Measure | ||
Uncle Vanya | ||
An Ideal Husband | ||
The Winter's Tale | ||
The Second Mrs Tanqueray | ||
The Importance of Being Earnest | ||
A Tale of Two Cities | ||
Death and the Maiden | ||
Coram Boy | ||
Macbeth | Royal Shakespeare Company, 2004–2005 | |
King Lear |
Radio[]
Date | Title | Role | Station |
---|---|---|---|
11 August 2008 – 15 August 2008 | The Pillow Book[11] | Shōnagon | BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour Drama |
8 June 2009 – 12 June 2009 | The Pillow Book (series 2)[12] | ||
30 October 2010 | The Vanishing[13] | Lieneke | BBC Radio 4 Saturday Play |
26 May 2011 – 30 May 2011 | The Spy Who Came in from the Cold[14] | Liz Gold | BBC Radio 4 |
15 November 2010 – 19 November 2010 | The Pillow Book (series 3)[15] | Shōnagon | BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour Drama |
31 October 2011 – 4 November 2011 | The Pillow Book (series 4)[16] |
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b Gibb, Bill "Home Fires star Ruth Gemmell shares an embarrassing encounter". The Sunday Post (7 April 2016). Retrieved 15 March 2017.
- ^ www.findmypast.co.uk https://www.findmypast.co.uk/transcript?id=BMD/B/1967/4/AZ/000487/003. Retrieved 19 April 2021. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - ^ "Ruth Gemmell: Movies, TV, and Bio". www.amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 19 April 2021.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Hardwick, Viv (14 October 2004). "Magic MacBeth". thenorthernecho.co.uk. Retrieved 23 March 2011.
- ^ Macbeth 2004 interview with Ruth Gemmell – dead link
- ^ Koncienzcy, Rebecca (10 December 2017). "Where is the cast of Band Of Gold now?". Liverpool Echo. Reach Plc. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
- ^ Fever Pitch Cast discuss film
- ^ Ruth Gemmell to guest in The Bill
- ^ BBC Press Office Week 45
- ^ https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/uk/lifestyle/a35404502/bridgerton-season-two-plot-lady-violet/[bare URL]
- ^ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – The Pillow Book
- ^ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – The Pillow Book (series 2)
- ^ BBC – Saturday Play – The Vanishing
- ^ BBC – The Spy Who Came in From the Cold
- ^ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – The Pillow Book (series 3)
- ^ BBC – Woman's Hour Drama – The Pillow Book (series 4)
External links[]
- Ruth Gemmell at IMDb
- 1967 births
- Living people
- Alumni of the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art
- English film actresses
- English radio actresses
- English television actresses
- People from Darlington
- People from Barnard Castle
- 21st-century English actresses
- 20th-century English actresses
- English stage actresses
- Actors from Bristol
- Actors from County Durham