Victoria Wicks

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Victoria Wicks
Victoria Wicks 2008.JPG
Born
Beverly Victoria Anne Wicks

(1959-04-18) 18 April 1959 (age 62)
OccupationActress
Spouse(s)
Peter Williams
(m. 1984; div. 2004)
Children1

Victoria Wicks (born Beverly Victoria Anne Wicks; 18 April 1959) is a British actress. She is known for her role as Sally Smedley in Channel 4's comedy series Drop the Dead Donkey (1990–1998), Mrs. Gideon in The Mighty Boosh (2004), and the College Director in Skins (2007–08). Her film appearances include The Imitation Game (2014) and High-Rise (2015). She is an associate of Howard Barker's theatre company, The Wrestling School.

Biography[]

Early life and education[]

Wicks was born Beverly Victoria Anne Wicks in Chippenham, Wiltshire, England, to Brian and Judith Wicks. Wicks's mother, Judith Bates, born 1933, was the second child of the writer H. E. Bates. Wicks is the niece of Jonathan Bates, a sound editor who died in 2008, and the television producer Richard Bates, who produced the television adaptation of The Darling Buds of May. Wicks is a director of Evensford Productions Ltd, the company set up in 1955 to protect and promote H. E. Bates's work.[1][2]

Wicks trained at the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama where she was awarded the Pernod and Bisquit Award for the most promising graduate.

Career[]

Her first job was as acting assistant stage manager at Northampton Rep for a year, before going to Bristol Old Vic, Regent's Park and then the RSC. In 1986 Wicks was in Andy Hamilton's black comedy Tickets for the Titanic, and then went on to play Sally Smedley in all six series of Drop the Dead Donkey.[3] The Mighty Boosh is a radio, television and stage show created by Noel Fielding and Julian Barratt. Mrs Gideon was the Head of Reptiles at the Zooniverse in Series 1. Wicks played Harriet Lawes, the Head of College in series 1, 2 and 3 of Skins.

Wicks joined 'The Wrestling School' in 1996. The company was formed in 1988 for the sole purpose of performing the work of the dramatist Howard Barker. Since joining the company Wicks has appeared in nine plays by Barker, performing in London, Berlin, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Adelaide and also in Rouen, Grenoble, Le Mans and Paris for the co-production of Les Animaux en Paradis, which was performed in French by four British and five French actors. Wicks is an associate of The Wrestling School. In 2010 Wicks was invited to the in New York as guest of Theatre Minima to celebrate a day-long event on the work of Howard Barker.[4]

Wicks played the high priestess of the Sybillines in The Fires of Pompeii, a 2008 episode of Doctor Who. In 2014, she played Dorothy Clarke in The Imitation Game and Susannah Marshall in the E4 drama Glue (2014).

Personal life[]

In 1984 Wicks married Peter Williams (divorced 2004); they have one daughter, Madelaine Rose, born 1985.

Credits[]

Work for Howard Barker[]

  • Concentration and - Premiere readings of at The Print Room, London
  • - Premiere reading at The Purcell Room, South Bank Centre, London
  • - Premiere reading at Lewis Festival
  • - Premiere reading Hampstead
  • The Fence in Its Thousandth Year - Algeria: London
  • - Tenna: Théâtre des Deux Rives in Rouen, Paris, Grenoble, Le Mans.
  • - Cruel Cup, Kind Saucer, The Ring, Blue Shoe, The Drum: London
  • Gertrude – The Cry - Gertrude: Elsinore Castle, Denmark and London
  • - Turner, The Queen: London.
  • - Mrs Golllancz: Adelaide Theatre Festival, Australia
  • Scenes From an Execution - Rivera: Barbican Theatre, London
  • - Mother Placida: London, Birmingham, Copenhagen
  • Uncle Vanya - Helena: London, Berlin, Stockholm
  • - Mrs. Toynbee: BBC Radio Drama
  • - Lyndsey: BBC Radio Drama
  • - The Queen: BBC Radio Drama
  • - Klatura: Marionette Theatre for PuppetBarge

Television[]

Film[]

Theatre[]

Radio[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Estates – H. E. Bates".
  2. ^ Comdevelopment Ltd. "Beverly Wicks".
  3. ^ "TELEVISION VIEW; The News From Britain, Sort Of". 23 July 1995.
  4. ^ "Playwright Howard Barker (UK) at the Segal Center" Archived 9 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine, City University of New York, May 2010

External links[]

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