Liz Crowther
Liz Crowther | |
---|---|
Born | Elizabeth Ann Crowther 9 December 1954 |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1966–present |
Parent(s) | Leslie Crowther Jean Crowther (née Stone) |
Elizabeth Ann Crowther (born 9 December 1954) is an English theatre actress. Her father was the actor, comedian and presenter Leslie Crowther and her mother was Jean Crowther, actress and dancer.
Theatre work
[edit]This section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (February 2022) |
Beginning her stage career in 1966, Crowther debuted with London Festival Ballet (now English National Ballet), playing Clara, the lead role in the annual production of The Nutcracker. At the time, she was training at Arts Educational Schools, London, where she studied from ages 10–17. She later went on to train at École Jacques Lecoq, Paris, where she focused primarily on mime and physical theatre.
Since then, Crowther has featured in over a hundred theatre productions, touring in England as well as performing internationally.
Among Crowther's later theatre work are productions of A Passage to India (Simple8 Theatre/Theatre Royal, Northampton/ Park Theatre),[1] Running Wild (Chichester/Regents Park Theatre, UK tour),[2] Oliver Twist (Regents Park) and Kite (Wrong Crowd/Soho Theatre) as part of the London International Mime Festival.
Working with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) in Stratford, Crowther was cast in productions of Middleton and Dekker's The Roaring Girl, John Webster's The White Devil, Massinger's The City Madam and Weiss' Marat/Sade, a 'reimagined' version of Cardenio (Shakespeare's lost play) by Gregory Doran, Song of Song (adapted from the biblical text) and The Witch of Edmonton by Dekker and Ford.
Crowther played the title role in Richard III, performing the show and conducting workshops on tour across the US, with 'Actors from the London Stage'.[3] She has also performed in Romeo and Juliet (Rose Theatre, Bankside, and Globe Theatre), Macbeth (Theatre Royal, Northampton), Twelfth Night and The Merry Wives of Windsor (Regents Park).
Appearing in over twenty-five plays for the same theatre, Crowther's credits at the Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond, include Middlemarch Trilogy, The Memorandum, Bodies, What the Heart Feels, Four Attempted Acts and King Lear.[4]
Elsewhere, Crowther has appeared in Cyrano de Bergerac (Royal Exchange), Blithe Spirit (Nottingham Playhouse), Mr Whatnot, The Elephant Man, Piaf, Wait Until Dark and David Copperfield (Theatre Royal, Northampton), Abigail's Party (Hampstead Theatre & UK Tour), Communicating Doors (Stephen Joseph and Chicago Theatre Festival), The Real Thing (UK Tour), and Be My Baby and Pat and Margaret (Salisbury Playhouse).
Crowther's noteworthy appearances in London's West End include The Country Wife (Theatre Royal Haymarket), Gambling (Royal Court), Onassis (Novello Theatre), Animal Farm (National Theatre) and Ducktastic (Noël Coward Theatre), written by comedy double-act The Right Size and directed by Kenneth Branagh.
In 2023 Crowther played Es in Es and Flo by Jennifer Lunn, a drama about dementia that played at the Wales Millennium Centre and the Kiln Theatre, London, directed by Susie McKenna.
Television and film work
[edit]Although primarily a stage performer, Crowther has also made film and television appearances. She first appeared as Lucy in ABC's 1967 production of The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe. Later, she featured in Shoestring, Watching, Slinger's Day, French Fields, The Dumping Ground, Outnumbered, Mansfield Park, Holby City, London's Burning, Miss Marple, EastEnders and A Very Peculiar Practice. Beyond these appearances, Crowther was a regular cast member in soap opera Family Affairs, playing Annie Hart, from its debut in 1997, until 1999. She also played Sgt Jane Kendall in The Bill for nine months in 1993. Recent television includes: Beyond Paradise, three episodes of Pack of Lies, The Chelsea Detective, Miss Scarlet and The Duke, the Christmas episode of Vera, and Dalgleish.
In film, Crowther has played Romola Garai's mother in The Unicorn (Daybreak Pictures), a short film by Penelope Skinner. She has also featured in Funseekers (Comic Strip) and The Thirty-Nine Steps (Rank).[5] Crowther appears as Beth in the French romcom Jane Austen a Gâché ma Vie which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival in September 2024, followed by the Marrakesh Film Festival in November 2024.
Selected filmography
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1967 | The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe | Lucy | 10 episodes[6] |
1968 | The Queen Street Gang | Philippa | 9 episodes[6] |
ITV Playhouse | Esther | Thirteen Thousand and Eighty Free Pounds | |
1978 | The Thirty Nine Steps | Maid (uncredited) | |
1979 | Hazell | Cynthia | Episode: "Hazell Gets the Boot" |
1979–1980 | Shoestring | Sonia | 20 episodes |
1983 | Mansfield Park | Julia Bertram | 5 episodes (TV mini-series) |
1984 | Play for Today | Doctor | "Dog Ends" |
Tripper's Day | Sylvia | 6 episodes | |
1985 | Miss Marple: A Murder is Announced | Myrna Harris | 2 episodes |
1986 | A Very Peculiar Practice | Antonia | Episode: "A Very Long Way from Anywhere" |
No Place Like Home | Elsie | 5 episodes | |
Slinger's Day | Sylvia | 6 episodes | |
1987 | Bergerac | Carol Miles | Episode: "A Desirable Little Residence" |
1988 | The Comic Strip Presents | April | "Funseekers" |
1988–1989 | Watching | Susan Roberts | 8 episodes |
1989–1990 | French Fields | Jill Trendle | 12 episodes |
1991 | Titmuss Regained | Daphne Jones | 1 episode (TV mini-series) |
1992 | The Bill | Susan Harding | Episode: "Just Send Them Flowers" |
1992–1993 | Growing Pains | Sandra Phillips | 20 episodes |
1993 | A Year in Provence | Georgina | 1 episode (TV mini-series) |
The Bill | Sgt. Jane Kendall | 11 episodes | |
1995 | Ghosts | Nurse Angela | Episode: "Shadowy Third" |
Porkpie | Janice | Episode: "Spend, Spend, Spend" | |
1997–1999 | Family Affairs | Annie Hart | 35 episodes |
2000 | Grange Hill | Carol Wright | 2 episodes |
2001 | London's Burning | Alison Hemmings | 8 episodes |
2006 | EastEnders | Marion | 1 episode |
Holby City## | Iona Morrow | Episode: "The Games People Play" | |
2008 | Outnumbered | Alice | Episode: "The Airport" |
2010 | Lewis | Mrs. Lemming | Episode: "Dark Matter" |
2016 | The Dumping Ground | Mary | Episode: "The End of it All" |
2020 | Shakespeare & Hathaway: Private Investigators | Nelissa Norris | Episode: "All That Glisters" |
2022 | The Chelsea Detective | Nancy Cooper | Episode: "Mrs. Romano" |
Miss Scarlet and The Duke | Maud Skelton | Episode: "The Heir" | |
2023 | Dalgleish: A Certain Justice | Margaret Jackson | 1 episode |
The Following Events Are Based on a Pack of Lies | Joyce Ransom | 4 episodes | |
Vera | Judith Sinclair | Episode: "The Rising Tide" | |
2024 | Beyond Paradise | Penny | 1 episode |
Jane Austen a Gâché ma Vie | Beth | Feature film |
Charity work
[edit]Crowther works with Scene & Heard, a playwriting charity committed to benefiting disadvantaged children in Somers Town, Kings Cross, London, performing alongside other volunteer theatre professionals.[7]
References
[edit]- ^ "A Passage to India". Park Theatre. Archived from the original on 22 November 2018. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
- ^ Crowther, Sacha (5 April 2017). "We chat to Running Wild's Liz Crowther". The State of the Arts. Archived from the original on 26 October 2020. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
- ^ Nichols, Aaron (21 October 2016). "Back at the Mothership: Richard III returns to Notre Dame". Notre Dame Shakespeare Festival. Archived from the original on 1 October 2020. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
- ^ "The Middlemarch Trilogy". Orange Tree Theatre. Archived from the original on 10 January 2018. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
- ^ "Liz Crowther". Holborn, London: Scott Marshall Partners. Archived from the original on 30 August 2019. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
- ^ a b Credited as Elizabeth Crowther.
- ^ "Home page". Scene & Heard. Archived from the original on 10 July 2019. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
External links
[edit]- Liz Crowther at IMDb