Amelia Bullmore

Amelia Mary Bullmore (born 31 January 1964)[1][2] is an English actress, screenwriter and playwright.[3] She is known for her roles in Coronation Street (1990–1992, 1995), I'm Alan Partridge (2002), Ashes to Ashes (2008–2009), Twenty Twelve (2011–2012) and Scott & Bailey (2011–2014). Bullmore began writing in 1994.[4][5] Her writing credits include episodes of This Life,[6] Attachments,[7] Black Cab,[8] and Scott & Bailey.[5]

Amelia Bullmore
Born
Amelia Mary Bullmore

(1964-01-31) 31 January 1964
Occupation(s)Actress
Scriptwriter
Playwright
Years active1987–present
Spouse
(m. 1993)
Children2

Early life and education

Bullmore was born in Chelsea, London,[1][9] to Jeremy Bullmore, an advertising executive, and Pamela Bullmore (née Green), a gardening writer.[10] She has two older brothers, neuropsychiatrist and neuroscientist Edward Bullmore and documentary filmmaker Adam Bullmore.[11]

She studied drama at Manchester University.[1][3]

Career

Acting

Bullmore was part of a cabaret group named Red Stockings, along with Helen Edmundson.[12] While performing at the Contact Theatre in Manchester, a casting director for Coronation Street saw her performance. Bullmore played Steph Barnes in Coronation Street, and was a regular on the show from February 1990 to September 1991. She made brief returns in April 1992 and September 1995.[3][11][13] She worked and lived in Manchester for 10 years, moving to London in 1995.[11]

Bullmore appeared in the first series of the BBC comedy series Big Train broadcast in 1998.

Bullmore appeared opposite Steve Coogan as Sonja, the Ukrainian girlfriend of Alan Partridge in the series two of the BBC2 comedy series I'm Alan Partridge.[13] She also appeared on BBC Radio 4's phone-in spoof Down the Line.[14]

From 2011 to 2014, Bullmore co-starred in the crime drama Scott & Bailey. She also wrote seven episodes of the show.[1][5]

In 2016, she starred in the second series of Happy Valley, playing jealous mistress Vicky Fleming.[15]

Writing

In 2005, Bullmore wrote her first play, Mammals, which was staged at Bush Theatre and went on to tour the UK regionally.[16][17]

In 2013, Bullmore wrote a second play, Di and Viv and Rose, which was staged at Hampstead Theatre.[18] Di and Viv and Rose is about the friendship of three women over the course of 30 years, from 1983 when they are in university to 2013.[19] The play eventually transferred to the West End in early 2015,[20] where it ran at the Vaudeville Theatre before closing in March.[21][22]

Personal life

In 1993, Bullmore married Scottish actor Paul Higgins.[13][23] They met in Manchester in 1992 while they were performing A View from the Bridge.[9] The couple have two daughters, Mary and Flora.[1]

Awards

Year Award Work Result
1997 Writers' Guild of Great Britain Award for Best Original TV Drama Serial (shared) This Life Won
2005 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize (co-winner) Mammals Won[25][26]
2009 Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Ensemble Performance The Norman Conquests Won[27]
2012 Writer's Guild of Great Britain Award for Best Television Drama Series (shared) Scott & Bailey Nominated
2013 Crime Thriller Awards Best Supporting Actress Dagger Won[28]
2018 BBC Audio Drama Award for Best Supporting Actor/Actress The Beard Nominated[29]

Filmography

Actor
Year Title Role Notes
1990–1992, 1995 Coronation Street Steph Barnes 130 episodes
1991 Give Us a Clue Contestant 1 episode
1993 Comedy Playhouse Beth 1 episode: "Stuck on You"
1993 Cracker Catriona Bilborough 2 episodes
1994 Woman of the Wolf Madame Plaisir TV short
1994 Faith Ros TV miniseries; 4 episodes
1996 Frontiers Caroline Poole 6 episodes
1997 Hetty Wainthropp Investigates Karen Parmenter 1 episode
1997 Insiders Paula Green 1 episode
1997 Turning World Social worker 2 episodes
1997 The Bill Tracy Cooper 1 episode
1997 Mrs Dalloway Rezia Warren Smith
1997–2001 Brass Eye Various roles 3 episodes
1998–2002 Big Train[30] Various roles 7 episodes
1999 Tilly Trotter Eileen Sopwith 2 episodes
2000 Jam Various roles 6 episodes
2000 Attachments Lin 1 episode
2001 Linda Green Lucy Cooper 1 episode
2002 The Gist Freda Cooper TV movie
2002 I'm Alan Partridge Sonja 6 episodes
2002 Bookcruncher Bookshop Manageress Short
2003 Hello, Friend Friend Short
2003 State of Play Helen Preger TV miniseries
2003 Coming Up Psychiatrist 1 episode: "The Baader Meinhoff Gang Show"
2004 I Am Not an Animal Winona Matthews (voice) 6 episodes
2004–2006 Donovan Evie Strauss 2 episodes
2005 Festival Micheline Menzies
2006 The Truth Candy's Mother
2006 Sorted Claire Hill 3 episodes
2006–2007 Suburban Shootout Joyce Hazeldine 11 episodes
2007 Director's Debut Tara Vaughan 1 episode
2007 Dalziel and Pascoe Frances Cunningham 2 episodes
2007 The IT Crowd Helen Buley 1 episode
2008 The Whistleblowers Helen Millard 1 episode
2008 Mrs In-Betweeny Emma TV movie
2008 Lewis Caroline Hope 1 episode
2008–2009 Ashes to Ashes[31] Caroline Price 9 episodes
2009 Endgame Gill
2010 Bellamy's People Various roles 1 episode
2010 Agatha Christie's Poirot Judith Butler 1 episode: "Hallowe'en Party"
2010 Jo Brand's Little Crackers Helen 1 episode
2011 Shameless Mildred Fletcher 3 episodes
2011 Lewis Caroline Hope 1 episode
2011–2014 Scott & Bailey DCI Gill Murray 30 episodes
2011–2012 Twenty Twelve Kay Hope 13 episodes
2012 Sherlock Dr Stapleton 1 episode: "The Hounds of Baskerville"
2013 Common Ground Becky TV series short; 1 episode
2013 It's Kevin Various roles 4 episodes
2014 What We Did on Our Holiday Margaret McLeod
2015 Jekyll and Hyde Renata Jezequiel 3 episodes
2016 Happy Valley Vicky Fleming 3 episodes
2016 Power Monkeys[32] Lauren 6 episodes
2016 The Crown Kathleen Sutherland 1 episode
2018 Deep State Olivia Clarke 8 episodes
2019 Gentleman Jack Eliza Priestley 8 episodes
2019 Vienna Blood[33] Rachel Liebermann
Writer
1997 This Life N/A 2 episodes: "When the Dope Comes In", "She's Gotta Get It"
1998 Big Train Additional material (6 episodes)
2000 Jam 1 episode: "fussfussfussfussfussfussfuss"
2000 Black Cab Ten 10-minute TV films (series deviser); 3 episodes: "Busy Body"
"Marriage Guidance", "Tom & Marianne"[8]
2000 Attachments 2 episodes: "Hot Mail", "Plug & Play"[7]
2012–2014 Scott & Bailey 7 episodes: "Sidelines" (2012), "Undermined" (2013),
"Wrong Place, Wrong Time" (2013), "Superficial" (2014)
"Tough Love" (2014), "Fatal Error" (2014), "Lost Loyalty" (2014)
2019-2021 Traces[34] 6 episodes

Theatre work

Actor
Year Title Role Notes
1987 Breaking Rank: Oh Yes We Can by Helen Edmundson Red Stockings Theatre Company (Manchester)[35]
1988 Ladies in the Lift by Helen Edmundson Sarah
1989 The Red Balloon by Albert Lamorisse Pascal Contact Theatre (Manchester)[36]
1989 Be Bop a Lula by Bill Morrison Sharon Sheeley Liverpool Playhouse (Liverpool)[37]
1991 The Threepenny Opera by Bertolt Brecht Birmingham Repertory Theatre[38]
1992 A View from the Bridge by Arthur Miller Catherine Royal Exchange (Manchester)[9]
1992 Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Lady Capulet Royal Exchange (Manchester)[39]
1992 Major Barbara by George Bernard Shaw Barbara Undershaft Citizens Theatre (Glasgow)[40]
1992 Sweet Bird of Youth by Tennessee Williams Heavenly Finley Citizens Theatre (Glasgow)[41]
1993 How the Other Half Loves by Alan Ayckbourn Mary Everyman Theatre (Cheltenham)[42]
1993 All My Sons by Arthur Miller Ann Deever
1993 Inadmissible Evidence by John Osborne Liz Lyttelton Theatre (London)[43]
1994 The Queen and I by Sue Townsend Leanne/Trish Royal Court Theatre (London)[44]
1994 Road by Jim Cartwright Louise/Linda/Claire Royal Court Theatre (London)[45]
1996 The Thickness of Skin by Clare McIntyre Laura Royal Court Theatre (London)[46]
2004 Measure for Measure by William Shakespeare Ensemble The National Theatre (London)[47]
2004 The Crucible by Arthur Miller Elizabeth Proctor Sheffield Crucible (Sheffield)[48]
2008 The Norman Conquests by Alan Ayckbourn Ruth The Old Vic (London)[49]
2009 Circle in the Square Theatre (New York)[50]
2010 Really Old, Like Forty Five by Tamsin Oglesby Cathy The National Theatre (London)[51]
2015 A Christmas Carol Noël Coward Theatre (London)[52]
2018 Circle Mirror Transformation by Annie Baker Marty HOME (Manchester)[53]
Playwright
2005 Mammals N/A Bush Theatre (London)
2007 Ghosts (Henrik Ibsen adaptation) Gate Theatre (Dublin)
2011 Di and Viv and Rose Vaudeville Theatre (London)[20]

Radio work

Actor

Writer

Works and publications

Plays

  • Bullmore, Amelia (2005). Mammals. London: Methuen Pub. ISBN 978-0-413-77522-1. OCLC 82367220.
  • Ibsen, Henrik; Bullmore, Amelia (new translation by) (2007). Ghosts. London: Methuen Drama. ISBN 978-0-713-68577-0. OCLC 891562141.
  • Bullmore, Amelia (2013). Di and Viv and Rose. London: Bloomsbury Methune Drama. ISBN 978-1-472-50857-7. OCLC 843806192.

Radio

  • Bullmore, Amelia (written by); Davis, Julia; McQuarrie, Stuart; Rabbit, Anne; Treves, Simon; Marinker, Peter (2007). "Cash Flow" (Radio program (15 min)). From Fact to Fiction. BBC Radio 4.
  • Bullmore, Amelia (written by); Nighy, Bill; Parkinson, Katherine; Agutter, Jenny; Baker, Sean; Peate, Mary (directed by) (2009). "The Bat Man" (Radio program (45 min)). Afternoon Drama. BBC Radio 4.
  • Bullmore, Amellia (written by); Peate, Mary (directed by); Cunniffe, Emma; Miles, Ben (2009). "The Middle" (Radio program (1 hr)). Saturday Drama. BBC Radio 4.
  • Bullmore, Amelia (created by, written by); Peake, Maxine (2009). "Craven" (Radio program (15 min)). 15 Minute Drama. BBC Radio 4.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Bullmore, Amelia (written by); Crook, Mackenzie (2011). "Family Tree" (Radio program (45 min)). Afternoon Drama. BBC Radio 4.
  • Bullmore, Amelia (written by) (2012). "Craven: Looking for Mr King" (Radio program (45 min)). Afternoon Drama. BBC Radio 4.

Other writing

References

  1. Calkin, Jessamy (2 October 2014). "Scott and Bailey's Amelia Bullmore on acting, baking and her love of Bananagrams". The Telegraph.
  2. Walsh, Alyson (13 June 2016). "Creative women at work: Amelia Bullmore". Thatsnotmyage.com.
  3. Gilbey, Ryan (15 January 2015). "Amelia Bullmore: 'I love choppy waters'". The Guardian.
  4. "Amelia Bullmore". United Agents. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  5. Anthony, Andrew (28 April 2012). "Amelia Bullmore: 'I like to think that I don't look like those people'". The Guardian.
  6. "Writers' Guild Awards 1996 - Writers' Guild of Great Britain". Writersguild.org.uk. 26 October 1997. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  7. "Attachments". World Productions. BBC Worldwide. 2000.
  8. "Black Cab". World Productions. BBC Worldwide. 1999.
  9. Wylie, Ian (29 June 2011). "Back 'home' – former Coronation Street star Amelia Bullmore turned Scott & Bailey cop". Manchester Evening News.
  10. Hume, Lucy, ed. (2017). "Bullmore, Prof Edward Thomas". Debrett's People of Today 2017. London, UK: Debrett's Peerage Limited. ISBN 978-1-786-84310-4. OCLC 985347513.
  11. Gilbert, Gerard (4 March 2012). "Amelia Bullmore: 'My brother calls me the family pornographer'". The Independent. Archived from the original on 7 March 2012.
  12. "Creative women at work: Amelia Bullmore - That's Not My Age". Archived from the original on 7 March 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  13. "Sonja bags a partridge". The Scotsman. 9 November 2002.
  14. Cumming, Michael (2006). "Down The Line - Behind The Microphone". BBC Radio 4. Archived from the original on 14 December 2021.
  15. Carson, Sarah (10 November 2017). "Meet the cast of Happy Valley series two". Radio Times.
  16. Billington, Michael (11 April 2005). "Mammals, Bush Theatre, London". The Guardian.
  17. Benedict, David (5 March 2006). "Mammals". Variety.
  18. Masters, Tim (13 February 2013). "Amelia Bullmore explores female friendship in Di and Viv and Rose". BBC News.
  19. Gruber, Fiona; Bullmore, Amelia (2 August 2017). "MTC Talks: Interview with Amelia Bullmore" (Audio interview). Melbourne Theatre Company.
  20. Billington, Michael (30 January 2015). "Di and Viv and Rose review – female friendship explored with wit". The Guardian.
  21. Bullmore, Amelia (17 January 2015). "Amelia Bullmore: How I wrote my latest play with a little help from my friends". The Independent.
  22. Editorial Staff (20 February 2015). "Di and Viv and Rose announces early closure". WhatsOnStage.
  23. "Amelia M Bullmore: England and Wales Marriage Registration Index, 1837-2005". FamilySearch. 1993.
  24. "Writers' Guild Awards 1996". Writers' Guild of Great Britain. 1996.
  25. "Plays: 2000's. Mammals, Amelia Bullmore". Susan Smith Blackburn Prize.
  26. Hernandez, Ernio (25 February 2006). "Bullmore's Mammals and Kuti's Sugar Wife Share 2006 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize". Playbill.
  27. Gans, Andrew (21 May 2009). "59th Annual Outer Critics Circle Awards Presented May 21". Playbill.
  28. "The Crime Thriller Award Winners 2013". Dead Good. 25 October 2013. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  29. "The List of 2018 Winners". BBC Radio 4. 2018.
  30. Gooch, Victoria (25 April 2012). "Big Train: a cult comedy that proved an early platform for top talent". The Guardian.
  31. Wylie, Ian (29 June 2011). "Scott and Bailey: Amelia Bullmore". Life of Wylie.
  32. McNally, Kevin; Bullmore, Amelia (16 June 2016). "Power Monkeys' Kevin McNally And Amelia Bullmore on EU Referendum Satire" (Video interview). Good Morning Britain. Archived from the original on 14 December 2021.
  33. "BBC - Amelia Bullmore (Rachel Liebermann) - Media Centre". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  34. Cottrell, Imani (18 December 2019). "Amelia Bullmore: The ultimate storyteller | Royal Television Society". Rts.org.uk. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  35. "British Newspaper Archive (including Breaking Rank 1987 production info". Genes Reunited. Retrieved 25 September 2018.
  36. Clark, Anthony; Lamorisse, Albert (7 August 2015). The Red Balloon (1989). ISBN 9781783192748. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
  37. "Amelia Bullmore" (PDF). Troika Talent. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  38. "British Newspaper Archive (includes The Threepenny Opera production info". Genes Reunited. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  39. "Romeo and Juliet". Neil Stuke. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  40. "Amelia Bullmore". The Stage. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  41. "Sweet Bird of Youth (1992)". University of Glasgow Scottish Theatre Archive. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  42. "British Newspaper Archive (includes How the Other Half Loves and All My Sons production info)". Genes Reunited. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  43. Osborne, John (4 April 2013). Inadmissible Evidence (1993). ISBN 9780571300853. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  44. "The Queen & I". Theatricalia. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  45. "Playwright and actor Amelia Bullmore". The Stage. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  46. Taylor, Paul (5 April 1996). "The Thickness of Skin Royal Court Upstairs, London". The Independent. Archived from the original on 30 January 2018.
  47. "Amelia Bullmore CV" (PDF). Troika Talent. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  48. Spencer, Charles (12 February 2004). "When a flawed classic becomes a must-see". The Telegraph.
  49. "The Norman Conquests". The Old Vic. 2008.
  50. Brantley, Ben (23 April 2009). "Unrequited Love, in Triplicate". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  51. "Tamsin Oglesby's Really Old, Like Forty-Five opens at London's National Theatre". Playbill. 3 February 2010. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  52. Shenton, Mark (9 December 2015). "A Christmas Carol, Starring Jim Broadbent, Opens on the West End Tonight". Playbill.
  53. "Circle Mirror Transformation". HOME. 2018.
  54. McEwan, Ian (novel by); Bullmore, Amelia (read by); Hall, Christine (abridged and produced by) (7 September 2012). "Sweet Tooth (episode 5)" (Radio program (15 min)). Book at Bedtime. BBC Radio 4.
  55. Stibbe, Nina (written by); Bullmore, Amelia (reader) (11 March 2016). "Delamere's Meadow" (Radio program (15 min)). First for Radio. BBC Radio 4.
  56. Atack, Timothy X (written by); Bullmore, Amelia (14 September 2017). "The Beard" (Radio program (45 min)). First for Radio. BBC Radio 4.
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