Orla Brady
Orla Brady (born 28 March 1961) is an Irish theatre, television, and film actress born in Dublin. She has been nominated for several awards from the Irish Film & Television Academy for her work in televised programs, as well as starring in the RTÉ/BBC co-production A Love Divided where she portrayed Sheila Cloney, for which she won the 1999 Golden Nymph Best Actress Award. She began her career with the Balloonatics Theatre Company as a touring performer, later gaining her first minor role in television as a bank clerk in the series Minder in 1993. Her first role in film was as Vanessa in Words Upon the Window Pane in 1994. Brady later appeared in recurring roles in a number of US and UK series and in two supporting character roles in the CBS-Paramount series, Star Trek: Picard. Brady appeared in the 2020 list of Ireland's greatest film actors, published by The Irish Times.
Orla Brady | |
---|---|
Born | Dublin, Ireland | 28 March 1961
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1991–present |
Spouse |
Early life and education
Brady was born on 28 March 1961 in Dublin,[1] the daughter of Catherine and Patrick Brady,[2] the second of four children. At one time, her parents were the owners of an establishment called Oak Bar, in Temple Bar, Dublin.[2] She lived in Bray, County Wicklow, Ireland, from birth until the age of seven.[3] She was educated at a Loreto Convent in Wicklow, and an Ursuline Convent in Dublin.
Brady began training in performance in 1986, with a year in Paris;[1] she studied at L'École Philippe Gaulier,[4] and secured a place at Marcel Marceau's École Internationale de Mimodrame de Paris.[5] As she spoke of the time in interview, "there was a lot of clowning around, buffoonery and fencing. It was then that my own style kind of blossomed."[1]
Career
Brady began her career touring with Balloonatics Theatre Company,[6] in productions of Hamlet and Finnegans Wake. On returning to Dublin, she performed the role of Adela in House of Bernarda Alba at the Gate Theatre[7] and Natasha in Three Sisters.[8] After moving to London, she played Kate in Brian Friel's Philadelphia, Here I Come!, which later transferred from the King's Head Theatre to the West End.
Brady was cast in a minor TV role in 1993 and a first film part in 1994[6] (respectively, as a bank clerk in the series Minder and as Vanessa in Words Upon the Window Pane[9]); her first professional stage work was in the role of Ghislane in Stephen Poliakoff's Blinded by the Sun, performed at the Royal National Theatre in England in 1996,[1][10] and she has since developed a career based on both Irish and British located theatre, television and film. These have included the RTÉ/BBC co-production of A Love Divided where she portrayed Sheila Cloney, for which she won the 1999 Golden Nymph Best Actress Award.[11][6]
She also played one of four main characters in the BBC's drama series Mistresses, Siobhan Dillon, a lawyer who struggled to maintain her relationship with husband Hari while also having an affair. Also, she has appeared in RTÉ's Proof, and had roles in films such as Words Upon the Window Pane (1994), The Luzhin Defence (2000), How About You (2007), and 32A (2007).
Since moving to California in 2001, Brady has also appeared in Family Law, where she played Naoise O'Niell, a series that ran for 3 years on CBS. She also starred in Nip/Tuck, a US drama about plastic surgeons (in which she played Dr. Jordan), and starred in Shark as Claire Stark, the ex-wife of James Woods' character. In 2008, she appeared in Firewall, the second episode of the BBC series Wallander.[12] She also appeared as Meredith Gates, a fleecing art collector who herself is conned in the first series of the British series Hustle.
Commencing in 2009, Brady portrayed Elizabeth Bishop, the wife of Walter Bishop and the mother of Peter Bishop in the Fox television series Fringe.[13][6] In 2010, she appeared in the TV series The Deep alongside James Nesbitt, wherein she played Catherine, and starred in the TV series Strike Back as Katie Dartmouth.
In 2012, she appeared in the ITV series Eternal Law as Mrs Sheringham, an angel who fell in love with a human and became mortal, and played Taryn in the Sky One series Sinbad. In late 2013, she appeared as the Countess Vera Rossakoff in the television adaptation of The Labours of Hercules, part of the final series of Agatha Christie's Poirot alongside David Suchet. Brady appeared in a special production in the BBC science-fiction series Doctor Who,[6] the 25 December 2013 Christmas special, The Time of the Doctor (as the character Tasha Lem). In 2014, she filmed Banished, playing Anne Meredith.
In addition to other indie roles, Brady appeared as architect Eileen Gray in Irish director Mary McGuckian's The Price Of Desire, which was in festivals in 2016 (and found a digital distributor in 2020).[6] From 2017 to 2019, she had a main role in the AMC martial arts drama series Into the Badlands as Lydia. Brady had a recurring role in a season of the American Horror Story franchise,[6] portraying Dr. Hopple in American Horror Story: 1984, the ninth season of the FX horror anthology television series.
As of 2022, Brady has had a recurring role in the science fiction television series, Star Trek: Picard — as Laris, wife of the now-deceased Zhaban (Jamie McShane), the two being former members of the Romulan Tal Shiar and now, workers in the wine production and home of Picard at his Chateau.[14][15]
Other notable work
As described in 2013 by artist Jack Vettriano, Brady had modelled more than 25-years earlier for "a series of photographs of dancing couples", and those had "later inspired [his] most famous painting, ‘The Singing Butler’".[16] While in her mid-20's, Brady had spent a day's work being photographed for an artist's guide, The Illustrator's Figure Reference Manual, and was paid about £50, and it was one of these images that led to reporting that Vettriano "owed his composition in part" to that Manual.[17]
Awards and recognition
Brady has been nominated for several awards from the Irish Film & Television Academy for her work.[6] She won the 1999 Golden Nymph award for Best Actress for her starring role as Sheila Cloney in the RTÉ/BBC co-production, A Love Divided at the Monte-Carlo Television Festival.[11] In 2020, Brady was listed as number 43 on The Irish Times list of Ireland's 50 greatest film actors.[18]
Personal life
In 2001, Brady moved to Los Angeles, where she met English photographer Nick Brandt, whom she married in December 2002 in the Chyulu Hills of Kenya. She also has a Georgian flat in Dublin.[19] She admitted in an interview that she originally left Ireland as she found it "a repressive place to be a woman" at the time with little opportunity. The 2015 marriage equality and 2018 abortion referendums, as well as the expanding Irish industry, changed her mind, making her realise "Oh, this is a different Ireland and it accepts me now."[20] Brady had a "Catholic upbringing", but as of 2002 considered herself an atheist.[21]
Filmography
Film
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1994 | Words Upon the Window Pane | Vanessa | |
1999 | A Love Divided | Sheila Kelly Cloney | |
2000 | The Luzhin Defence | Aunt Anna | |
2001 | Silent Grace | Eileen | |
2002 | Fogbound | Ann | |
2006 | Last Night | Lucy | Short film |
2007 | 32A | Jean Brennan | |
2007 | How About You | Kate Harris | |
2013 | Wayland's Song | Grace | |
2015 | The Price of Desire | Eileen Gray | |
2017 | The Foreigner | Mary Hennessy | |
2019 | A Girl from Mogadishu | Emer Costello | |
2019 | Rose Plays Julie | Ellen | |
2022 | The Other Me | Marina | |
TBA | Freud's Last Session | Filming |
Television
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1993 | Minder | Bank Teller | Episode: "Opportunity Knocks and Bruises" |
1994 | The Bill | Amy | Episode: "No Job for an Amateur" |
1994 | Absolutely Fabulous | Nurse Mary | Episode: "Hospital" |
1994 | The Rector's Wife | Sister Josephine | Episode: "1.2" |
1995 | Dangerfield | Diane Foster | 2 episodes |
1995 | New Voices | Ruby | Episode: "The Treasure of Zavimbi" |
1995 | Casualty | Wendy | Episode: "Outside Bulawayo" |
1995–1996 | Out of the Blue | D.S. Rebecca "Becky" Bennett | 12 episodes |
1996 | Pie in the Sky | Kit Kelly de Goris | Episode: "Irish Stew" |
1996 | The Vicar of Dibley | Aoife | Episode: "The Christmas Lunch Incident" |
1997 | The Heart Surgeon | Marcella Duggan | Television film |
1997 | Noah's Ark | Clare Somers | 9 episodes |
1998 | Wuthering Heights | Cathy | Television film |
1999 | Pure Wickedness | Jenny Meadows | 4 episodes |
1999 | The Magical Legend of the Leprechauns | Kathleen Fitzpatrick | Television movie |
2000–2002 | Family Law | Naoise O'Neill | 43 episodes |
2003 | Servants | Flora Ryan | 6 episodes |
2003 | The Debt | Angela Jahnsen | Television movie |
2003 | Chris Ryan's Strike Back | Katie Dartmouth | 2 episodes |
2004 | Hustle | Meredith Gates | Episode: "Picture Perfect" |
2004 | Nip/Tuck | Dr. Monica Jordan | Episode: "Christian Troy" |
2004 | Lawless | Liz Bird | Television movie |
2004–2005 | Proof | Maureen Boland | 8 episodes |
2005 | Revelations | Nora Webber | 6 episodes |
2005 | Empire | Atia | 2 episodes |
2005 | World of Trouble | Joan Denny | Television movie |
2006 | Sixty Minute Man | Kate Henderson | Television movie |
2006 | Jesse Stone: Death in Paradise | Lilly Summers | Television movie |
2007 | Protect and Serve | Dr. Lorna Herrera | Television movie |
2007–2008 | Shark | Claire Stark | 4 episodes |
2008 | Wallander | Ella Lindfeldt | Episode: "Firewall" |
2008–2010 | Mistresses | Siobhan Dillon | 16 episodes |
2010 | The Deep | Catherine Donnelly | 5 episodes |
2010–2012 | Fringe | Elizabeth Bishop | 5 episodes |
2012 | Sinbad | Taryn | 9 episodes |
2012 | Eternal Law | Mrs. Sheringham | 6 episodes |
2013 | Jo | Beatrice Dormont | 8 episodes |
2013 | Agatha Christie's Poirot | Countess Rossakoff | Episode: "The Labours of Hercules" |
2013 | Doctor Who | Tasha Lem | Episode: "The Time of the Doctor" |
2015 | Banished | Anne Meredith | 7 episodes |
2015 | American Odyssey | Sofia Tsaldari | 9 episodes |
2015–2019 | Into the Badlands | Lydia | 25 episodes |
2018 | Collateral | Phoebe Dyson | 3 episodes |
2019 | American Horror Story: 1984 | Dr. Karen Hopple | 4 episodes |
2020–2023 | Star Trek: Picard | Laris / Tallinn | 11 episodes |
2020 | The South Westerlies | Kate Ryan | 6 episodes |
2022 | Death in Paradise | Maggie Harper | Episode: "#11.8" |
Further reading
- Brady, Orla (2022). "Orla Brady" (academy member autobiography). IFTA.ie. Dublin, Ireland: The Irish Film & Television Academy. Retrieved 25 February 2023. Note, this autobiographical work has apparently already been used as a source, without inline citation, in this article.
References
- Philby, Charlotte & Brady, Orla (5 January 2008). "How Do I Look?: Orla Brady, actress, 46" (reporter's biography and interview). The Independent. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 9 May 2008.
[reporter's bio] Orla Brady was born in Dublin on 28 March 1961. She trained in Performing Arts in Paris, before starting her professional career in Blinded by the Sun at the National Theatre. Currently based in Los Angeles, she is a regular in US drama series World of Trouble and NBCs Revelations. Other television credits include Nip/Tuck, Proof, Absolutely Fabulous and Lawless. She is currently filming American legal drama Shark and stars in Mistresses on BBC1 this month. She lives with her husband and they divide their time between LA, Dublin and London. [interview] I went to Paris for a year in 1986 to study theatre; there was a lot of clowning around, buffoonery and fencing. It was then that my own style kind of blossomed...
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Staff of Orla Brady, The Unoffical Fan Web-Site. "Biography". Orla Brady, The Unoffical Fan Web-Site (OrlaBrady.org). Archived from the original on 20 August 2008. Retrieved 9 May 2008.
Orla Brady studied acting at the Ecole Phillippe Gaulier in Paris. Upon returning to Dublin, she won the role of Adela in the House of Bernarda Alba at the Gate Theatre. She is currently working on both sides of the Atlantic with a career mix of television, film, and stage to her credit. / In 1999, Orla played the lead role of Sheila Cloney in A Love Divided. For her role in this critically acclaimed movie, Orla won the Monte Carlo Film and Television Festival's Best Actress award in 1999. She was also nominated for the Irish Film and Television (IFTN) best actress award that year. Besides leading lady roles, Orla has taken on such diverse characters as a hunger-striking political prisoner in Silent Grace, a housekeeper in Servants, a Russian aristocrat in The Luzhin Defence, a veterinarian in Noah's Ark, a homicide detective in Out of the Blue, and a lawyer in Family Law. Along with her first performance in House of Bernarda Alba, Orla has a string of classic roles to her credit, such as Cathy in Wuthering Heights, Natasha in Three Sisters, Pegeen Mike in The Playboy of the Western World, and Ophelia in Hamlet. / Born in County Wicklow, Ireland, Orla has lived in Bray, Dublin, London, Paris, and California. She is the daughter of Catherine and Patrick Brady, who used to own the Oak Bar in Temple Bar, Dublin. In 2002, Orla married Nick Brandt in a ceremony overlooking Mount Kilimanjaro followed by a safari honeymoon. / When she isn't busy filming or off on safari with her husband, Orla likes horseback riding, reading, and has a great love of animals.
- Brady, Orla (12 January 2014). RTÉ Radio (Interview). Interviewed by O'Callaghan, Miriam. Dublin, Ireland: Raidió Teilifís Éireann.
{{cite interview}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - Clarke, Donald (15 September 2021). "Orla Brady: 'I felt Ireland was a very repressive place to be a woman'". www.irishtimes.com. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
When Brady left the nation – first for Paris, where she trained at École Philippe Gaulier – work was thinner on the ground.
- Brady, Tara (30 May 2016). "Orla Brady: from Dublin to Hollywood to kicking ass in the Badlands". www.irishtimes.com. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
Sure, Brady was already well-travelled: she had trained in performing arts at Marcel Marceau's École Internationale de Mimodrame de Paris and later at the L'École Philippe Gaulier in Paris.
- Balfour, Brad & Brady, Orla (11 June 2020). "Actor Orla Brady Brings Masterful Architect Eileen Gray to Life Through "The Price Of Desire"—Director Mary McGuckian's Re-Issued Film" (reporter's biography and interview). IrishExaminerUSA.com. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
[reporter's bio] The Dublin-born Brady has been nominated for several awards from the Irish Film & Television Academy as well as starring in A Love Divided for which she won the 1999 Golden Nymph Best Actress Award. Her career began by touring with the Balloonatics Theatre Company; later she was cast in a minor TV role in 1993. In '94, Brady got her first film part; over the years she has worked with McGuckian and other indie films, but lately she's landed roles (some recurring) in a number of genre US and UK series such as Fringe and American Horror Story as well as being in a Doctor Who special. And most recently she was in Star Trek: Picard.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - "The House of Bernarda Alba". irishplayography.com. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- "Three Sisters". irishplayography.com. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
- AllMovie.com Staff (23 September 1996). "Words Upon the Window Pane (1994) / Directed by Mary McGuckian" (database entry). AllMovie.com. Goshen, NY: Netaktion LLC. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- Wolf, Matt (23 September 1996). "Blinded by the Sun" (review). Variety.com. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- Broadcast Now Staff (1 March 2000). "Brits strike gold at Monte Carlo". Broadcast Now. London, England: Media Business Insight Limited. Retrieved 7 November 2013.
- "BBC One Programmes: Wallander | Firewall". BBC. 30 November 2008. Archived from the original on 6 December 2008. Retrieved 30 November 2008.
- "Meet Mrs. Bishop: Orla Brady Joins 'Fringe'". TV.com. Archived from the original on 13 December 2009. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
- Donaldson, Mark (24 December 2022). "Every Picard TNG Love Interest (Before Laris)". Screen Rant. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart) eventually found happiness with Laris (Orla Brady) at the end of Star Trek: Picard season 2, ending his string of failed romantic relationships... A former member of the Romulan Tal Shiar, Laris and her husband Zhaban (Jamie McShane) worked at Chateau Picard and helped him expose the Zhat Vash, a secretive Tal Shiar cabal... motivated by their hatred of synthetic lifeforms. A year after the events of Picard season 1, Zhaban passed away and left Laris widowed. She continued to work closely with Jean-Luc, and the two formed a closer bond, which developed into romantic feelings for one another. / However, due to Picard's childhood trauma... he [felt he] couldn't pursue a relationship because of his sense of duty. This avoidance led Laris to prepare to leave Jean-Luc, the vineyard, and Chateau Picard's wine behind for good, but his experiences in the past with her ancestor Talinn convinced him to try again.
- Parker, Ryan (4 April 2022). "'Picard' Star Orla Brady Credits Character's Total Sense of Self to "Reasonably Rare" Female Director". HollywoodReporter.com. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
Brady was thrilled to learn that she would return for the second season of the Paramount+ series in a double role as both Jean-Luc's (Patrick Stewart) love interest, Laris, and also as a new character, Tallinn, a mysterious figure who serves as a guide to Picard in the 21st century. / However, the Dublin-born actress is quick to point out... that while fans may be frustrated with Jean-Luc's inability to be happy in love, Laris... is fine and certainly not pining over him... Jean-Luc rejected her romantic advances in the opening moments of this season. However, it is clear he wants to love her in return, but something is holding him back.
- Staff of JackVettriano.com (24 December 2013). "Profile of Orla Brady". JackVettriano.com. Archived from the original on 24 December 2013. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
- Jones, Sam (4 October 2005). "Vettriano brought to book by illustrator's manual". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 20 September 2014. Retrieved 19 February 2020. Note, this article discusses the attribution of the Vettriano painting to the Manual, but it does not mention Brady.
- Clarke, Donald; Brady, Tara (13 June 2020). "The 50 greatest Irish film actors of all time – in order". The Irish Times. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
- O'Doherty, Cara (4 October 2020). "Orla Brady interview: 'I would see certain people walking in the door and blanching'". The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on 4 October 2020. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
- Clarke, Donald (15 September 2021). "Orla Brady: 'I felt Ireland was a very repressive place to be a woman'". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 15 September 2021. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
- Allen Smith, Warren (2002). Celebrities in Hell: A Guide to Hollywood's Atheists, Agnostics, Skeptics, Free Thinkers, and More. Barricade Books Inc. p. 130. ISBN 1-56980-214-9.
Brady had a Catholic upbringing but now considers herself an atheist
External links
- Orla Brady at IMDb
- Orla Brady at AllMovie
- Orla Brady on Twitter