Niamh Cusack
Niamh Cusack | |
---|---|
Born | Dalkey, County Dublin, Ireland |
20 October 1959
Nationality | Irish |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1984 – present |
Spouse(s) | Finbar Lynch |
Children | 1 |
Parent(s) | Cyril Cusack |
Relatives | Sinéad Cusack (sister) Sorcha Cusack (sister) Jeremy Irons (brother-in-law) Max Irons (nephew) Richard Boyd Barrett (nephew) |
Niamh Cusack (/ˈniːv/ NEEV; born 20 October 1959 in Dublin, Ireland) is an Irish actress. Born to a family with deep roots in the performing arts, Cusack has been involved in acting since a young age. She has served with the Royal Shakespeare Company and performed in a long line of major stage productions since the mid-1980s. She has made numerous appearances on television including a long-running role as Dr. Kate Rowan in the UK series Heartbeat (1992–1995). She has often worked as a voice actress on radio, and her film credits include a starring role in In Love with Alma Cogan (2011).
Contents
Early life
The daughter of the Irish actor Cyril Cusack, she is the sister of Sinéad Cusack and Sorcha Cusack, and half sister of Catherine Cusack. She has two brothers, Paul Cusack, a television producer, and Pádraig Cusack, Producer for the Royal National Theatre of Great Britain. Cusack's husband is the actor Finbar Lynch; they have a son, Calam.[1]
Niamh Cusack originally trained as a professional flautist, winning a scholarship to train at the Royal Academy of Music working as a freelance musician with the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra and Concert Orchestra before winning a place at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama to train as an actress. Cusack left the school after one year without completing the course because she was offered her first professional acting job at the Gate Theatre in Dublin, playing the juvenile lead in their summer play.
Acting career
Cusack was then offered the role of Irina in Kasparov Wrede's production of Three Sisters at Royal Exchange, Manchester, before playing Desdemona in the Royal Shakespeare Company production of Othello opposite Ben Kingsley.
Cusack came to the wider public's attention when she starred as Dr. Kate Rowan in the popular television drama series Heartbeat (1992–1995). Cusack was nominated in the category of Best Actress in a TV Drama in 2004 at the Irish Television and Film awards IFTA for her role in the Cartlon Television TV film Too Good to be True. Niamh was nominated for a Whatsonstage.com Award in 2012 in the Best Supporting Actress in a Play category for her role in Playboy of the Western World at the Old Vic. In January 2013, she was nominated for a BBC Audio Drama Award in the Best Supporting Actress category for The Man with Wings by Rachel Joyce, produced by Gordon House, Goldhawk Essential Productions for Radio 4.
Cusack played Molly Bloom in James Joyce's Ulysses for BBC Radio 4 which aired a new 9-part adaptation dramatised by Robin Brooks, produced and directed by Jeremy Mortimer. The series began on Bloomsday (16 June) 2012.[2]
Other television acting credits also include Always and Everyone (1999–2002), a British accident and emergency medical series; the miniseries State of Mind; and the small but important role of Beatrix Potter in the TV series The World of Peter Rabbit and Friends (1992–1995). She played Wodehouse's Bobbie Wickham in the ITV series Jeeves and Wooster (1990–1993). She played a character in an Agatha Christie's Marple series ("4:50 from Paddington", 2004), and has starred in episodes of Midsomer Murders (2008) and A Touch of Frost (2009) and the film The Closer You Get (2000) alongside Sean McGinley.
Cusack starred opposite Sean Bean in the 1986 RSC production of Romeo and Juliet.[3] In 2007, Cusack appeared in the Victoria Benedictsson's The Enchantment, at the Royal National Theatre,[4][5] and played Alison Ellis in Crestfall by Mark O'Rowe at Theatre503.[6] In 2010, she played Catherine Dickens in Andersen's English, a play by Sebastian Barry.[7] In 2011 she appeared in The Painter by Rebecca Lenkiewicz,[8] and followed it with the role of Edith Davenport in Cause Célèbre by Terence Rattigan at the Old Vic.[9]
In August 2012 Niamh Cusack rejoined the Royal National Theatre to play the role of Siobhan in the stage adaptation of Mark Haddon's book The Curious Incident of a Dog in the Night-Time adapted by Simon Stephens and directed by Marianne Elliott. The show premièred on 2 August 2012. It also starred Luke Treadaway as Christopher, Nicola Walker as his mother Judy, Paul Ritter as his father Ed and Una Stubbs as Mrs. Alexander.
The production, which ran until late October 2012, was broadcast live to cinemas worldwide on 6 September 2012 through the National Theatre Live programme. The nominations for the 2013 Olivier Awards, which recognise excellence in professional productions staged in London, were announced on 26 March 2013; The Curious Case of the Dog in the Night-Time secured the most nominations with eight, including Best New Play, Best Director (Elliott), Best Actor (Treadaway),[10] Best Actress in a Supporting Role, and other categories including Best Set Design, Best Lighting Design, Best Sound Design and Best Choreographer.[11] The show transferred to the Apollo Theatre in Shaftesbury Avenue, London on 1 March 2013 with Cusack reprising her role of Siobhan.
Filmography
Film | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
1990 | Fools of Fortune | Josephine | |
1992 | The Playboys | Brigid Maguire | |
2000 | The Closer You Get | Kate | |
2007 | Matterhorn | Marie | Short film |
2010 | The Kid | 1980 school nurse | |
Hereafter | Marcus' foster mother | ||
2011 | In Love with Alma Cogan | Sandra | |
Television | |||
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1989 | Agatha Christie's Poirot | Valerie Saintclair | Episode: The King of Clubs |
1991 | Jeeves and Wooster | Roberta 'Bobbie' Wickham | Episode: Wooster with a Wife (or, Jeeves the Matchmaker) |
Chalkface | Melanie | 7 episodes | |
1992 | The World of Peter Rabbit and Friends | Beatrix Potter | |
Heartbeat | Dr. Kate Rowan | 49 episodes | |
1998 | Colour Blind | Bridget Paterson | 2 episodes |
1999 | Rhinoceros | Julie Flynn | TV film |
Always and Everyone | Christine Fletcher | 5 episodes | |
2000 | Little Bird | Ellen Hall | TV film |
2003 | State of Mind | Dr. Grace Hazlett | TV film |
Loving You | Chloe | TV film | |
Too Good to Be True | Tina | TV film | |
2004 | Agatha Christie's Marple | Emma Crackenthorpe | Episode: 4.50 from Paddington |
2005 | The Last Detective | Gill | Episode: Friends Reunited |
2007 | Fallen Angel | Vanessa Byfield | Episode: The Judgement of Strangers |
2008 | Midsomer Murders | Penny Galsworthy | Episode: Days of Misrule |
2010 | A Touch of Frost | Sally Berland | 2 episodes |
Lewis | Dr. Ellen Jacoby | Episode: Falling Darkness | |
2012 | Henry IV, Part II | Lady Northumberland | TV film |
Selected theatre credits
- 1985: Othello (Royal Shakespeare Company/Barbican)
- 1985: Mary, After the Queen (Royal Shakespeare Company)
- 1985: Anything Goes (Royal Shakespeare Company)
- 1986: Romeo and Juliet (Royal Shakespeare Company)
- 1987: The Art of Success (Royal Shakespeare Company)
- 1987: Portrait of a Marriage (Royal Shakespeare Company/Barbican Theatre, London)
- 1988: The Tutor (Old Vic, London) – Alongside half sister Catherine Cusack
- 1988: The Admirable Critchton (Theatre Royal Haymarket)
- 1990: Three Sisters (Gate Theatre, Dublin & Royal Court Theatre, London – Alongside sisters Sinead Cusack & Sorcha Cusack & her father Cyril Cusack)
- 1991: The Plough and the Stars (Young Vic Theatre, London)
- 1991: The Phoenix (Bush Theatre, London)
- 1993: A Doll's House (Gate Theatre, Dublin)
- 1995: Indian Ink (West End- Aldwych Theatre)
- 1996: As You Like It (Royal Shakespeare Company/Barbican)
- 1997: The Maids (Donmar Warehouse)
- 1998: Nabokov's Gloves (Hampstead Theatre)
- 2003: The Merchant of Venice (Chichester Festival Theatre)
- 2003: His Dark Materials (Royal National Theatre)
- 2005: Breathing Corpses (Royal Court Theatre/Jerwood Theatre Upstairs)
- 2006: Mammals (Richmond Theatre)
- 2007: The Way of the World (Royal Theatre, Northampton)
- 2007: The Enchantment (Royal National Theatre)
- 2007: Ghosts (Gate Theatre – Notting Hill)
- 2007: Crestfall (Theatre503)
- 2008: The Portrait of a Lady (Theatre Royal Bath)
- 2009: Dancing at Lughnasa (Old Vic)
- 2010: Anderson's English (Hampstead Theatre and on tour)
- 2010: Women, Power and Politics (Tricycle Theatre)
- 2011: Cause Célèbre (Old Vic)
- 2011: The Painter (Arcola Theatre)
- 2011: The Playboy of the Western World (Old Vic Theatre)
- 2012: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (Royal National Theatre)
- 2013: The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (West End – Apollo Theatre)
Awards and nominations
- Nominated: BBC Audio Drama Awards 2013 – Best Supporting Actress for The Man with Wings by Rachel Joyce, for BBC Radio 4
- Nominated: Whatsonstage.com Awards 2012 – Best Supporting Actress in a Play for Playboy of the Western World at Old Vic
- Nominated: Irish Film and Television Awards IFTA 2004 – Best Actress in a TV Drama for Too Good to be True, Carlton TV
- Winner: Received an Irish Life Award
- Winner: Received an Irish Post Award
References
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External links
- Niamh Cusack at the Internet Movie Database
- [1] Niamh Cusack IFTA nominee 2004
- [2] Niamh Cusack at BroadwayWorld.Com
- [3] Niamh Cusack in The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
- [4] Niamh Cusack – National Theatre Company Cast Bio
- [5] Niamh Cusack nomination for BBC Audio Award
- EngvarB from October 2013
- Use dmy dates from October 2013
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- 1959 births
- Living people
- Cusack family (Ireland)
- Royal Shakespeare Company members
- Irish film actresses
- Irish television actresses
- People from Dublin (city)
- Shakespearean actresses
- Royal National Theatre Company members
- Irish stage actresses
- People from Dalkey
- Irish voice actresses
- Irish radio actresses
- 20th-century Irish actresses
- 21st-century Irish actresses