:Juliet Cowan

{{Short description|British actress}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{BLP sources|date=August 2016}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Juliet Cowan

| birth_date =

| birth_place = Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK

| occupation = Actress

| yearsactive = 1993–present

| spouse =

| children =

|known_for = Hank Zipzer as Rosa (2014–2016)

|television =This Life
The Sarah Jane Adventures
Back to Life

}}

Juliet Cowan is a television, film and stage actress from Northern Ireland. Cowan has had various TV guest star roles in long-running shows such as EastEnders, Silent Witness, and Casualty. Cowan has also had a recurring role in the CBBC show The Sarah Jane Adventures, This Life, and BBC comedy Back to Life.

Early life and education

Juliet Cowan was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland.{{cn|date=February 2025}}

Career

Cowan's first aired acting role was in the 1993 live performance video Raising Hell,{{cite AV media | people=Declan Lowney (Director)| year=1994| title=Raising Hell| time=54:25| publisher=PMI| location=Pinewood Studios, London}} by Iron Maiden, which was broadcast live on pay-per-view television in the United Kingdom and on MTV in North America.{{cite book | author=Wall, Mick | author-link=Mick Wall | title=Iron Maiden: Run to the Hills, the Authorised Biography (3rd ed.)| publisher=Sanctuary Publishing | year=2004 | isbn=1-86074-542-3 |page=298}} She was not credited for this performance, however. Cowan guest-starred in over 20 episodes of The Bill as Julie Saunders, the mother of the boy who accused PC Tony Stamp of sexual assault. She also starred in "The Wench Is Dead", the penultimate episode of the Inspector Morse series, as Joanna Franks, a Victorian woman who is murdered on board a canal boat.

She played recurring characters Nicki in This Life (1997), Carla in Series 7 of The Queen's Nose, air stewardess Polly Arnold in the Channel 5 soap opera Family Affairs (2001), Tanya in Pulling (2003), and Chrissie Jackson in The Sarah Jane Adventures,{{Cite magazine

| last = Arnop

| first = Jason

| title =

| magazine = Doctor Who Magazine

| issue = 387

| pages = 19

| date = 17 October 2007

| orig-date = 19 September 2007

}} making her first appearance in the first episode "Invasion of the Bane" (2007).{{cite web

| url = https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0184588/

| title = Juliet Cowan

| website = Internet Movie Database

| year = 2007

| access-date = 2007-09-20}} She was social worker Josie in two episodes of the series Shameless in 2009. In 2006, Cowan appeared in a short film entitled Goodbye to the Normals. It was a promotional video for Robbie Williams, directed by Jim Field Smith and featuring the song "Burslem Normals".

Cowan has also appeared in television adverts for Danone Actimel (2003 to 2004), Nationwide Building Society (2006), Cadbury (2007), and Cif cleaning products (2008){{cite web

| url = https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0184588/otherworks

| title = Other works for Juliet Cowan

| website = Internet Movie Database

| year = 2007

| access-date = 2007-09-20}} She was a finalist in the So You Think You're Funny competition at the 1999 Edinburgh Festival Fringe.{{cite web

| url = https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0184588/bio

| title = Biography for Juliet Cowan

| website = Internet Movie Database

| year = 2007

| access-date = 2007-09-20}} On 5 March 2009, Cowan guest-starred in Episode 7, "JJ", of the third series of the teen drama Skins. She plays the mother of the character JJ and returned again in the sixth episode of the fourth series to reprise the role. In 2010 she appeared in two episodes of PhoneShop as Lance's wife Shelley, as well as in a Christmas advertisement for Boots; an appearance which has evolved into a more recurring role in subsequent commercials for Boots. Cowan played Sharon Watts's Bridesmaid Nina Hewland in EastEnders on 13–14 August 2012. From September 2012, she acted as Stanley Brown's mother in the CBBC programme The Revolting World of Stanley Brown. In late 2013 Cowan acted as Rosa Zipzer for the new CBBC programme Hank Zipzer along with Henry Winkler. Cowan appeared in an episode of Utopia for Channel 4 as Bridget in July 2014.

2018 saw her play real-life character Tracey Rogers in Killed by My Debt for the BBC. In 2022 she appeared in Dylan Moran sit-com Stuck.{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0csfgjg|title=Stuck – BBC Two|publisher=|accessdate=5 September 2022}}

In February 2023, it was announced that Cowan was added to the cast of the Amy Winehouse biopic Back to Black and would be playing Winehouse's mother Janis Winehouse-Collins.{{Cite web |last=Chrisp |first=Kitty |date=19 February 2023 |title=Amy Winehouse's dad disappointed not to be played by George Clooney in new biopic: 'Eddie f****** Marsan!' |url=https://metro.co.uk/2023/02/19/amy-winehouses-dad-wanted-to-be-portrayed-by-george-clooney-in-biopic-18307252/ |access-date=19 February 2023 |website=Metro}}

Filmography

{{expand list|date=February 2023}}

= Television =

class="wikitable sortable"

!Year

!Title

!Role

!Notes

1998

| Inspector Morse: The Wench is Dead

| Joanna Franks

|

2003

|Bounty Hamster

| Cassie

| Main role, voice

2006 – 2009

| Pulling

| Tanya

|

2007 – 2008

| The Sarah Jane Adventures

| Chrissie Jackson

|

2008

| Beautiful People

|Kathy

|Guest role

2009 – 2010

| Skins

| Celia Jones

|

2010 – 2011

| PhoneShop

| Shelley

|

2012

| The Revolting World of Stanley Brown

| Amanda Brown

|Recurring role

2013

| Fresh Meat

| Chris Nordstrom

|

2014 – 2016

| Hank Zipzer

| Rosa

|Main role

2017

| The End of the F***ing World

| Della

|

2021

| Brassic

| Liz Jones

2022-

|Am I Being Unreasonable?

|Viv

|

rowspan="4" |2022

|The Flatshare

|Gillian

|

Stuck

|Joy

|

Everything I Know About Love

|Joan

|

Prefect

|Janice

|

rowspan="2" |2023

|The Power

|Barbara Monke

|Recurring role

Culprits

|Marian

|2 episodes

2024

|Death in Paradise

|Eloise Mirie

|

2025

|Big Boys

|Eileen

|1 episode

= Film =

class="wikitable sortable"

!Year

!Title

!Role

!Notes

2023

|Falling Into Place

|Sara

|

2024

|Back to Black

|Janis Winehouse

|

References

{{Reflist}}