Draft:Gillian Brown (actress)
{{AFC submission|d|v|u=2A00:23C6:D88E:8901:E16F:CA26:9064:4DC5|ns=118|decliner=Greenman|declinets=20221010194812|ts=20221010172150}}
{{AFC comment|1=Large portions of the submission are unsourced. Greenman (talk) 19:48, 10 October 2022 (UTC)}}
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{{short description|English actress}}
{{BLP sources|date=May 2021}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2021}}
{{Use British English|date=February 2021}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Gillian Brown
| image = File:The Knotty July 1966.jpg
| caption = Gillian Brown during rehearsals of The Knotty
| birth_place = Manchester, England
| alma_mater = Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
| occupation = {{hlist|Actress|singer|writer|composer|director}}
| yearsactive =
| spouse = {{marriage|Geoffrey Larder|1968|1976|reason=div}}
{{marriage|Brian Parrish|1980|1994|reason=div}}
}}
Gillian Brown is a British actress, singer, writer, composer and director, who trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA). In 1963, when she graduated,{{cite web |title=Gillian Brown RADA Alumni Profile |url=https://www.rada.ac.uk/profiles/gillian-brown/ |website=RADA |access-date=2021-03-02}} Brown was awarded the RADA Special Silver Medal.
Early life
File:RADA 1963.jpg Brown, although born in Manchester, spent most of her childhood in Colchester. After several unsuccessful attempts to entertain the other children at the Saturday Morning Pictures, Brown discovered Colchester Repertory Theatre, now the Mercury Theatre, and knew she'd come home. She saw Marie Ney and the late Bruce Montague in Ibsen's Ghosts, followed by a production of Sandy Wilson's musical, The Boy Friend. Brown then joined Colchester Junior Repertory Club and was taught and mentored by Mrs Dorothy Hallett, to whom she owes a great deal...
In 1961, Brown began her RADA training, in the same year as the late Geoffrey Hutchings, Richard Digby Day, Anthony Hopkins, Susan Fleetwood, Eric Allan, Udi Schneewind, Victor Henry and Alaknanda Samarth. Her final productions included playing Mitzi in Milo Sperber's production of Franz Kafka's, The Castle, opposite the late Geoffrey Hutchings, who played K (June 1963) and Sonya in John Fernald's production of Uncle Vanya,{{cite journal|title=Actors in the Making|journal=Theatre World|date=March 1964|pages=24|publisher=Iliffe Books Ltd.}} with Eric Allan as Astrov and Susan Fleetwood as Yeliena (July 1963).
Theatre
Brown is well known for having been a member of the Victoria Theatre company in Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent, for six years, commencing in January 1966: the Artistic Director was Peter Cheeseman and the resident playwright was Peter Terson. During this time, she worked as an actor, singer, composer and director. Brown played the title role in Anna of the Five Towns
During her time at the Victoria Theatre in Hartshill, Stoke-on-Trent, Brown was a member of the permanent company. She worked with, among many others, Susan Tracy, Alan David, Shane Connaughton, Jane Wood, Robert Powell, James Hayes, David Hill, Bob Hoskins, Geoffrey Larder, Susan Glanville, the late Ken Campbell, Anjula Harman, Christopher Bond, Jacqueline Morgan and Charles McKeown.
In 1967, Brown played Beatie Bryant in Arnold Wesker's play, Roots, at the Victoria Theatre. Jane Wood played Mrs Bryant, Beatie's mother, and Susan Glanville played Jenny Beales, Beatie's sister.
Brown directed two plays at the Victoria Theatre: the first, in 1969, was Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs by David Halliwell and the second, in 1970, was Eh? by Henry Livings.
In her role as Norma Elliott, Brown partnered George Costigan{{cite web |title=George Costigan CV |url=http://www.cdalondon.com/os/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/GeorgeCostigan.pdf |website=CDA London |access-date=2020-05-17 |page=2}} in Alpha Beta by Ted Whitehead, at the Man in the Moon Theatre in Chelsea (1987). This was the first London revival of the play since the Royal Court production, starring Rachel Roberts and Albert Finney (1972).
{{multiple image
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| image1 = Anna of the Five Towns - 1969.jpg
| caption1 = Geoffrey Larder and Gillian Brown in Anna of the Five Towns
| image2 = Alpha Beta poster - 1987.jpg
| caption2 = Alpha Beta Poster
| image3 = Alpha Beta still - 1987.jpg
| caption3 = George Costigan and Gillian Brown in Alpha Beta
}}
Theatre award nominations
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| image2 = Ironmistress still - 1989.jpg|thumb]]
| caption2 = Louise Waddington and Gillian Brown in Ironmistress
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Brown was nominated for a Time Out Award for Best Actress for her role as Martha Darby in April De Angelis's play, Ironmistress (1989). This production, which also featured Louise Waddington as Little Cog, opened at the Hill Street Theatre, in Edinburgh,{{cite journal |title=Festival Theatre, Contemporary |date=1989-08-18 |issue=101 |page= 23 |url=http://archive.list.co.uk.s3-website.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/the-list/1989-08-18/25/ |access-date=2021-04-26 |publisher=The List Ltd.}} after which it transferred to the Man in the Moon Theatre, in Chelsea, London.
In 1992, Brown received a London Fringe Award nomination for Best Actress for her role as Teresa Brown in House by Colin Hurley at the New Grove Theatre. Colin Hurley won the London Fringe Award for Best First Play for House. This production was directed by Martin Clunes{{cite web |title=Martin Clunes CV |url=https://www.independenttalent.com/actors/martin-clunes/ |website=Independent Talent Group Limited |access-date=2020-05-18}} for his Big Arts company with Neil Morrissey.
Music
Brown composed the music for The Ballad of the Artificial Mash,{{cite web |title=Peter Terson - Playwright Database |url=http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsT/terson-peter.html |website=Doollee |access-date=2022-08-10}} a musical play by Peter Terson. This agricultural satire, with lyrics by Terson, opened at the Victoria Theatre, Hartshill, on 5th September, 1967. The following year, the television producer, Leonard White, chose the show to be the 400th and final Armchair Theatre production. It was transmitted twice: on 25th July 1968 on ATV Television and on 27th July 1968 on ABC Television.{{cite book |author1=Lez Cooke |title=A sense of place : regional British television drama, 1956-82 |publisher=Manchester University Press |isbn=978-0719086786}} Brown was Musical Director for the television production and taught the songs to the actors in that production. The cast included Stanley Holloway OBE, Alfred Lynch, The Paper Dolls, Mark Dignam, Valerie French and Derek Francis (who played Major Fatstock Gadget). Additionally, Brown played a small part in the television production (The Average Newspaper Reader's Wife). See Leonard White's memoir: Armchair Theatre, The Lost Years.{{Cite book |last=White |first=Leonard |title=Armchair Theatre: The Lost Years |publisher=Kelly Publications |year=2003 |isbn=9781903053188 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0nesK2YgNA8C}}
Brown wrote music and lyrics for the two theatre documentaries she was involved in, at the Victoria Theatre, as well as acting and singing in these productions. In The Knotty, a documentary which opened in July 1966,{{Cite journal| jstor=3206583 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3206583| title=Documentary Theatre at Stoke-on-Trent | last1=Elvgren | first1=Gillete A. | journal=Educational Theatre Journal | year=1974 | volume=26 | issue=1 | pages=86–98 | doi=10.2307/3206583}} about North Staffordshire's famous railway, Brown was commissioned by Peter Cheeseman to write a song to close the first half of the show. "What about?" she asked. "About railways - but not about railways," Cheeseman replied. The song Brown wrote is called Railway Lines.
The second theatre documentary Brown was involved in, Six Into One, opened in July 1968, at the Victoria Theatre.{{Cite journal| jstor=3206583 |url= https://www.jstor.org/stable/3206583| title=Documentary Theatre at Stoke-on-Trent | last1=Elvgren | first1=Gillete A. | journal=Educational Theatre Journal | year=1974 | volume=26 | issue=1 | pages=90 | doi=10.2307/3206583}} This is a documentary concerning the federation of Stoke-on-Trent: the amalgamation of six towns into a single county borough. City status was granted to Stoke-on-Trent in 1925. Brown and Guillaume Oyônô Mbia, who played the talking drum, wrote and performed the narrative songs for the show.
In 1972, Brown appeared as Catherine Tekakwitha in Conversations, a musical revue based on the songs, books and poems of Leonard Cohen, at Hampstead Theatre Club. The show was produced by Greengage Productions, directed by Roger Christian and featured Sean Hewitt, Claire Marshall, John Plume and Brown.
Television roles
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| caption1 = Gillian Brown as Sophie in Colditz - Lord, Didn't It Rain
}}
Brown's first professional television appearance was in 1965, in The Newcomers,{{cite web |title=The Newcomers, 10th Dec 1965 |url=https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/493a733ab12846109106fd8ca2fa281c |website=BBC Genome |access-date=2021-10-05}} directed by David Giles, on BBC Television. She played Ivy from the Pig Marketing Board. As a recent convert to vegetarianism, Brown found this to be a particularly challenging role.
Brown's numerous television roles include Casanova with Frank Finlay,{{cite web |title=Casanova, Episode 6: Golden Apples |url=https://www.paleycenter.org/collection/item/?q=alfred&p=56&item=T:23594 |website=The Paley Center for Media |access-date=2021-10-05}} Colditz - Lord, Didn't It Rain with Christopher Neame, Robert Wagner, directed by Michael Ferguson,{{cite web |title=Colditz: Lord, Didn't It Rain |url=https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/3b94dd3445884f97b9971465fd3c6309 |website=BBC Genome |access-date=2021-10-05}} Grange Hill,{{cite web |title=Grange Hill, 18th Dec 1979 |url=https://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/78a6ae46ebd94ea6b3d4c053de305df9 |website=BBC Genome |access-date=2021-10-05}} The Mayor of Casterbridge with Alan Bates{{cite web |title=Gillian Brown BFI Profile |url=https://www2.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2ba4be5f18 |website=BFI |access-date=2021-10-05}} and Ohica in Doctor Who - The Brain of Morbius{{cite web |title=The Brain of Morbius Cast & Crew Summary |url=https://guide.doctorwhonews.net/story.php?story=TheBrainofMorbius&detail=cast |website=Doctor Who Guide |access-date=2021-10-05}} with Tom Baker, Philip Madoc - all BBC Television.
Selected theatre
class="wikitable" style="font-size: 90%;"
!Year !Title !Role !Company !Notes |
1964
|King John |Blanche |Northampton Repertory Theatre |with Kenneth Gilbert |
1964
|Come Blow Your Horn |Connie |Northampton Repertory Theatre |with Kenneth Gilbert, Nigel Lambert |
1964
|An Ideal Husbnad |Mabel Chiltern |directed by Iain Cuthbertson with Stephen MacDonald |
1964
|Dick Macwhitty |Catriona the cat |directed by Iain Cuthbertson with John Grieve |
1965
|Nerissa |directed by Iain Cuthbertson including short tour |
1965
|The Parliament of Women |The Girl (including two solo songs) |New Theatre, Cardiff |directed by Minos Volonakis music by Yannis Markopoulos with Bernard Lloyd, Sheila Hancock |
1966
|Sing an Arful Story |Various acting and singing roles |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |written by Peter Terson directed by Peter Cheeseman |
1966
|Ticket-of-Leave Man |Sam Willoughby |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent | |
1966
|The Pot of Gold |Staphyla |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |with Ken Campbell |
1966
|The Knotty |Various, including commissioned original song Railway Lines: words and music by Gillian Brown |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |directed by Peter Cheeseman |
1966
|Fallen Angels |Julia |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |with Anjula Harman, Ellis Dale |
1966
|Yeliena |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent | |
1966
|Cathy (lead) |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |directed by Peter Cheeseman |
1967
|Roots |Beatie Bryant (lead) |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |with Jane Wood, Susan Glanville, James Hayes, Terence Davies |
1967
|Mrs Lumpkin |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |with Robert Powell, Ken Campbell |
1967
|The Ballad of the Artificial Mash |Singer/Narrator + wrote all music |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |directed by Peter Cheeseman Repeated in 1968 on ATV Television as 400th Armchair Theatre production, produced by Leonard White and starring Stanley Holloway |
1968
|The Promise |Lika |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |with Shane Connaughton, Geoffrey Larder directed by Ken Campbell |
1968
|Lady Capulet |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |with Susan Glanville |
1969
|Anna (lead) |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |directed by Peter Cheeseman with Geoffrey Larder, Anjula Harman, Brian Young, Susan Tracy |
1970
|The Daughter-in-law |Minnie |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |directed by Peter Cheeseman |
1970
|The Affair at Bennett's Hill |Sylvia |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |directed by Peter Cheeseman with Jacqueline Morgan |
1970
|The 1861 Whitby Lifeboat Disaster |Mrs. Tattersfield (lead) |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |including Come Together season at Royal Court Theatre, London |
1970
|Sylvia |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent | |
1970
|Sweeney Todd |Johanna |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |Johanna's song written by Charles McKeown and Gillian Brown with Susan Tracy, Stanley Dawson |
1971
|Major Barbara |Barbara |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |with Alan David |
1971
|Anarchist |Madame Z |directed by Chris Parr |
1972
|Conversations |Catherine Tekakwitha + various |Greengage Productions |Songs, books + poems of Leonard Cohen |
1972
|Quetzalcoatl |La Lloronna (the Narrator) and played various flutes |with Geoffrey Larder, Oliver Cotton |
1972
|The Trial |The Laundress (including solo song) |Oval Theatre |directed by Steven Berkoff with Paola Dionisotti |
1979
|You Never Can Tell{{cite web |title=You Never Can Tell Cast List |url=https://theatricalia.com/play/2x/you-never-can-tell/production/sxg |website=Theatricalia |access-date=2022-01-25}} |Maid |Knightsbridge Productions |directed by David Giles with Cheryl Campbell, Peter Egan, Sian Phillips, Lynsey Baxter |
1986
|Eastwood |Katharine Brindsley (lead) |Man in the Moon Theatre |directed by Nick Ward Eastwood won a Time Out award |
1987
|Alpha Beta |Norma Elliott (lead) |Timeless Productions Man in the Moon Theatre |with George Costigan |
1989
|Ironmistress |Martha Darby (lead) (Time Out, Best Actress nomination) |Blood & Honey Productions |directed by Thomas de Mallet Burgess with Louise Waddington as Little Cog |
1991
|The Transmigration of Timothy Archer |Angel Archer (lead) |Epping Forest College |directed by Geoff Ryman with Edward de Souza, Colin Hurley |
1992
|House |Teresa Brown (London Fringe Award, Best Actress nomination) |New Grove Theatre |directed by Martin Clunes produced by Big Arts with Neil Morrissey |
2001
|Love Letters |Melissa |Andrew Sketchley Theatre |directed by Richard Jacques |
2008
|The Knotty |Various, including commissioned original song Railway Lines: words and music by Gillian Brown |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |Gala Performance only |
2010
|Major Barbara |Barbara |Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent |Excerpt only with Alan David |
Not an exhaustive list
Selected television
class="wikitable" |
Year
! Title ! Role !Notes |
---|
1965
|Ivy |with Alan Lake directed by David Giles |
1967
|Armchair Theatre - The Heroism of Thomas Chadwick |Mrs. Colclough |directed by Mike Vardy |
1968
|Armchair Theatre - The Ballad of the Artificial Mash |The Average Newspaper Reader's Wife |Brown was Musical Director directed by Dennis Vance |
1971
|The Nun |four episodes with Frank Finlay directed by Mark Cullingham |
1972
|Colditz - Lord, Didn't It Rain |Sophie |with Robert Wagner, Christopher Neame directed by Michael Ferguson |
1973
|Owen, M.D. - You Don't Get Me |Receptionist |with Nigel Stock, Patrick Troughton |
1975
|Z-Cars - Intervention |Edna Dove |with Miles Anderson, James Donnelly, James Ellis |
1976
|Doctor Who - The Brain of Morbius |Ohica |with Philip Madoc, Tom Baker |
1976
|Angels - Signals |Mrs. Clarke |with Nigel Havers, Sharon Maughan |
1977
|The Maid |with Alan Bates, Anna Massey |
1978
|The Stranger's Gift (Our Little Town Series) |Fisherman's wife |with Martin C. Thurley featuring a thespian chicken |
1979
|Librarian |with Sean Arnold |
1979
|Jackanory Playhouse - The Cave of Solomon |Queen of the Serpents |directed by John Prowse |
1986
|The Madness Museum |Mary Willcocks |with Simon Callow written by Ken Campbell |
Not an exhaustive list
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{IMDb name|0113641}}
- [https://theatricalia.com/person/2408/gilly-brown Gilly Brown] at Theatricalia
{{DEFAULTSORT:Brown, Gillian}}
:Category:Alumni of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
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