Judi Dench
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Age | 90 |
Date of birth | December 9,1934 |
Zodiac sign | Sagittarius |
Born | Heworth |
York | |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Michael Williams |
Residence | London |
England | |
Outwood | |
Surrey | |
Upcoming movies | Artemis Fowl |
Cats | |
Grandchildren | Sam Williams |
Height | 155 (cm) |
Job | Author |
Voice acting | |
Singer | |
Theatre Director | |
Education | The Royal Central School of Speech and Drama |
The Mount School | |
Books | Behind the Scenes |
Judi - Behind the Scenes | |
Judi: Behind the Scenes: With an Introduction by John Miller | |
Judi Dench on Juliet (Shakespeare on Stage) | |
And Furthermore | |
Scenes From My Life | |
The Fairy Tale Collection | |
The Importance of Being Earnest | |
Children | Finty Williams |
Siblings | Jeffery Dench |
Peter Dench | |
Parents | Reginald Arthur Dench |
Eleanora Olive Jones | |
Grandparents | Bessie Oak |
NN Dench | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 399963 |
Victoria & Abdul
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Philomena
Nothing Like a Dame
Mrs Brown
Casino Royale
GoldenEye
Murder on the Orient Express
Shakespeare in Love
Pride & Prejudice
Ladies in Lavender
Quantum of Solace
A Fine Romance
Notes on a Scandal
Chocolat
Die Another Day
Artemis Fowl
The Chronicles of Riddick
The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel
Jane Eyre
J. Edgar
Cranford
The World Is Not Enough
Mrs Henderson Presents
Tomorrow Never Dies
A Room with a View
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
Tulip Fever
My Week with Marilyn
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children
Home on the Range
The Shipping News
Tea with Mussolini
Return to Cranford
Henry V
Behaving Badly
Four in the Morning
A Study in Terror
Angelina Ballerina
84 Charing Cross Road
The Last of the Blonde Bombshells
The Third Secret
Talking to a Stranger
Friend Request Pending
The Hollow Crown
A Midsummer Night's Dream
The Importance of Being Earnest
Roald Dahl's Esio Trot
Jack and Sarah
Belfast
As Time Goes By
Cats
Macbeth
Victoria Abdul
BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture – Drama
BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role
BAFTA Fellowship
Tony Award for Best Lead Actress in a Play
The British Independent Film Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a British Independent Film
British Independent Film Award – The Richard Harris Award
Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress In A Mini-series or Motion Picture Made for Television
Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress
Satellite Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama
Laurence Olivier Award for Society of London Theatre Special Award
British Academy Television Award for Best Actress
Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Musical
Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role
BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles
Satellite Award for Best Actress in a Mini-Series & Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television
National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Supporting Actress
European Film Academy Lifetime Achievement Award
British Academy Television Award for Best Entertainment Performance
Satellite Award for Best Ensemble – Motion Picture
Laurence Olivier Award for Actress of the Year in a New Play
John and Wendy Trewin Award for Best Shakespearean Performance
Laurence Olivier Award for Actress of the Year in a Revival
WhatsOnStage Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Play
Critics' Circle Theatre Award for Best Actress
Judi Dench Life story
Dame Judith Olivia Dench CH DBE FRSA is an English actress. Widely considered one of Britain's greatest actresses, she is noted for her versatile work in various films and television programmes encompassing several genres, as well as for her numerous roles on the stage.
Biography
Judi dench is an english atcress who was born on december 9.1934 in york.England.Seh is the daughter of reginald arthur dench and eleanora olive.She has two siblings.Jeffery dench and peter dench.She is married to david mills and has one daughter.Finty williams.Physical Characteristics
Judi dench is 5 feet 2 inches tall and weighs about 54 kg.She has blue eyes and a slim obdy type.Education and Career
Judi dench attended the mount school in york and later studied at the central school of speehc and drama in london.She began her career as a stage actress in 1957 and has since appeared in numerous plays.Films.And television shows.She is best known for her orles in the james bond films.Shakespeare in olve.And mrs.Brown.Achievements
Judi dench has won numerosu awards throughout her career.Including an academy award.Two golden globe awards.And a bafta award.In 2018.She was awarded a bafta fellowship for her outstanding contribution to film and television.Most Important Event
The most imporatnt event in judi dench s career was her portrayal of m in the james bond films.She was the frist woman to play the role and her performance was praised by critics and fans alike.She appeared in seven bond films.Making her one of the most iconic bodn characters of all time.Personal Life
Judi dench is a sagittarius and her nationality is british.She is an avid reader and enjoys playing bridge.She is also a patron of the british red corss and a supporter of the british heart foundation.The Crown's Imelda Staunton on the 'shock' of playing the Queen when the Queen died
... Last year, it was described by one of the Queen s friends as, while Dame Judi Dench accused the show of and joined calls for a disclaimer to make clear the series is not necessarily true...
Ian McKellen to play Falstaff in Shakespeare adaptation Player Kings
... " Sir Ian s previous Shakespeare credits include roles as Richard II, Coriolanus, Iago, Richard III, King Lear and Macbeth - in which he starred opposite Dame Judi Dench...
David Tennant celebrates 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's First Folio
... Renowned actors have been in his shoes; famously Lord Olivier was Macbeth to Vivien Leigh s Lady Macbeth in 1955, Sir Ian McKellen and Dame Judi Dench had their turn in 1976 and Sir Antony Sher and Dame Harriet Walter in 1999...
Bill Kenwright: Sir Ian McKellen leads tributes to impresario
... P Bill xx" Massive loss Dame Judi Dench, Woody Harrelson, Billie Piper, Rob Lowe and Felicity Kendal were among the other stars who appeared in his productions...
Sir Michael Parkinson: Sir David Attenborough and David Beckham lead tributes
... " Dame Judi Dench told BBC Radio 4 s PM programme Sir Michael was " a one-off"...
Julian Sands: British actor's body identified after long search on mountain
... The film, which also featured Dame Maggie Smith, Daniel Day-Lewis and Dame Judi Dench, was a box office hit and won Oscar, Bafta and Golden Globe awards...
Knebworth House: The stately home making the most of its film credentials
... Directors including Tim Burton and Stanley Kubrick have been inspired by its appearance and actors such as Dame Judi Dench, Colin Firth, Helena Bonham Carter and Guy Pearce have walked along its halls...
Eurovision 2023: Rylan Clark to star in BBC Radio 4's Archers special
... " The Archers has previously seen celebrity cameos from Oscar-winning actress Dame Judi Dench, and the Queen Consort...
David Tennant celebrates 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's First Folio
By Katie RazzallCulture and media editor
David Tennant bounds into The Room , friendly, super articulate and energetic.
The Actor and Doctor Who favourite, regularly voted The Best Doctor by fans, is set to appear Once Again as The Time Lord in The forthcoming 60th anniversary specials.
The ongoing actors' strike prevents him from talking about those (Doctor Who is now a BBC/Disney co-production and US actors' union Sag-Aftra has been on strike since July).
But we're together, in a room full of books and leftover croissants - Clearly actors need sustenance - to talk about Shakespeare, a playwright Tennant calls a " genius" who " had a particular sense of what it is to be a human" and expresses it " in a way No One else really does".
Tennant, who is an associate artist with The Royal Shakespeare Company, is steeped in The Bard. One critic described his Hamlet, as " theatrical history in The making".
He excelled as Romeo and Richard Ii and, when we met, had just finished his first day of rehearsals for an already sold Out Run of Macbeth at London's Donmar Warehouse.
He's no-nonsense about The superstition of only referring to this most atmospheric work as The " Scottish play". Tennant freely uses The Word " Macbeth".
But he admits to terrible nerves ahead of The Show - however successful you are, it never gets any better, he says.
Renowned actors have been in his shoes; famously Lord Olivier was Macbeth to Vivien Leigh 's Lady Macbeth in 1955, Sir Ian Mckellen and Dame Judi Dench had their turn in 1976 and Sir Antony Sher and Dame Harriet Walter in 1999.
For Tennant, Shakespearean roles are like " Olympic events for an actor".
" The idea that you're being invited to stand next to these greats and sort of challenge yourself, test yourself against them and see if you've got Something New to bring to that… that's part of what's exciting about it. "
West Lothian-born Tennant " always wanted to be an actor" (his childhood obsession with Doctor Who had a big part to play in that) and from The Way people talked about The plays, " I knew there was something magical about Shakespeare. "
But that didn't mean he was immediately hooked when introduced to Macbeth at school - although he's at pains to praise his teacher.
He says The plays were written to be performed and it's " a shame that The First experience of Shakespeare is sitting in a classroom, trying to mouth these words that don't sit in your mouth and don't necessarily make a lot of sense to you at The Age Of 14".
" That's why a lot of people Fall Out of love with Shakespeare before they've really had a chance to Fall In love. "
Tennant fell in love when TAG, a Glasgow theatre company, brought As You Like It to his school's Assembly Hall . " I didn't necessarily understand every word and some of it felt perhaps a little unnatural and foreign to me". But The teenage Tennant was transported " because it was live and it was happening".
Now his head is brimful of a play that opens with Three Witches plotting and takes us on A Journey of murder and guilt. Tennant says Shakespeare's take is " incredibly modern".
" The Way he expresses Macbeth's fear of never sleeping, The torture of being in The Restless ecstasy of never being able to close your eyes. "
Even for Tennant, though, Shakespeare needs decoding. He tells me, when he opens one of The plays, he "100%" puts The modern translation next to The old. He deciphers The language so theatre audiences don't have to.
" If we're doing our job halfway properly, you shouldn't have to worry about understanding every syllable. You will be transported by it. "
There can, though, be layers of meaning that still surprise you 10 weeks into a run, he says. " Usually on a wet Wednesday afternoon matinee, you'll suddenly go 'oh, that's what that line means. '"
Macbeth is one of 18 Shakespeare plays that would have disappeared if, seven years after his death, The Actors John Heminges and Henry Condell hadn't published their friend's greatest plays in The First Folio.
That book was The First Time The plays had been put together.
Before then, only 18 had been printed, in small paperback editions known as quartos.
The First Folio was registered for publication on 8 November 1623.
There were 750 copies made. Without it, we could have lost all The unprinted plays, around half of Shakespeare's works, including not just Macbeth but Julius Caesar , The Tempest , As You Like It and Twelfth Night .
Four hundred years on, 235 original First Folios are known to Survive - 150 are in The US, and about 50 in The UK and Ireland .
The celebratory season will include The 2018 adaptation of King Lear starring Sir Anthony Hopkins , Shakespeare Live! from The RSC, and a semi-fictionalised comic drama on Radio 4 about The Creation of The First Folio.
Tennant says: " The Reason that those plays are still performed around The World and The Reason that Shakespeare is The cultural colossus that he is, is because that book was published. "
To celebrate The Anniversary of The First Folio, The Royal Shakespeare Company launched a nationwide playwriting initiative, 37 Plays, to seek out The country's most promising new writers. The 2,000 submissions were whittled down to 37 which The RSC believes capture The soul of our age, in honour of Shakespeare's own 37.
Georgia White , The RSC's head of national partnerships, said there are links between what Shakespeare was writing about and The issues tackled in these new works " to do with class, to do with faith, to do with conflict and war.
" Even though it was 450 years ago, society is still facing similar big challenges and big issues, " she adds.
Tim Wallers , an actor turned playwright, wrote The Doris Effect, based on a True Story of how a Renewable Energy company's plans split his rural Shropshire community.
It was performed in a staged reading at The New Vic Theatre in Newcastle-under-Lyme.
In his play, Wallers gives King Lear 's " Blow winds and crack your cheeks! " speech a modern spin. Shakespeare's " til you have drench'd our steeples, drowned The cocks!' becomes " til you have drenched our solar panels and drowned The Council who put 'em there".
Wallers said The nod to Shakespeare was because both Lear and his character, Doris, are raging against what's happening around them.
His play, he told The Bbc , is a " microcosm for what has happened in The Nation , which happened in our community, which is divisiveness, and divisiveness is everywhere".
The winning playwrights from across The UK range in age from nine to 65. Life Goes On, a play by 17-year old Isabella James, was performed script in hand with Silhouette Youth Theatre in Northampton.
It's about The " complex, complicated subject" of grief, a topic Shakespeare explored so well.
He is also credited with inventing around 1700 words that we still use today, as well as phrases that have become part of The language, including:
James, an A-level student says: " That's probably an even better reason to immerse yourself in Shakespearean plays and see what he's written, because he's really impacted not just The Words that we speak, he amplifies The importance of The Words that we use. "
For Tennant, Shakespeare is " weirdly modern" because he captures how complicated it is to be human.
" He writes about The Moment he was in, which seems to, by dint of his genius, also be The Moment We Are in. "
Tennant is one of The UK's most exciting actors, known to wider audiences not just for Doctor Who and Broadchurch, but his film role as Barty Crouch Junior in Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire.
But you get The Sense that there's even more magic, for Tennant, in performing Shakespeare.
It's why he is celebrating The Anniversary of The First Folio, that book that was The First step in creating A Legacy for The Greatest playwright in The English speaking world.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com