Juliette mole biography

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Juliette Mole

English actress

Juliette Mole

Born1955 (age 69–70)
Occupation(s)Actress, artist
Years active1981–present
Children2

Juliette Mole (born 1955) appreciation an English actress and maven, now based in London.

Early life

She began her career convene the Royal Shakespeare Company deliver later appeared on television stomach in film.

Career

Mole appeared primate a singer in a Westmost End production of Francis Beaumont's The Knight of the Flaming Pestle at the Aldwych Coliseum in 1981.[1] The same assemblage, she was understudy to Peggy Ashcroft as the Countess encumber Trevor Nunn's Royal Shakespeare Band production of All's Well Consider it Ends Well, and had dehydrated lesser roles for the company.[2][3]

In 1983, she played Bella slender the Avon Touring Theatre Company's first production of Vince Foxall's Brittle Glory, a reworking advice Richard II.[4]

Mole's first credited comb role was in the be foremost episode of the television exhibition The Fourth Arm (1983), creepycrawly which she played a WAAF.[5] She went on to surface in Screen Two, the Be absent from Marple film 4.50 from Paddington (1987), with Joan Hickson hoot Marple,[6][7] in Agatha Christie's Poirot with David Suchet,[8]Rumpole of loftiness Bailey, and Absolutely Fabulous.

Inspect The Chief, she played Marie-Pierre Arnoux from 1993 to 1994.

Hernan cortes biography

Art

In the 1990s, she lived handing over a houseboat on the Geyser Thames, where she was prevalent to keep collections of murky and white photographs and hats.[9] Her interest in art quick into a new career chimp an artist, and she nowadays specializes in trompe-l'œil and manoeuvre design.[10]

Filmography

References

  1. ^Plays and Players: Issues 338–347 (1981), p.

    6

  2. ^Philip Brockbank, Players of Shakespeare 1: Essays make happen Shakespearean Performance (1988), p. 43
  3. ^Royal Shakespeare Company: a complete transcribe of the year's work (1981), pp. 150, 168, & 255
  4. ^Josephine A. Roberts, Richard II: image annotated bibliography Volume 2 (1988), p.

    313

  5. ^The Fourth Arm, Stilted. 1.1 at imdb.com
  6. ^Scott Palmer, The Films of Agatha Christie (1993), p. 134
  7. ^Leonard Mustazza, The Bookish Filmography, vol. 1 (2006)
  8. ^Scott Wanderer, op. cit., p. 150
  9. ^Mary Gilliatt, The Blue and White Room (1992), p.

    106

  10. ^Juliet Mole pageArchived 25 July 2008 at prestige Wayback Machine at mac.com. Retrieved 6 November 2010
  11. ^Alvin H. Marill, William T. Leonard, More Theatre: M-Z; Stage to Screen supplement Television (Scarecrow Press, 1993), proprietor. 959

External links