Abigail Thaw
Abigail J. Thaw | |
---|---|
Born | London, England | 1 October 1965
Occupation | Actress |
Spouse | |
Children | 2 |
Parent(s) | Sally Alexander (mother) John Thaw (father) Sheila Hancock (stepmother) |
Abigail J. Thaw (born 1 October 1965[1]) is an English actress known for her role of investigative journalist Dorothea Frazil in detective drama series Endeavour. Thaw has appeared in numerous TV series, such as Casualty, Midsomer Murders, Agatha Christie's Poirot and Black Mirror, as well as many stage productions.
Early life
[edit]Abigail Thaw was born in London to actor John Thaw and his first wife, Sally Alexander, an academic/feminist activist who taught modern history at Goldsmiths College. Her parents divorced in 1968. On her mother's side she has a half-brother (Daniel), and on her father's side she has an elder stepsister (Melanie Jane) and a half-sister (Joanna). Her stepmother is actress Sheila Hancock.
After her parents' divorce in 1968, Abigail was brought up in Pimlico by her mother and her mother's new partner, Gareth Stedman Jones. Her father also kept in regular contact. Abigail attended Pimlico Comprehensive. Her mother was involved in the flour-bombing of the 1970 Miss World contest, the story of which is the subject of the 2020 film Misbehaviour.[2]
After school she spent a year in Italy, where she was in a car accident. Returning to England, she decided to attend RADA, where she met her future husband, actor Nigel Whitmey.
Career
[edit]Abigail Thaw began her career working in rep at Cheltenham, York, and Salisbury, then performed with the RSC and the Royal Exchange Theatre and Library in Manchester, Chichester, The Tricycle, The Gate, Theatre503, The Orange Tree, Battersea Arts Centre, New End, The Finborough, Birmingham, Theatr Clwyd, Watford and extensive touring in Whipping It Up, Ladies in Lavender and Entertaining Angels. She played Ms Capulet in Tom Morris' Juliet and her Romeo at the Bristol Old Vic, and acted in Cymbeline with Mark Rylance at The Globe Theatre and Brooklyn Academy of Music. She also spent a year working with Mike Alfred's company, "Method and Madness", performing in Private Lives, Jude the Obscure and Flesh and Blood. She was nominated for the Best Actress Off West End award in 2011 for The Firewatchers at the Old Red Lion. In early 2015, she participated in the world premiere of Michael Hastings' The Cutting of the Cloth.
Thaw has also worked in television since 1990, including in The Bill, Casualty, Pie in the Sky, Peak Practice, Spywatch, Vanity Fair, Love Soup and Trust. In 2009 she appeared in the Midsomer Murders episode “Small Mercies” as Annabel Johnson; and the Agatha Christie's Poirot episode “The Clocks”. She also performed in the 2016 BBC comedy series I Want My Wife Back.
She played a newspaper editor in the ITV1 2011 Christmas special edition of the Inspector Morse prequel, Endeavour, a role she continued in Series 1, and in subsequent series.[3]
In 2014, Thaw appeared as a shaman in The Inbetweeners 2.
Personal life
[edit]Thaw met Nigel Whitmey at RADA in the mid-1980s, and they married in 1986. In 1997 she gave birth to a daughter, Molly-Mae Whitmey, and in 2003 to her second daughter, Talia. The family live in Muswell Hill, North London.[citation needed]Her daughter Molly had a cameo as the younger version of her grandmother Sally Alexander in the Endeavour episode "Oracle" (series 7, episode 1, broadcast February 1, 2020).[4]
Filmography
[edit]Film
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | Trust | Caroline | TV film |
2005 | The Stepfather | DS Sullivan | TV film |
2009 | Tales of the Fourth Dimension | Ann Hathaway | Direct-to-Video |
2014 | The Inbetweeners 2 | Shaman | |
2015 | Caring for the Recently Deceased | Dr. James | Short film |
Nipplejesus | Juliette | Short film | |
2017 | The Penny Dropped | The Being | Short film |
Television
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1990 | The Bill | Berne | Episode: "Sufficient Evidence" |
1995 | Pie in the Sky | DS Lorna Purvis | Episode: "Brown Bread" |
1996 | Spywatch | Vivienne Belling | Recurring role, 6 episodes |
1997 | Casualty | Aileen O'Donnell | Episode: "Tall Tales" |
1998 | Vanity Fair | Jane Osborne | Mini-series, 3 episodes |
1999 | The Bill | Officer Dunsmore | Episode: "Follow Through" |
Big Bad World | Alice | Episode: "Be Nice to Posh People" | |
2000 | Peak Practice | Pam Lloyd | Episode: "For Love of the Child" |
2003 | Doctors | Lois Campbell | Episode: "Points of View" |
2006 | Casualty | Karen Whitear | Episode: "Heads Together" |
2008 | Love Soup | Phillipa | Episode: "Dream Twister" |
2009 | Midsomer Murders | Annabel Johnson | Episode: "Small Mercies" |
Agatha Christie's Poirot | Rachel Waterhouse | Episode: "The Clocks" | |
2011 | Doctors | Dr. Andrea Weller | Episode: "Lord Letherbridge" |
2012-2023 | Endeavour | Dorothea Frazil | Series regular, 25 episodes |
2013 | Black Mirror | Juliet | Episode: "The Waldo Moment" |
2016 | I Want My Wife Back | Abbie | Series regular, 6 episodes |
2017 | Doctors | Elizabeth Briscoe | Episode: "Field Fever" |
2018 | Casualty | Emma Mabbitt | Episode: "Episode #32.36" |
2020 | Housebound | Annabel Monroe | Recurring role, 3 episodes |
2021 | The Nevers | Mrs. Hundley | Episode: "True" |
2022 | Miss Scarlet and the Duke | Mrs. Herbert | Episode: "Arabella" |
2023 | Sister Boniface Mysteries | Dinah Morgan | Episode: "Don't Try This at Home" |
Theatre credits
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Abigail Thaw". btvguide.net. Retrieved 3 May 2014.
- ^ Cochrane, Kira (1 March 2003). "Children of the revolution". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
- ^ "Endeavour's Abigail Thaw: 'My dad would have approved'" by James Hibbs at www.radiotimes.com
- ^ "It's a family affair: John Thaw's daughter Abigail stars in Endeavour's new series 7 with daughter Molly playing her mother Sally..." Ox In A Box. 4 February 2020.
External links
[edit]- Abigail Thaw at IMDb
- Spencer, Charles (7 December 2008). "Guilty secrets in the vicarage garden". The Telegraph. London.