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English actress (born 1988) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philippa Elaine Fanti Bennett-Warner (born 23 July 1988) is a British actress.[1] She began her career as a child actress, playing young Nala in the original West End production of The Lion King (1999). She went on to earn WhatsOnStage and Ian Charleson Award nominations for her roles in the musical Caroline, or Change (2006) and Michael Grandage's King Lear (2010) respectively.[2]
Pippa Bennett-Warner | |
---|---|
Born | Philippa Elaine Fanti Warner 23 July 1988 Banbury, Oxfordshire, England |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1999–present |
On television, Bennett-Warner starred in the Sky Atlantic crime drama Gangs of London (2020–present) and the BBC thrillers Roadkill (2020) and Chloe (2022).
Bennett-Warner was brought up in Buckinghamshire, and was educated at St Edward's School in Oxford, and Lucie Clayton Charm Academy. She is of Jamaican and Kittitian descent, and has a sister, Georgina, who is three years older.[3]
She started her acting career in Julie Taymor's 1999 London production of The Lion King, as one of the original young Nalas.[4]
In 2006, she got a place at Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and the role of Emmie Thibodeaux in the musical Caroline, or Change, for which she was nominated for the Whatsonstage.com Stuart Phillips London Newcomer of the Year award 2007, alongside Andrew Garfield. She went on to star in the lead role in Athol Fugard's UK premiere of Victory for the Peter Hall Company and then went to RADA in September 2007.
Bennett-Warner graduated from RADA in 2010, but left early to take on the role of Sophie in Lynn Nottage's Ruined at the Almeida Theatre. Before completing the course she was awarded the prestigious Carleton Hobbs Radio Award. However, due to another job commitment she was unable to join the radio rep.[clarification needed]
After finishing Ruined, a two-hander (Crocodile, written by Frank McGuinness) with Sinéad Cusack for Sky Arts followed. During this time Bennett-Warner was cast in Michael Grandage's award-winning King Lear as Cordelia, with Derek Jacobi in the title role.[4] Before rehearsals started for King Lear in October, she filmed small parts in Come Fly With Me with David Walliams and Ashley Lucas and also in Case Histories alongside Jason Isaacs.
Bennett-Warner received an Ian Charleson commendation for King Lear. She then took the role of Denise in D. C. Moore's new play The Swan — in a role that had been written for her – at the National Theatre[5] followed by playing Queen Isabel in Michael Grandage's swan song Richard II at the Donmar Warehouse with Eddie Redmayne in the title role and Andrew Buchan as Bolingbroke in 2010.[6] She received positive reviews from the critics, with Kate Bassett from The Independent saying: "Both of them (Redmayne and Buchan) are, in fact, outshone by Pippa Bennett-Warner in the cameo role of Isabel, Richard’s devoted, fiery queen."[7]
In 2012, she played the lead role in Vivienne Franzmann's second play The Witness, at the Royal Court Theatre.[4] She received rave reviews with Susannah Clapp from The Observer stating, "Always thought Pippa Bennett-Warner had big future. Now she is having it in 'The Witness' at Royal Court...There are actresses (even actors) who are more flashy, who more obviously inflect every detail of a speech. PBW is completely natural. Audiences of course admire her: but they do something else, which is not always the same thing: they believe her". Bennett-Warner went on to secure a nomination for Best Actress at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards 2012, alongside Cate Blanchett and Dame Eileen Atkins and was named as one of the 1,000 Most Influential Londoners in 2012 in the category "Generation Next" by The Evening Standard.
In 2016, she narrated Zadie Smith's book Swing Time. From 2018 to 2019 she played the title role in The Maya Angelou Autobiographies for BBC Radio 4. In 2020, she narrated Bernardine Evaristo's Girl, Woman, Other for the BBC.
She is an Ambassador for The Theatres Trust.[8]
Bennett-Warner is good friends with Jonathan Bailey who she appeared with in Doctor Who's "Time Heist" episode in 2014.[9] Bailey also photographed her for a profile for Rose & Ivy magazine in 2021.[10]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2016 | Patient Zero | Linda | |
Wakefield | Emily | ||
2017 | The Foreigner | Marissa Levitt | |
2018 | Johnny English Strikes Again | Lesley | |
2020 | Real | Jamie | [11] |
2021 | Open | Naomi | |
2022 | See How They Run | Ann Saville | |
A Bit of Light | Bethan | ||
2024 | Magpie | Esther | |
TBA | The Magic Faraway Tree | Hannah | Filming |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2002 | Holby City | Gemma Webber | Episode: "Leopard Spots" |
2003 | Lenny Henry in Pieces | Jessica | |
2010 | Crocodile | Girl | TV film |
2011 | National Theatre Live | Cordelia | Episode: "King Lear" |
Come Fly With Me | Lisa | 2 episodes | |
Case Histories | Emma Drake | Episode: "Case Histories, Part 1 and 2" | |
2012 | Lewis | Nina Clemens | Episode: "The Indelible Stain" |
Inspector George Gently | Delores Kenny | Episode: "Gently Northern Soul" | |
Agatha Christie's Marple | Victoria | Episode: "A Caribbean Mystery" | |
Southcliffe | Susannah | TV mini-series | |
2013 | Vera | Manda/Sister Claire | Episode: "Young Gods" |
Death in Paradise | Rosie Curloo | ||
2014 | The Smoke | Ziggy Brown | 8 episodes |
Law & Order: UK | Zana Washington | Episode: "Repeat to Fade" | |
The Secrets | Lorna | TV mini-series | |
Doctor Who | Saibra | Episode: "Time Heist" | |
2015 | National Theatre Live | Dorinda | Episode: "The Beaux' Stratagem" |
The Trials of Jimmy Rose | Kerry Irwin | TV mini-series | |
River | Tia Edwards | ||
2016–2019 | Harlots | Harriet Lennox | TV series |
2017–2018 | Sick Note | Becca Palmerstone | |
2018 | Silent Witness | DC Heidi Bailey | 2 episodes |
2019 | MotherFatherSon | Lauren Elgood | TV series |
2020 | Sitting in Limbo | Eileen | TV film[12] |
Unsaid Stories: Look at Me | Kay | TV short film | |
Roadkill | Rochelle Madeley | TV series | |
Maxxx | Tamzin | TV series | |
2020–present | Gangs of London | Shannon Dumani | TV series |
2022 | Chloe | Livia | TV series |
2023 | Obsession | Peggy Graham | Miniseries[13] |
2024 | Moonflower Murders | Madeleine | Post-production[14] |
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