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Emily Beecham

English actress (born 1984)


Summary

English actress (born 1984)

FieldValue
nameEmily Beecham
imageMalaga Film Festival 2025 - Emily Beecham (cropped).jpg
captionBeecham in 2025
birth_date
birth_placeWythenshawe, Greater Manchester, England
citizenship
occupationActress
alma_materLondon Academy of Music and Dramatic Art
years_active2006–present

Emily Beecham (born 12 May 1984) is an English actress. She is best known for her roles in the Netflix series 1899 in which she played the lead character, the AMC series Into the Badlands, the Coen Brothers film Hail, Caesar!, and the title role in the 2017 film Daphne. She starred in the 2019 film Little Joe, for which she received the Best Actress award at the Cannes Film Festival.

Early life

Beecham was born in Wythenshawe, the daughter of an English father and American mother from Arizona. Her father is an airline pilot. She has dual British and American citizenship. In 2003, at the age of 18, she enrolled at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA) and graduated with a BA in 2006.

Career

In her final year at LAMDA, Beecham started accepting professional acting opportunities, with her first appearances occurring in the thriller Bon Voyage and the supernatural TV series Afterlife. Her first feature film, Bon Voyage, premiered that October and received positive notices following its showing on ITV. It won the Golden Nymph award at the June 2007 Monte Carlo Television Festival.

In mid-2007, Beecham was chosen by the director Jan Dunn for the leading role in her independent film The Calling, for which she won the Best Actress Award at the London Independent Film Festival, and the Edinburgh International Film Festival Trailblazer Award. The film received mixed reviews; however, one commented that "newcomer Emily Beecham plays a young woman determined to take the veil and holds her own well against such stalwarts as Brenda Blethyn and Susannah York". Film columnist Hannah McGill, the Edinburgh Festival's artistic director from 2006 to 2010, decided that Beecham should be one of the recipients of the coveted Skillset Trailblazer Award. That year, Beecham gave her first professional stage performance in Ian McHugh's first play, How to Curse, at the Bush Theatre in Shepherd's Bush, London, directed by the theatre's artistic director Josie Rourke. In 2011, she received the Best Actress award at the London Independent Film Festival.

Beecham has appeared in numerous television series, including Agatha Christie's Marple, Tess of The D'Urbervilles, Silent Witness and The Street. She was listed in Nylon magazine's "Young Hollywood" issue as one of 55 "Faces of the Future", with the photograph captioned "Young Hollywood London". John Rankin, Esquire magazine's veteran glamour photographer, was quoted as saying that she has "that something special, that thing you just feel about someone... she's one of the most exciting actresses out there".

In 2013, Beecham starred as Caro Allingham in The Village, and as The Widow in the AMC martial arts action drama series Into the Badlands. In 2016, she had a supporting role in the Coen Brothers movie Hail, Caesar!. One year later she played the title role in Daphne, which earned her a nomination for the Best Actress award at the British Independent Film Awards. In 2019, she starred in the film Little Joe, for which she received the Best Actress award at the Cannes Film Festival. She also appeared in the Netflix series 1899, created by Jantje Friese and Baran bo Odar. A period mystery/horror blend, the series was cancelled after one season despite being one of the service's highest-rated shows at the time.

In March 2024 it was announced that she had joined the cast of the upcoming period drama series King & Conqueror as Edith Swan-neck.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
200728 Weeks LaterKaren
Rise of the FootsoldierKelly
2009The CallingJoanna
2010BasementPru
2016Hail, Caesar!Diedre
2017DaphneDaphneNominated—BIFA for Best Performance by an Actress in a British Independent Film
Nominated—Evening Standard British Film Award for Best Actress
Nominated—Evening Standard British Film Award for Breakthrough of the Year
Nominated—Empire Award for Best Female Newcomer
2019Berlin, I Love YouHannah
Little JoeAliceCannes Film Festival Award for Best Actress
2021Outside the WireSofiya
CruellaCatherine Miller
2023Guy Ritchie's The CovenantCaroline Kinley
My Mother's WeddingGeorgina
Stockholm BloodbathChristina Gyllenstierna
2024SlingshotZoe
William TellGertrude
2026Alura In-ZePost-production
TBALucy BirleyPost-production

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
2006AfterlifeSashEpisode: "Roadside Bouquets"
2007The Innocence ProjectRachel1 episode
2007Agatha Christie's MarpleElvira BlakeTV movie
2007Party AnimalsVienna Lurie1 episode
2007New TricksLaura Small1 episode
2007The BillAngela Myatt1 episode
2008LewisNell BuckleyEpisode: "And The Moonbeams Kiss The Sea"
2008Tess of the d'UrbervillesRetty Priddle2 episodes
2009UnforgivenLucy Belcome3 episodes
2009The StreetGemma2 episodes
2009MerlinEmmyria1 episode
2010Silent WitnessAnna Flannery2 episodes
2012Case SensitiveMary Trelease2 episodes
2012DamagesRutger's Daughter1 episode
2013The Thirteenth TaleIsabelle AngelfieldTV movie
2013BlandingsMiss Younghusband1 episode
2013–2014The VillageCaro AllinghamMain cast
2014The MusketeersAdele Besset1 episode
20152019Into the BadlandsThe WidowMain cast
2021The Pursuit of LoveFanny LoganMain cast (miniseries)
20221899Maura FranklinMain cast
2025King & ConquerorEdithMain cast

Video games

YearTitleRoleNotes
2008Mirror's EdgeCeleste "Cel" WilsonVoice

References

References

  1. (26 September 2017). "Emily Beecham interview: 'I never went to school wanting to play cute characters'".
  2. "Guerilla Films – The Calling directed by Jan Dunn starring Brenda Blethyn, Emily Beecham, Susannah York, Rita Tushingham, Pauline McLynn, Joanna Scanlan, Susannah Harker, Harriet Thorpe, Amanda Donohoe and Corin Redgrave.".
  3. "The Film Festival Guild".
  4. "Emily Beecham in ''Nylon'' magazine".
  5. (24 October 2018). "Nominations 2017". BIFA – British Independent Film Awards.
  6. (25 May 2019). "Korean director Bong Joon-ho wins Cannes' top prize". Daily Sabah.
  7. (17 November 2022). "How Emily Beecham Untangled the Mystery of '1899'". [[Netflix]].
  8. Kasey Moore. (3 January 2023). "'1899' Canceled At Netflix; Why Season 2 Isn't Moving Forward". What's On Netflix.
  9. (5 March 2024). "Clémence Poésy, Emily Beecham Join James Norton in Period Drama 'King and Conqueror'". Variety.
  10. (12 January 2018). "Evening Standard Nominations 2018".
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