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Juliet Stevenson
English actress (born 1956)
English actress (born 1956)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Juliet Stevenson |
| honorific_suffix | |
| image | Dustbin Baby- April and Marion crop.jpg |
| caption | Stevenson in Dustbin Baby (2008) |
| birth_name | Juliet Anne Virginia Stevenson |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Kelvedon, Essex, England |
| spouse | |
| children | 2 |
| alma_mater | Royal Academy of Dramatic Art |
| occupation | Actress and narrator |
| yearsactive | 1978–present |
Juliet Anne Virginia Stevenson, (born 30 October 1956) is an English actress of stage and screen, and a narrator. She is known for her role in the film Truly, Madly, Deeply (1991), for which she was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role. Her other film appearances include Emma (1996), Bend It Like Beckham (2002), Mona Lisa Smile (2003), Being Julia (2004), Infamous (2006), ** (2015), Wolf (2023), and Reawakening (2024).
In theatre, she has starred in numerous Royal Shakespeare Company and National Theatre productions, including Olivier Award nominated roles in Measure for Measure (1984), Les Liaisons Dangereuses (1986), and Yerma (1987). For her role as Paulina in Death and the Maiden (1991–92), she won the 1992 Olivier Award for Best Actress. Her fifth Olivier nomination was for her work in the 2009 revival of Duet for One. She has also received three nominations for the BAFTA TV Award for Best Actress: for A Doll's House (1992), The Politician's Wife (1995) and Accused (2010). Other stage roles include The Heretic (2011) and Happy Days (2014).
Early life
Stevenson was born in Kelvedon, Essex, England, the daughter of Virginia Ruth (née Marshall), a teacher, and Michael Guy Stevenson, an army officer. Stevenson's father was assigned a new posting every two and a half years. When Stevenson was nine, she attended Berkshire's Hurst Lodge School in Ascot, and she was later educated at the independent St Catherine's School in Bramley, near Guildford, Surrey, and at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA). Stevenson was part of the 'new wave' of actors to emerge from the Academy. Others included Jonathan Pryce, Bruce Payne, Alan Rickman, Anton Lesser, Kenneth Branagh, Imelda Staunton and Fiona Shaw. She started her stage career in 1978 with the Royal Shakespeare Company.
Career
Although she has gained fame through her television and film work and has often undertaken roles for BBC Radio, she is known as a stage actress. Significant stage roles include her performances as Isabella in Measure for Measure, Madame de Tourvel in Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Anna in the UK premiere of Burn This in 1990 and Paulina in Death and the Maiden at the Royal Court theatre and the West End (1991–92). For the last she was awarded the 1992 Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress.
In the 1987 TV film Life Story, Stevenson played the part of scientist Rosalind Franklin, for which she won a Cable Ace award. She played the leading role in the Anthony Minghella film Truly, Madly, Deeply (1991) and her roles in The Secret Rapture (1993), Emma (1996), Bend It Like Beckham (2002) and Mona Lisa Smile (2003). She has more recently starred in Pierrepoint (2006), Infamous (2006) as Diana Vreeland and Breaking and Entering (2006) as Rosemary, the therapist. In 2003, she played the mother of an autistic child in the television film Hear the Silence, a film promoting the now debunked claims of Andrew Wakefield that the MMR vaccine was responsible for autism in children. The film makers and Stevenson were criticised as Wakefield's professionalism was already seriously in doubt.

In 2008, she starred in ITV's A Place of Execution. The role won her the Best Actress Dagger at the 2009 Crime Thriller Awards. She performs as a book reader, and has recorded all of Jane Austen's novels as unabridged audiobooks, as well as a number of other novels, such as Lady Windermere's Fan, Hedda Gabler, Stories from Shakespeare, and To the Lighthouse. She received lifetime achievement prize at Women in Film And TV awards.
In 2024, she played Mary, the mother of a returning missing child in the British psychological thriller film Reawakening, alongside Erin Doherty and Jared Harris.
Personal life
Stevenson married her long-time partner, British anthropologist Hugh Brody, in 2021. They have a daughter and a son and live in Suffolk, but she also has an apartment in New York. She is an atheist but considers herself a spiritual and superstitious person.
In 2008, she campaigned on behalf of refugee women with a reading at the Young Vic of Motherland, in protest against conditions at Yarl's Wood immigration detention centre. Directed by Stevenson, with a script written by Natasha Walter, Motherland was described in The Guardian as "an intelligent and shocking piece of theatre", with Anthony Barnett characterising it as "skilful and engrossing, a mixture of drama and performance, witness and testimony, music and reporting."
Stevenson is patron of the UK registered charity LAM Action, which provides support, information and encouragement to patients with Lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) and their families, and raises funds to advance research into LAM. She is also an Amnesty Ambassador, and is patron of two other charities: Young Roots, a charity for young refugees; and Antenatal Results and Choices, which supports parents who have had a diagnosis of fetal anomaly.
On 12 September 2016, Stevenson, as well as Cate Blanchett, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Peter Capaldi, Douglas Booth, Neil Gaiman, Keira Knightley, Jesse Eisenberg, Kit Harington and Stanley Tucci, featured in a video from the United Nations' refugee agency UNHCR to help raise awareness of the global refugee crisis. The video, titled "What They Took With Them", has the actors reading a poem written by Jenifer Toksvig and inspired by primary accounts of refugees, and is part of UNHCR's #WithRefugees campaign, which also includes a petition to governments to expand asylum to provide further shelter, integrating job opportunities and education.
Stevenson's friends and frequent collaborators include director Robert Icke, comedian and feminist broadcaster Deborah Frances-White, poet Aviva Dautch and concert pianist Lucy Parham.
Stevenson is also a painter and has talked about how her art has helped her through difficult moments such as the COVID-19 lockdown and the death of her stepson.
Stevenson regularly attends protests in support of the people of Palestine. On 30 November 2024 she spoke at the National March for Palestine in London, highlighting the difference in the way the plight of the Palestinian people is portrayed in comparison to other people, and saying: "As artists we cannot remain silent in the face of such gross violations. Violations of human rights and of international law. Violations of the truth and of every human instinct."
In September 2025, she signed an open pledge with Film Workers for Palestine pledging not to work with Israeli film institutions "that are implicated in genocide and apartheid against the Palestinian people."
Filmography
Film
| Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1988 | Drowning by Numbers | Cissie Colpitts 2 | ||
| 1990 | Ladder of Swords | Alice Howard | ||
| ** | Clare Fitzgerald | |||
| Truly, Madly, Deeply | Nina | |||
| 1993 | ** | Fräulein Bürstner | ||
| ** | Isobel Coleridge | |||
| 1996 | ''{{sortname | Emma | dab=1996 theatrical film}}'' | Augusta Hawkins Elton |
| 2001 | Play | Second Woman | Short film | |
| Christmas Carol: The Movie | Mrs. Cratchit / Mother Gimlet (voice) | |||
| ** | Gwenyth Moore | |||
| 2002 | ''{{sortname | Food of Love | dab=2002 film}}'' | Pamela Porterfield |
| Bend It Like Beckham | Paula Paxton | |||
| ''{{sortname | Nicholas Nickleby | dab=2002 film}}'' | Mrs. Squeers | |
| 2003 | Mona Lisa Smile | Amanda Armstrong | ||
| 2004 | Being Julia | Evie | ||
| 2005 | Pierrepoint: The Last Hangman | Anne Fletcher | ||
| ''{{sortname | Red Mercury | dab=film}}'' | Sofia Warburton | |
| 2006 | ''{{sortname | Infamous | dab=2006 film}}'' | Diana Vreeland |
| ''{{sortname | Breaking and Entering | dab=film}}'' | Rosemary McCloud | |
| 2007 | And When Did You Last See Your Father? | Kim Morrison | ||
| 2008 | A Previous Engagement | Julia Reynolds | ||
| ** | Miss Heliotrope | |||
| 2009 | Quietus | Jayne | Short film | |
| ''{{sortname | Desert Flower | dab=film}}'' | Lucinda | |
| ''{{sortname | Triage | dab=film}}'' | Amy | aka: Shell Shock |
| 2013 | ''{{sortname | Diana | dab=2013 film}}'' | Sonia |
| Penelope | Penny | Short film | ||
| 2014 | ** | Mother Teresa | ||
| ** | Laura Burrell | Short film | ||
| Mayday | May | Short film | ||
| 2015 | Departure | Beatrice | ||
| 2016 | Love Is Thicker Than Water | Ethel | ||
| Let Me Go | Helga | |||
| 2018 | London Unplugged | Jayne | ||
| 2019 | Four | The Dowager | Short film | |
| 2022 | Walls Like Windows | Maggie | Short film | |
| Ceres | Ceres | Short film | ||
| 2024 | Reawakening | Mary | ||
| Rhoda | Rhoda | Short film | ||
| Post-production | ||||
| Filming |
Television
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1980 | ** | Barbara Mallen/Bensham | 6 episodes |
| 1981 | Maybury | Joanna Langston | Episodes: "A Fall from Grace", "What I Mean Is...", "Ten Green Bottles" |
| 1983 | Bazaar and Rummage | Fliss | TV film |
| 1984 | Crown Court | Catherine Lloyd | Episodes: "Dirty Washing: Parts 1–3" |
| Freud | Elizabeth von Reitberg | Mini-series; episode: "The Secret of Dreams" | |
| Pericles, Prince of Tyre | Thaisa | TV film | |
| 1986 | ** | Antigone | Episodes: "Oedipus at Colonus", "Antigone" |
| 1987 | Horizon | Rosalind Franklin | Episode: "Life Story" |
| 1988 | Screenplay | Ruth | Episode: "Out of Love" |
| Screen Two | Hilda Carline | Episode: "Stanley" | |
| This is David Lander | Penny Foster | Episode: "The Nicholson Story" | |
| 1990 | ** | Vicky Marshall | Episode: "Living with Dinosaurs" (originally aired in UK, 1989) |
| 1991 | 4 Play | Margaret | Episode: "In the Border Country" |
| Screen Two | Lucy | Episode: "Aimée" | |
| 1992 | Performance | Nora Helmer | Episode: "A Doll's House" |
| 1993 | ** | Jane (voice) | Main role; 13 episodes |
| Who Dealt? | Tom's Wife | Short story in the form of a monologue by Ring Lardner | |
| Screen Two | Fraulein Burstner | Episode: "The Trial" | |
| 1994 | Verdi | Giuseppina Strepponi (voice) | TV film |
| 1995 | ** | Flora Matlock | Mini-series; all 3 episodes |
| 1997 | Screen Two | Jean | Episode: "Stone, Scissors, Paper" |
| 1998 | Cider with Rosie | Annie Lee | TV film |
| 1999 | Trial by Fire | Helen West | TV film |
| 2002 | ** | Eve | TV film |
| The Pact | Gus Harte | TV film | |
| 2003 | Hear the Silence | Christine Shields | TV film |
| 2005 | ** | Gerda's Mother | TV film |
| 2007 | Agatha Christie's Marple | Gwenda Vaughn | Episode: "Ordeal by Innocence" |
| 2008 | 10 Days to War | Elizabeth Wilmshurst | Mini-series; episode: "A Simple Private Matter" |
| Place of Execution | Catherine Heathcote | Mini-series; 3 episodes | |
| Dustbin Baby | Marion Bean | TV film | |
| 2010 | Law & Order: UK | Rachel Callaghan | Episode: "Denial" |
| Accused | Helen Ryland | Episode: "Helen's Story" | |
| 2011 | Lewis | Diana Ellerby | Episode: "Old, Unhappy, Far Off Things" |
| ** | Lady Elms | Recurring role; 4 episodes | |
| 2012 | White Heat | Charlotte (Present Day) | Mini-series; 6 episodes |
| 2013–2014 | ** | Clem Allingham | Main role; 12 episodes |
| 2013–2015 | Atlantis | The Oracle | Main role; 12 episodes |
| 2014 | On Angel Wings | Mary (voice) | TV short film |
| 2015 | X Company | Mayor Marie Bellaire | Episode: "Walk with the Devil" |
| ** | Betty Grosse | Mini-series; 3 episodes | |
| Artsnight | Contributor | Episode: "Richard Wilson on Samuel Beckett" | |
| 2016 | One of Us | Louise Elliot | Mini-series; 4 episodes |
| 2018 | Hamlet | Gertrude | TV film; filmed stage production |
| 2019 | Riviera | Lady Cassandra Eltham | 10 episodes |
| 2020 | Out of Her Mind | Carol | Series regular; 6 episodes |
| 2021 | The Long Call | Dorothy Venn | Main role; 4 episodes |
| Death in Paradise | Natasha Carlton | Christmas Special | |
| 2022 | The Man Who Fell to Earth | Sister Mary Lou Prescott | Episodes: "Under Pressure", "The Pretty Things Are Going to Hell" |
| 2022–2025 | Professor T. | Dr. Helena Goldberg | Recurring role; 15 episodes |
| 2023 | Secret Invasion | Elizabeth Hill | Mini-series; episode: "Promises" |
| Wolf | Matilda Anchor-Ferrers | 6 episodes | |
| 2025 | A Cruel Love: The Ruth Ellis Story | Charity Taylor | Mini-series; 4 episodes |
| King & Conqueror | Lady Emma | 4 episodes | |
| The Deal | Cindy Cohen | 6 episodes |
Narration
In addition to her acting work, Stevenson has provided voice-overs for numerous film and TV documentaries, including:
- Horizon (6 episodes; 1988–2005)
- Greek Fire (9 episodes; 1990–1991)
- Equinox (1 episode; 1992)
- The World of Eric Carle (1 episode; 1993)
- Network First (1 episode; 1994)
- Paris Was a Woman (film, 1996)
- Anglia at Peace (4 episodes; 1996)
- Evita, una tumba sin paz (film, 1997)
- An Awfully Big Adventure (1 episode; 1998)
- B.P. Confidential! (TV film, 1998)
- Secret History (2 episodes; 1999, 2000)
- Hidden Love (1 episode; 2000)
- Animated Tales of the World (1 episode; 2000)
- The Real... (2 episodes; 2000, 2002)
- The Great Sperm Race (TV film, 2003)
- The Hunt for the Camden Ripper (TV film, 2004)
- Why Intelligence Fails (mini-series; 2004)
- John Wyndham: The Invisible Man of Science Fiction (TV film, 2005)
- Israel and the Arabs: Elusive Peace (3 episodes; 2005)
- Cutting Edge (2 episodes; 2005, 2006)
- In Search of Mozart (film, 2006)
- Dispatches (1 episode; 2007)
- London Calling: Inside BBC World Service (3 episodes; 2007)
- I Can't Believe I'm Telling You This (TV film, 2008)
- Arena (1 episode; 2008)
- In Search of Beethoven (film, 2009)
- True Stories (1 episode; 2011)
- In Search of Haydn (film, 2012)
- Russia's Open Book: Writing in the Age of Putin (film, 2013)
- Natural World (5 episodes; 2013–2016)
- In Search of Chopin (film, 2014)
- Pakistan's Hidden Shame (film, 2014)
- Invictus Games (TV series, 2014)
- 60 Years of Carols from King's (TV Special, 2014)
- 1066: A Year to Conquer England (3 episodes; 2017)
- Russia 1917: Countdown to Revolution (TV film, 2017)
- Queens of Mystery (12 episodes; 2019–2021)
- Wander (short film, 2020)
- Shakespeare: Rise of a Genius (3 episodes; 2023)
- Mozart: Rise of a Genius (3 episodes; 2024)
- Jane Austen: Rise of a Genius (3 episodes; 2025)
Theatre
| Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1978 | ** | Spirit | Royal Shakespeare Company | |
| Antony and Cleopatra | Iras / Octavia | Royal Shakespeare Company | ||
| Measure for Measure | Whore / Nun | Royal Shakespeare Company | ||
| ** | Caroline Thompson | |||
| ''{{sortname | Hippolytus | dab=play}}'' | Aphrodite / Artemis | |
| Lovers and Kings | ||||
| ** | Widow / Curtis | |||
| ** | Yeliena | |||
| ''{{sortname | Once in a Lifetime | dab=play}}'' | Miss Chasen | |
| 1980 | Henry IV | Lady Percy | Royal Shakespeare Company | |
| 1981 | ** | Hippolyta / Titania | ||
| ** | Susan | Royal Shakespeare Company | ||
| Money | Clara Douglas | |||
| 1983 | Other Worlds | Emma / Betsy | Royal Court Theatre, London | |
| 1984 | Measure for Measure | Isabella | Royal Shakespeare Company, Stratford Theatre | |
| Breaking the Silence | Polya | Royal Shakespeare Company, The Pit Theatre, London | ||
| 1985 | Troilus and Cressida | Cressida | Royal Shakespeare Company, Stratford Theatre | |
| As You Like It | Rosalind | Royal Shakespeare Company, Stratford Theatre | ||
| 1986 | Les Liaisons dangereuses | Madame de Tourvel | Royal Shakespeare Company, The Pit Theatre | |
| 1987 | Yerma | Yerma | National Theatre, London | |
| 1988–1990 | ** | Kyllene | Theatre of Delphi/National Theatre, London | |
| 1989 | Hedda Gabler | Hedda | National Theatre, London | |
| ''{{sortname | On the Verge | dab=play}}'' | Fanny | Sadler's Wells Theatre, London |
| 1990 | Burn This | Anna | Hampstead Theatre, London | |
| 1991–1992 | ''{{sortname | Death and the Maiden | dab=play}}'' | Paulina |
| 1993 | Scenes from an Execution | Galactia | Mark Taper Forum, Los Angeles | |
| 1995 | ** | Greenwich Theatre/Wyndham's Theatre, London | ||
| 1997 | ** | Royal National Theatre, London | ||
| 1999 | Private Lives | Amanda | The National Theatre | |
| 2000 | ** | Royal Court Theatre | ||
| 2003 | ** | Desirée Armfeldt | New York City Opera | |
| 2004 | ''{{sortname | We Happy Few | dab=play}}'' | |
| 2005 | ** | Royal Court Theatre | ||
| 2006 | ** | Irina Arkadina | The National Theatre | |
| 2009 | Duet for One | Stephanie Anderson | London | |
| 2011 | ** | Dr Diane Cassell | Royal Court Theatre | |
| 2014–2015 | ''{{sortname | Happy Days | dab=play}}'' | Winnie |
| 2016–2018 | ''{{sortname | Mary Stuart | dab=Schiller play}}'' | Mary Stuart / Elizabeth I |
| 2017 | ''{{sortname | Hamlet | dab=play}}'' | Gertrude |
| 2019, 2020, | ||||
| 2022, 2023 | ** | Professor Ruth Wolff | Almeida Theatre | |
| Adelaide Festival | ||||
| UK Tour & Duke of York's Theatre | ||||
| Park Avenue Armory, New York |
Audio recordings
A partial list of Stevenson's audio recordings:
- Man and Superman, BBC Audiobooks, 1998 (Broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1996). Production featured Juliet Stevenson, Ralph Fiennes and Judi Dench. It also included an interview with the director, Peter Hall
- Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats, Penguin Audiobooks, 1997
- The Plague Tales, BDD, c. 1997
- Hamlet by William Shakespeare, BBC Radio Collection, 1999 (with Michael Sheen)
- When Love Speaks (2002, EMI Classics) – "Sonnet 128" ("How oft, when thou, my music ...")
- Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (2004 BBC Radio 3)
- The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield, Unabridged, Orion audiobook (2006)
- Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen. Unabridged, Naxos audiobook, 7 CDs (2006)
- Persuasion by Jane Austen. Unabridged, Naxos audiobook, 7 CDs (2007)
- Mansfield Park by Jane Austen. Unabridged, Naxos audiobook, 14 CDs (2007)
- Emma by Jane Austen. Unabridged, Naxos audiobook, 13 CDs (2007)
- Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen, Unabridged, Naxos audiobook (2007)
- Lady Audley's Secret by Mary Elizabeth Braddon. Abridged, CSA Word Classic, 4 CDs (2007)
- The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë
- I, Coriander by Sally Gardner
- The King's General by Daphne du Maurier
- An Unequal Marriage by Emma Tennant
- From Shakespeare with Love by William Shakespeare. David Tennant (narrator), Juliet Stevenson (narrator), Anton Lesser (narrator), Alex Jennings (narrator)
- Rebecca, Frenchman's Creek & My Cousin Rachel (Daphne du Maurier Collection) by Daphne du Maurier. Juliet Stevenson (narrator), Daniel Massey (narrator), Michael Maloney (narrator)
- A Room with a View by E.M. Forster
- The London Tapes by Juliet Stevenson
- Ancient and Modern by Sue Gee (2004)
- Alentejo Blue by Monica Ali, abridged (2006)
- North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell, unabridged (2009)
- The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing (2010)
- A Room of One's Own by Virginia Woolf (2011)
- Middlemarch by George Eliot. Unabridged, Naxos Audiobooks (2011)
- Goldfish Girl by Peter Souter (2011)
- Mary Poppins by P. L. Travers (2012)
- The Signature of All Things by Elizabeth Gilbert (2013)
- The Paying Guests by Sarah Waters, unabridged (2014)
- Apple Tree Yard by Louise Doughty, unabridged (2014)
- Belgravia by Julian Fellowes, (2016)
- Miss Marple’s Final Cases by Agatha Christie (2022)
- Stevenson's speaking voice is heard in the historical symposium which opens and closes the production of The Handmaid's Tale at English National Opera in 2024.
Honours
In the 1999 Queens Birthday Honours, Stevenson was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE).
She is a patron of the London International Festival of Theatre.
Awards and nominations
Film
| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1992 | British Academy Film Award | Best Actress in a Leading Role | Truly, Madly, Deeply |
Television
| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | British Academy Television Award | Actress | A Doll's House | |
| 1996 | British Academy Television Award | Actress | The Politician's Wife | |
| 2011 | British Academy Television Award | Leading Actress | Accused | |
| 2019 | Primetime Emmy Award | Outstanding Narrator | Queens of Mystery (Episode: "Murder in the Dark: First Chapter") |
Theatre
| Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1983 | Critics' Circle Theatre Award | Best Actress | Measure for Measure | |
| 1984 | Laurence Olivier Award | Actress of the Year in a Revival | ||
| 1986 | Laurence Olivier Award | Best Actress | As You Like It, Les Liaisons Dangereuses and Troilus and Cressida | |
| 1987 | Laurence Olivier Award | Yerma | ||
| 1992 | Laurence Olivier Award | Death and the Maiden | ||
| 2009 | Evening Standard Theatre Award | Best Actress | Duet for One | |
| 2010 | Laurence Olivier Award | Best Actress | ||
| 2019 | Evening Standard Theatre Award | Best Actress | The Doctor | |
| Critics' Circle Theatre Award | Best Actress | |||
| 2020 | Laurence Olivier Award | Best Actress | ||
| 2024 | Drama Desk Award | Lead Performance in a Play |
References
References
- (10 January 2009). "My Secret Life: Juliet Stevenson".
- (7 November 2005). "Why Juliet Dreads the Boards". The Daily Telegraph.
- According to ''Who's Who on Television'' (1982 edition)
- [http://www.officiallondontheatre.co.uk/olivier_awards/view/item98526/Olivier-Winners-1992/] {{webarchive. link. (11 June 2009)
- {{IMDb name. 0828980
- (18 February 2008). "Juliet Stevenson: 'I would love a completely different life?'". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
- Aaronovitch, David. (14 December 2003). "A travesty of truth". The Guardian.
- Flood, Alison. (22 October 2009). "British readers vote Harlan Coben their favourite crime writer". guardian.co.uk (Guardian News & Media).
- "Juliet Stevenson receives lifetime achievement prize at Women in Film And TV awards". Sky News.
- (2023). "Reawakening". westendfilms.com.
- Howell, Madeleine. (8 August 2022). "Juliet Stevenson: 'Alan Rickman was never easy – but brilliant people never are'". The Telegraph.
- Dugan, Emily. (22 May 2011). "Juliet Stevenson: 'I'd much rather live a useful life than be rich'". Independent.
- Dodd, Celia. (14 March 2008). "Actress Juliet Stevenson reveals that her toughest role is being an older mother". The Times.
- Sign Up. (25 July 2008). "National Secular Society – Coming out as atheist – Billy Connolly, Juliet Stevenson and Peter O'Toole". Secularism.org.uk.
- (18 February 2008). "Juliet Stevenson: 'I would love a completely different life?'". The Daily Telegraph.
- Parsons, Tan. (8 February 2008). "Juliet Stevenson is truly, deeply sad about refugees". [[Ham & High]].
- Barnett, Anthony. (11 March 2008). "The real face of asylum". The Guardian.
- Verkaik, Robert. (2 March 2008). "Theatre stars unite for reform of 'brutal' UK asylum system". [[The Independent]].
- Barnett, Anthony. (7 March 2008). "Motherland is a must".
- Barnett, Anthony. (13 March 2008). "Political theatre presenting lives not lectures". The Guardian.
- "LAM Action".
- "Juliet Stevenson: Amnesty Ambassador".
- (13 December 2023). "ARC News December 2023 by ARCantenatal - Issuu".
- "2016 Stories – #WithRefugees".
- (2016-09-07). "What They Took With Them – #WithRefugees".
- Billington, Michael. (2019-08-21). "The Doctor review – Robert Icke offers brilliant diagnosis of modern ills".
- Galton, Bridget. (2017-06-21). "Juliet Stevenson: 'I thought I'd be bored but I love playing Gertrude'".
- "Mary Stuart".
- "The Guilty Feminist: 105. Mothers and Daughters with Juliet Stevenson and Rosalind Brody".
- "The Secret Policeman's Tour".
- "BBC Radio 4 – We Sigh for Houses".
- (26 July 2020). "JR July 2020 Issue Launch".
- "Literary Reflections – Deborah Freeman".
- "Lucy Parham with Juliet Stevenson: I, Clara".
- "Juliet Stevenson".
- Mallinson, Mathilda. (2021-04-21). "'When I paint, all the voices in my head go still': Juliet Stevenson on how art got her through lockdown".
- Siedlecka, Jo. (4 December 2024). "Text: Juliet Stevenson at Saturday's national peace march".
- "Film Workers Pledge to End Complicity".
- "Who Dealt? at IMDB".
- (1929). "Round Up: The Stories of Ring W. Lardner". [[Charles Scribner's Sons]].
- (15 February 2023). "BBC releases first look imagery for new crime thriller series Wolf".
- "Mary Poppins". BBC.
- (27 June 2017). "Julian Fellowes's Belgravia".
- Shapiro, Yehuda. Report on The Handmaid's Tale, London, February 2024. ''[[Opera (British magazine). Opera]]'', April 2024, Vol.75 No.4, p524-525.
- [https://www.liftfestival.com/about-us/meet-the-team "Meet The Team"] {{Webarchive. link. (11 September 2016 , ''LIFT''. Retrieved 9 August 2016.)
- "BAFTA Awards search Juliet Stevenson". BAFTA site.
- "Outstanding Narrator Nominees / Winners 2019".
- (2020-02-11). "Just announced! Full list of 2019 Critics' Circle Awards winners and production photos {{!}} Critics' Circle Theatre Awards".
- "Olivier Winners 1984".
- "Olivier Winners 1986".
- "Olivier Winners 1987".
- "Olivier winners 1992". Olivier Awards.
- agencies, Staff and. (2009-11-09). "Royal Court theatre celebrates 11 Evening Standard award nominations thanks to the success of Enron and Jerusalem".
- (2012-04-10). "Winners of Evening Standard Theatre Awards 2009".
- "Olivier Awards Winners 2010 -Official London Theatre".
- Paskett, Zoe. (2019-11-25). "The 2019 Evening Standard Theatre Awards winners in full".
- (2020-02-11). "2019 Results {{!}} Critics' Circle Theatre Awards".
- "Olivier Awards 2020 with Mastercard – Theatre's Biggest Night".
- Culwell-Block, Logan. (10 June 2024). "''Stereophonic'' Leads 2024 Drama Desk Awards With 7 Wins Including Outstanding Play".
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