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Maxine Peake

British actress (born 1974)


British actress (born 1974)

FieldValue
nameMaxine Peake
imageMaxinePeak 2015.JPG
alt
captionPeake in February 2015
birth_name
birth_date
birth_placeBolton, Greater Manchester, England
educationWesthoughton High School; Canon Slade School; Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
occupation
years_active1995–present
known_fordinnerladies
Shameless
Silk
The Village
partnerPawlo Wintoniuk

Shameless Silk The Village Maxine Peake (born 14 July 1974) is an English actress and narrator. She is known for her roles as Twinkle in dinnerladies, a sitcom on BBC One (1998–2000), as Veronica Ball in Shameless, the comedy drama from Channel 4 (2004–2007), Martha Costello in the BBC One legal drama Silk (2011–2014), and Grace Middleton in the BBC One drama series The Village (2013–2014). In 2017, she starred in the Black Mirror episode "Metalhead". She has also played the title role in a Royal Exchange production of Hamlet, as well as the notorious serial killer Myra Hindley in See No Evil: The Moors Murders, the critically acclaimed 2006 dramatisation by ITV of the Moors murders.

Early life

Peake was born in Bolton, England, on 14 July 1974. She went to Westhoughton High School and Canon Slade School (in the same year as Sara Cox) in Bradshaw, acquiring two A-levels.

Peake joined the Octagon Youth Theatre in Bolton at the age of 13, before a period at the youth theatre of the Royal Exchange in Manchester. She later did a two-year performing arts course at the Salford College of Technology. During this time she appeared in productions with two leading amateur theatre companies in Bolton: The Marco Players and The Phoenix Theatre Company. Peake was a member of the Communist Party of Britain Salford branch in her youth. In her teens, Peake played for Wigan Ladies rugby league team.

Peake's early attempts to enter the acting profession were unsuccessful. She applied to multiple theatre schools but was rejected, until she obtained a place at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) at the age of 21. Her attempts to find sponsorship for her study at RADA were the subject of a 1996 documentary by The South Bank Show. Eventually, after being put forward by RADA, she was awarded the Patricia Rothermere Scholarship.

Career

Peake has appeared in many television and stage productions, including Victoria Wood's dinnerladies, Channel 4's Shameless, in the lead role of barrister Martha Costello in the BBC's legal drama Silk and alongside John Simm in the BBC drama The Village, depicting life in a Derbyshire village during the First World War. Following career advice from Victoria Wood, between the two series of dinnerladies, Peake lost so much weight that an explanation had to be written into the script for her character, Twinkle.

Peake portrayed Moors murderer Myra Hindley in See No Evil: The Moors Murders, which was broadcast in May 2006. In January 2009, Peake appeared in her first major feature film role, as Angela, in the film Clubbed.

In 2012, Peake played the title role in Miss Julie at the Royal Exchange, Manchester, and previously played the part of Kristin in a 2000 production. She played Doll Tearsheet in the BBC2 adaptations of Henry IV, Parts I and II.

Peake wrote, directed and starred in the play Beryl: A Love Story On Two Wheels about the life of the Leeds-born cyclist Beryl Burton, which was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in November 2012. In 2014, Peake adapted her play for the stage. Entitled simply Beryl, it was commissioned by the West Yorkshire Playhouse, where it ran in June and July 2014 to coincide with the start of the Tour de France in Leeds. The play returned in June and July 2015 and toured across England in Autumn 2015. Peake wrote a later play called Queens of the Coal Age again for Radio 4 that told the story of Anne Scargill and three other women who tried to occupy a coal mine in 1993.

Peake provided the vocals for the Eccentronic Research Council's 2012 concept album 1612 Underture about the Pendle witch trials and for their 2015 album Johnny Rocket, Narcissist & Music Machine…I'm Your Biggest Fan. Peake also features as a crazed stalker in the music video for "Sweet Saturn Mine" by The Moonlandingz; a collaborative effort by Eccentronic Research Council and Fat White Family in 2015.

In September 2013, Peake was appointed an Associate Artist of the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester. Her association with the theatre began in childhood and she was a member of the youth theatre. Major productions in which she has performed include The Children's Hour in 2008, for which she won a MEN Award, and Miss Julie in 2012 for which she won a Manchester Theatre Award. All of her performances at the Royal Exchange have been directed by Sarah Frankcom with whom she also collaborated on The Masque of Anarchy in 2012 for the Manchester International Festival. Building on this work, in September 2014 Frankcom went on to direct her as the title character in a radical re-imagining of Hamlet. The demand for tickets was so great that the production was extended for a week, having been "the theatre's fastest-selling show in a decade". The Guardian said of her performance: "Peake's delicate ferocity, her particular mixture of concentration and lightness, ensure that you want to follow her whenever she appears". A year later she appeared in Frankcom's production of The Skriker, as "Caryl Churchill's shape-shifting, doom-wreaking fairy". The Guardian's Lyn Gardner listed the production in her top ten British plays of the year. In 2016, Peake resumed her partnership with Royal Exchange Artistic Director, Sarah Frankcom, to star as Blanche Dubois in Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire. Peake's performance in the role garnered critical acclaim with The Guardian describing her performance as "exquisite" and "breathtaking".

Peake starred in "Metalhead", a December 2017 episode of Netflix's Black Mirror anthology. The episode was directed by Hannibal and American Gods director David Slade.

Peake starred as Nellie in Mike Leigh's 2018 film, Peterloo, based on the events of the 1819 Peterloo Massacre in Manchester.

Peake starred as the eponymous protagonist in the 2018 film Funny Cow alongside a cast including Paddy Considine and Stephen Graham. Tony Pitts wrote and starred in the film, which received positive reviews, in particular for Peake's "magnificent" performance.

Peake starred in, and won critical acclaim for, the lead role of Winnie in Samuel Beckett's Happy Days at the Royal Exchange Theatre in May 2018. The Guardian said she gave a "brilliant central performance, there's barely a breath between optimism and despair". Following Happy Days, the theatre presented Queens of the Coal Age, a play written by Peake. Adapted from her earlier radio drama, Queens of the Coal Age looks at the 1993 pit closure protests by miners' wives in northern England. The play received mixed reviews.

Peake starred in The Nico Project as the Velvet Underground singer Nico at the Manchester International Festival in July 2019.

Peake stars as Miss Fozzard in the 2020 BBC remake of Talking Heads, recreating a role originally played by Patricia Routledge.

Personal life

Peake is in a relationship with art director Pawlo Wintoniuk. In 2009, Peake left London after living there for 13 years. She said that living in Salford with Wintoniuk gave her the freedom to choose riskier roles and lower-paying jobs in theatre.

Political views

Peake is a feminist and socialist. She was active in communist organisations during her youth and a member of the Communist Party of Britain. In January 2014, Peake won the first Bolton Socialist Club Outstanding Contribution to Socialism Award for using her work to oppose the government's "crippling austerity measures".

In February 2011, Peake spoke against the "class snobbery" that she felt affected the entertainment business of the age.

In January 2016, Peake featured in The Climate Coalition's short film I Wish For You as Mia, with Jeremy Irons starring as her grandfather, to highlight the urgency of combating climate change.

In July 2015, Peake endorsed Jeremy Corbyn's campaign in the Labour Party leadership election. She wrote on her website: "For me, Jeremy Corbyn is our only beacon of hope to get the Labour Party back on track, get the electorate back in touch with politics and save this country from the constant mindless bullying of the vulnerable and poor." In 2016, along with other celebrities, Peake toured the UK to support Corbyn's bid to become prime minister.

In April 2017, Peake endorsed Corbyn in the 2017 general election. She said: "I am a Corbyn supporter. My mind boggles why people treat him like the anti-Christ, but it goes to show people are a lot more right-wing than they like to believe." In November 2019, along with other public figures, Peake signed a letter supporting Corbyn, describing him as "a beacon of hope in the struggle against emergent far-right nationalism, xenophobia and racism in much of the democratic world", and endorsed him in the 2019 general election.

In June 2020, she took part in an interview with The Independent in which she stated that the practice of police officers in the United States kneeling on someone's neck, one example of which led to the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, was "learnt from seminars taught by Israeli secret services". The Independent amended the original article to add a note that "the allegation that US police were taught tactics of 'neck kneeling' by Israeli secret services is unfounded". Peake later stated that she was "inaccurate in [her] assumption of American police training and its sources". Peake's statement was denounced by Labour leader Keir Starmer, the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Jewish Labour Movement as an "antisemitic conspiracy theory". Shadow Education Secretary Rebecca Long-Bailey retweeted the article and called Peake an "absolute diamond". When Jewish groups demanded she delete the tweet, Long-Bailey refused to do so, leading to her dismissal from the Shadow cabinet by Starmer. John McDonnell, the shadow chancellor under Corbyn, said that "criticism of practices of [the] Israeli state is not antisemitic" and that Peake's claim "was not antisemitic". In October 2023, she criticised Israel's military offensive in the Gaza Strip and called for a ceasefire.

Acting credits

Film

Denotes works that have not yet been released
YearTitleRoleNotes
1998Girls' NightSharon
2002All or NothingParty Girl
2005Be MineTina's motherShort
FrozenTicket Attendant
Stealing UpDaughterShort
2006The Madness of the DanceThe Professor
2007I Am BobMarilyn Monroe
Would Like to MeetHeather
2008ClubbedAngela
2010The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne ListerAnne Lister
AliceGillianShort
EdgeElly
2011Room at the TopAlice Aisgill
Best Laid PlansIsabel
2012Private PeacefulHazel Peaceful
2013Run & JumpVanetia Casey
SvengaliAngie
2014The FallingEileen
The Theory of EverythingElaine Mason
Keeping RosyCharlotte
2017Dispossession: The Great Social Housing SwindleNarratorDocumentary
Funny CowFunny Cow
2018Fanny Lye Deliver'dFanny Lye
PeterlooNellie
GwenElen
2019Be Still My Beating HeartShort film
JudyJudy
2020It's MeMiriam
The Way BackAlyssa, the Sat Nav
2022Lapushka!Scoot Piccolo
Wendell & WildIrmgard Klaxon (voice)
2023TishTish Murtha (voice)
Dance FirstBarbara Bray
2024WokenHelen
2025Words of WarAnna Politkovskaya
I SwearDottie Achenbach

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1995Children's WardGeraldine5 episodes
1996Hetty Wainthropp InvestigatesPhotocopy AssistantEpisode: "Fingers"
1998Picking Up the PiecesLucySeries 1: Episode 7
1998–2000dinnerladiesTwinkleAll 16 episodes
1999SunburnSueSeries 1: Episode 5
Coronation StreetBelinda PeachEpisode #1.4635
Jonathan CreekMarion CretissEpisode: "The Curious Tale of Mr. Spearfish"
2000Clocking OffMarie LeachEpisode: "The Leaches' Story"
2001The Way We Live NowRuby RugglesTV mini-series; all 4 episodes
Linda GreenReceptionistEpisode: "Fitness Freak"
2002Holby CityTanya WiltonEpisode: "Pawns in the Game: Part 1"
Dalziel and PascoeDr. Allison LaurieEpisode: "Mens Sana"
Hamilton MattressLulu (voice)TV short
2003At Home with the BraithwaitesTrixie FletcherSeries 4: Episode 3
Early DoorsJanice4 episodes
2004Christmas LightsPaulineTelevision film
2004–2007ShamelessVeronica BallSeries regular (series 1–3), guest (series 4); 26 episodes
2005FaithLindaTelevision film
Messiah IV: The HarrowingDS Vickie ClarkeTV mini-series; all 3 episodes
2006See No Evil: The Moors MurdersMyra HindleyTelevision film
2007Confessions of a Diary SecretaryTracey Temple
2008Fairy TalesCindy MellorEpisode: "Cinderella"
Bike SquadWPC Kate McFayTelevision film
Hancock and JoanJoan Le Mesurier
PlaceboDr. Sian Nuttall
The Devil's WhoreElizabeth Lilburne4 episodes
Little DorritMiss Wade7 episodes
2009Red Riding: In the Year of Our Lord 1980Helen MarshallTelevision film
Agatha Christie's MarpleThey Do It with MirrorsJolly Bellever
The StreetMadeleineEpisode: "Past Life"
Criminal JusticeJuliet Miller5 episodes
2010The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne ListerAnne ListerTelevision film
2011–2014SilkMartha CostelloAll 18 episodes
2012Henry IV, Parts I and IIDoll TearsheetTV dramas, part of the series The Hollow Crown
2013–2014The VillageGrace MiddletonAll 12 episodes
2015Call SecurityNarratorDocumentary
2016Comic Strip – Red TopRebekah BrooksTelevision film
A Midsummer Night's DreamTitania
2017Three GirlsSara Rowbotham3 episodes
Black MirrorBellaEpisode: "Metalhead"
2018The BisexualSadieAll 6 episodes
2020Inside No. 9NadiaEpisode: "Thinking Out Loud"
Talking HeadsMiss FozzardEpisode: "Miss Fozzard Finds Her Feet"
MandySusan BlowerEpisode: "Susan Bloody Blower"
2022AnneAnne WilliamsTV mini-series; all 4 episodes
Rules of the GameSam ThompsonTV mini-series; all 4 episodes
Kelvin's Big Farming AdventureNarratorSix-part television series
2023Star Wars: VisionsKalina Kalfus (voice)Episode: "I Am Your Mother"
2024Say NothingDolours Price7 episodes
TBAThe DispatcherUpcoming miniseries

Music videos

YearTitleArtistRoleNotes
2019"The Dazzler"Ex:ReActorLead actor, portrays a nameless woman spending the night at The Dazzler

Theatre

YearTitleRoleNotesReferences
1998Early One MorningLizzie
2000Miss JulieKristin
The John Ford InvestigationVarious
The Importance of Being EarnestGwendoline
The Cherry OrchardDunyasha
2001The RelapseMiss Hoyden
LutherKatherine Von Bora
2002Mother Theresa Is DeadJane
HamletOphelia
2003Serjeant Musgrave's DanceAnnie
Robin HoodMaid Marian
The Permanent WayVariousNot in the final cast
2005Rutherford and SonJanet
2006On the Third DayClaire
2007Leaves of GlassDebbie
2008The Children's HourKaren Wright
2011LoyaltyLaura
The Deep Blue SeaHester Collyer
2012Miss JulieMiss Julie
2013The Masque of AnarchyPerformer
2014BerylWriter
HamletHamlet
2015How to Hold Your BreathDana
The SkrikerThe Skriker
2016A Streetcar Named DesireBlanche DuBois
2018Happy DaysWinnie
2019Avalanche: A Love StoryJulia
The Nico ProjectNico
2020The WelkinLizzie Luke
The Great Mountain Sheep GatherNarrator
2022–2023Betty! A Sort of MusicalMeredith Ankle and Betty BoothroydCo-writer and actor
2025The Last Stand of Mrs Mary WhitehouseMary Whitehouse

Radio drama

  • Much Ado About Nothing (2005), Beatrice
  • Guilty Until Proved Innocent (2009), Dina
  • Geoffrey Chaucer – Troilus and Criseyde (2009), Criseyde (dramatised by Lavinia Greenlaw)
  • This Repulsive Woman (2010), Deborah Hurst
  • Craven (Series 1: 2009, Series 2, 3 & 4: 2012, Series 5: 2013, Series 6: 2014), Detective Sue Craven
  • Beryl: A Love Story on Two Wheels (2012), writer and performer (Beryl Burton)
  • Queens of the Coal Age (2013) writer and performer (Anne Scargill)
  • My Dad Keith (2014), writer and performer (Steph)
  • Betsie Coleman (2015), performer (Betsie Coleman)
  • Briar Road (2015), narrator (writer Jonathan Buckley)
  • Not in Our Name CD (2015), narrator (writer Heathcote Williams)
  • Only Mountains, BBC Radio Drama on 3 (writer) 8 March 2020

Radio (other)

  • Only Artists (2018), meets the musician and performance artist Cosey Fanni Tutti.

Awards and nominations

YearNominated workAssociation/AwardsCategoryResult
2006See No Evil: The Moors MurdersRoyal Television Society – NorthBest Actress
2009Hancock & JoanBAFTA TV Awards
2010The StreetBroadcasting Press Guild Awards
Criminal Justice
Crime Thriller Awards
2013SilkBroadcasting Press Guild Awards
Crime Thriller Awards
Room at the TopBroadcasting Press Guild Awards
2014Keeping RosyFantasporto Awards
The VillageBAFTA TV Awards
Broadcasting Press Guild Awards
2018Three Girls
UK Theatre AwardsOutstanding contribution to British Theatre
Funny CowBritish Independent Film AwardsBest Actress
2025Say NothingBAFTA TV AwardsBest Supporting Actress

References

References

  1. Deans, Jason. (13 July 2010). "Maxine Peake to star in BBC1 legal drama Silk". The Guardian.
  2. "Index entry". ONS.
  3. Philby, Charlotte. (8 March 2008). "My Secret Life: Maxine Peake, actress, 33". [[The Independent]].
  4. ''Manchester Evening News'' Saturday 21 August 1993 page 14
  5. (31 December 2017). "Who is Maxine Peake? Everything you need to know about the Black Mirror star". Manchester Evening News.
  6. Mitchison, Amanda. (15 May 2010). "Maxine Peake: The Misfit". The Guardian.
  7. (4 January 2012). "Maxine Peake – My lovely Lancashire home". Lancashire Life.
  8. (11 December 2013). "From running on rugby league fields to acting on the Hollywood big screen". [[Fox Sports (Australia).
  9. Raphael, Amy. (3 October 2009). "Justice at last for Maxine Peake". The Guardian].
  10. Jones, Alice. (22 June 2006). "Maxine Peake: Onward and upward". [[The Independent]].
  11. (19 March 2013). "The Village by Peter Moffat". BBC Press Office.
  12. (17 April 2010). "Return to the Moors". [[Manchester Evening News]].
  13. "''Miss Julie'' Cast List". Royal Exchange Theatre.
  14. (19 January 2000). "Eccleston Woos Miss Julie at Haymarket".
  15. (24 November 2011). "Cast confirmed for BBC Two's cycle of Shakespeare films". BBC Drama Publicity.
  16. Abraham, Richard. (20 November 2012). "BBC to broadcast Beryl Burton radio drama". [[Cycling Weekly]].
  17. "Beryl: A Love Story On Two Wheels". BBC.
  18. Ian Youngs. (24 June 2014). "Maxine Peake celebrates unsung sporting hero Beryl Burton". BBC News.
  19. (8 July 2015). "Tour de Beryl". West Yorkshire Playhouse.
  20. "Queens of the Coal Age". BBC.
  21. Doran, John. (22 August 2012). "The Eccentronic Research Council And Maxine Peake". The Quietus.
  22. Bath, Tristan. (27 May 2015). "The Eccentronic Research Council – Johnny Rocket, Narcissist & Music Machine... I'm Your Biggest Fan". The Quietus.
  23. (16 February 2015). "Sweet Saturn Mine". YouTube.
  24. (14 February 2015). "Maxine Peake Stalks the Fat Whites...". The Guardian.
  25. "Meet The Creative Team". Royal Exchange Theatre.
  26. "Royal Exchange Press Release". royalexchange.co.uk.
  27. "Maxine Peake's run as Hamlet at Royal Exchange extended by a week", ''Manchester Evening News'', 1 September 2014.
  28. (20 September 2014). "Hamlet Review". The Guardian.
  29. Clapp, Susannah. (12 July 2015). "The Skriker review – extraordinarily prescient". The Guardian.
  30. Gardner, Lyn. (17 December 2015). "Lyn Gardner's top 10 theatre of 2015". The Guardian.
  31. Billington, Michael. (13 September 2016). "A Streetcar Named Desire review – Maxine Peake is a breathtaking Blanche". The Guardian.
  32. Haring, Bruce. (25 August 2017). "'Black Mirror': Season 4 Cast & Episode Info, Teaser Trailer Released By Netflix". Deadline.
  33. Ritman, Alex. (5 July 2017). "Maxine Peake Joins Mike Leigh's 'Peterloo' (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter.
  34. Kermode, Mark. (22 April 2018). "Funny Cow review – grit and wit".
  35. Love, Catherine. (31 May 2018). "Happy Days review – Maxine Peake is transfixed by climate chaos". The Guardian.
  36. "Queens of the Coal Age, Afternoon Drama - BBC Radio 4".
  37. "Queens of the Coal Age review at Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester". The Stage.
  38. Love, Catherine. (5 July 2018). "Queens of the Coal Age review – Maxine Peake shines light on women's fight for the mines".
  39. (8 March 2019). "Maxine Peake to star as Nico in play about the singer's 'dark side'".
  40. "Talking Heads' Maxine Peake says she 'panicked' when first asked to perform Alan Bennett monologue".
  41. (16 June 2020). "BBC - An interview with Maxine Peake - Media Centre".
  42. Mcnulty, Bernadette. (4 August 2015). "Maxine Peake on Leaving London". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  43. (17 October 2018). "'Hope has started to grow': Maxine Peake on Corbyn, people power and Peterloo's radical legacy".
  44. Chaudhari, Saiqa. (10 January 2014). "Maxine Peake wins socialism award for opposing austerity measures". [[The Bolton News]].
  45. (15 February 2015). "Maxine Peake Attacks 'Classist' Acting Profession". BBC News.
  46. "Maxine Peake stars in new climate change film 'I Wish for You...'".
  47. James, Luke. (11 July 2015). "Peake: Corbyn can put Labour on track". [[Morning Star (British newspaper).
  48. (28 July 2015). "#JC4PM". jc4pmtour.
  49. Wilkinson, Michael. (1 February 2016). "Celebrities to tour Britain in 'Jeremy Corbyn For Prime Minister' musical show". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
  50. Hattenstone, Simon. (29 April 2017). "Maxine Peake: 'I'm a Corbyn supporter. We need a coup'". [[The Guardian]].
  51. Neale, Matthew. (16 November 2019). "Exclusive: New letter supporting Jeremy Corbyn signed by Roger Waters, Robert Del Naja and more". [[NME]].
  52. (25 June 2020). "Maxine Peake: 'People who couldn't vote Labour because of Corbyn? They voted Tory as far as I'm concerned'". The Independent.
  53. (25 June 2020). "I feel it's important for me to clarify that, when talking to The Independent, I was inaccurate in my assumption of American Police training & its sources. I find racism & antisemitism abhorrent & I in no way wished, nor intended, to add fodder to any views of the contrary.".
  54. Walker, Peter. (25 June 2020). "Keir Starmer sacks Rebecca Long-Bailey from shadow cabinet". The Guardian.
  55. Stolworthy, Jacob. (October 18, 2023). "Tilda Swinton, Steve Coogan and Miriam Margolyes among 2,000 artists calling for Gaza ceasefire". The Independent.
  56. King, Jack. (March 14, 2022). "'Wendell & Wild' Teaser Announces Ving Rhames, David Harewood, and More Joining Voice Cast".
  57. "First look: Gabriel Byrne as Samuel Beckett in James Marsh's biopic 'Dance First'".
  58. "Rules Of The Game".
  59. Kroll, Justin. (February 1, 2024). "Lola Petticrew, Hazel Doupe, Anthony Boyle, Josh Finan and Maxine Peake To Star In FX Limited Series 'Say Nothing'".
  60. "Marvelous Maxine Peake". Maxine Peake.
  61. (13 March 2000). "Miss Julie". Variety.
  62. "Cherry Orchard". What's on Stage.
  63. (27 July 2001). "The Relapse". Variety.
  64. "Sewell, Griffiths & West Lead Nationals'".
  65. Billington, Michael. (27 June 2002). "Mother Teresa is Dead". The Guardian.
  66. "Hamlet".
  67. Billington, Michael. (6 October 2003). "Serjeant Musgrave's Dance". The Guardian.
  68. Ascherson, Neal. (9 November 2003). "Whose Line is it Anyway". [[The Observer]].
  69. "Rutherford and Son".
  70. Billington, Michael. (23 June 2006). "On the Third Day". The Guardian.
  71. Gardner, Lyn. (12 May 2007). "Leaves of Glass". The Guardian.
  72. "The Children's Hour".
  73. Gardner, Lyn. (20 July 2011). "Loyalty". The Guardian.
  74. (22 February 2011). "The deep Blue Sea".
  75. Hickling, Alfred. (17 April 2012). "Miss Julie Review". The Guardian.
  76. "The Mask of Anarchy". Manchester International Festival.
  77. (20 September 2014). "Hamlet review – Maxine Peake is a delicately ferocious Prince of Denmark". The Guardian.
  78. (11 February 2015). "How to Hold Your Breath review". The Guardian.
  79. Heward, Emily. (5 March 2015). "MIF15: Maxine Peake to face one of 'most challenging' roles yet in The Skriker".
  80. "A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE - Royal Exchange Theatre".
  81. "Happy Days - Royal Exchange Theatre".
  82. "Betty! A sort of Musical at Royal Exchange".
  83. Jays, David. (2025-09-11). "The Last Stand of Mrs Mary Whitehouse review – Maxine Peake takes us behind moral crusader’s curtain". The Guardian.
  84. "BBC - (none) - Drama on 3 - Much Ado about Nothing".
  85. (2009). "Guilty Until Proved Innocent". [[BBC Radio 4]].
  86. "Geoffrey Chaucer – Troilus and Criseyde". BBC Radio 4.
  87. (2010). "This Repulsive Woman". BBC Radio 4.
  88. "15 Minute Drama, Craven, Episode 1". BBC.
  89. "Behind the Scenes of Queens of the Coal Age". Savvy Productions.
  90. (2014). "My Dad Keith". BBC Radio 4.
  91. "Afternoon Drama: Betsie Coleman". BBC Radio 4.
  92. "BBC National Short Story Award: Briar Road". BBC Radio 4.
  93. "MAXINE PEAKE – Actress". Peace in Our Name Music.
  94. "28/03/2018, Series 4, Only Artists - BBC Radio 4".
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