Anna Maxwell Martin
Anna Maxwell Martin, sometimes credited as Anna Maxwell-Martin, is an English actress.
Theatre work includes the role of Lyra Belacqua in His Dark Materials at the Royal National Theatre.
She has won two British Academy Television Awards, for her portrayals of Esther Summerson in the BBC's 2005 adaptation of Bleak House and "N" in Channel 4's 2008 adaptation of Poppy Shakespeare. From 2017 Martin has played the lead role in BBC TV comedy Motherland for which she was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Female Comedy Performance.
Early life and education
Anna Charlotte Martin was born in Beverley on 10 May 1977 to Rosalind and Ivan Martin. Her father was managing director of a pharmaceutical company and her mother was a research scientist. Her mother gave up her job to bring up Anna and her elder brother Adam. She attended Beverley High School where she appeared in school plays. After she left school, Martin studied history at Liverpool University, specialising in the First World War.She joined the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art after completing her studies at Liverpool. She added the name Maxwell to her surname to distinguish her from another member with the same name when she joined Equity.
Career
Martin first came to prominence on the London stage playing the leading role of Lyra in the National Theatre's production of Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials. She was then cast in the part of Bessie Higgins in the BBC television adaptation of the Elizabeth Gaskell novel, North and South, in 2004, and made a guest appearance in the 2005 series of Doctor Who. She played Esther Summerson, the central character in the 2005 BBC adaptation of Charles Dickens' Bleak House, for which she won the Best Actress BAFTA Television Award in 2006.In January 2006, Martin took part in a reading of The Entertainer at the Royal Court Theatre, and in February and March she appeared in Laura Wade's Other Hands, directed by Bijan Sheibani at the Soho Theatre. She is the narrator of the CD version of The Foreshadowing, a children's book about the First World War by Marcus Sedgwick, which was published in May 2006. In the same year she worked on I Really Hate My Job, directed by Oliver Parker and, from October 2006 to April 2007, played Sally Bowles in Bill Kenwright and Rufus Norris's West End production of Cabaret at the Lyric Theatre.
She played Cassandra Austen in Becoming Jane, a 2007 film about the early life of the novelist Jane Austen starring American actress Anne Hathaway in the title role. At the end of the year she played the gaoler's daughter in Lee Hall's adaptation of The Wind in the Willows, a multimillion-pound production by Box TV for BBC One, and was the joint narrator of the CD version of Tamar, a children's book about the Second World War by Mal Peet, which was published in December 2007.
In 2008 she starred in the BBC Two drama White Girl and with Naomie Harris in Channel 4's adaptation of Poppy Shakespeare, for which she won her second Best Actress BAFTA Television Award in 2009.
From July to October of that year, she appeared with Dame Eileen Atkins in The Female of the Species at the Vaudeville Theatre in London. She also appeared in a BBC Radio 4 adaptation of Agatha Christie's novel Crooked House. In July 2009 she appeared in the BBC Two drama Freefall, and played Neil Armstrong's wife, Janet, in Moonshot: The Flight of Apollo 11, an ITV1 drama documentary to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing.
In February 2010 she played freedom of information campaigner Heather Brooke in On Expenses, a BBC Four satirical drama, and later played Isabella in Shakespeare's Measure For Measure at the Almeida Theatre.
In February 2011, she played Sarah Burton in a three-part BBC adaptation of Winifred Holtby's novel, South Riding. On 12 July 2011, she played Kay Langrish in a BBC Two dramatisation of The Night Watch.
Beginning in September 2012, she starred in the drama mini-series The Bletchley Circle. On 4 September 2012, she appeared in Jimmy McGovern's Accused.
In December 2013 she returned to the world of Jane Austen, starring as Elizabeth Darcy in the BBC Christmas season drama Death Comes to Pemberley, a three-part television adaptation of the P. D. James novel of the same name which continues the events of Austen's Pride and Prejudice six years after Darcy and Elizabeth's marriage, with a murder mystery plot involving the same characters.
In March 2015 she played Mary Shelley in the ITV drama series, The Frankenstein Chronicles.
In 2018 she played the lead role in sitcom Motherland.
In 2019 she played Beelzebub, leader of the denizens of Hell, in the Amazon Prime TV show Good Omens, based on the book of the same name.
Filmography
Radio
- The Tall One as Samantha
- The Raj Quartet as Daphne Manners
- The Ante Natal Clinic as Ros
- The Sea as Rose
- Great Expectations as Estella
- The Invention of Childhood as one of several readers
- Berlin – Soundz Decadent as herself
- Crooked House as Sophia Leonides
- Words and Music: The Soft Machine as one of two poetry readers
- The Portrait of a Lady as Isabel Archer
- Villette as Lucy Snowe
- Au Pairs as Dorika
- Chekhov's Seven and a Half Years as Olga in Three Sisters
- The New Radio 2 Arts Show with Claudia Winkleman as herself
- Words and Music: Malady as one of two readers
- The Wings of the Dove as Milly Theale
- The White Devil as Vittoria
- Faust as Gretchen
- Juvenile Jane as the extract reader
Theatre
- The Little Foxes as Alexandra at the Donmar
- The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe as Lucy for the RSC at the Sadler's Wells Theatre
- The Coast of Utopia as Alexandra, Maria and Tata at the Royal National Theatre
- The Lady of Larkspur Lotion as Mrs Hardwicke-Moore at the National Theatre
- Hello from Bertha as Goldie at the National Theatre
- Collateral Damage II at the National Theatre
- Honour as Sophie at the Royal National Theatre
- Three Sisters as Irina at the Royal National Theatre
- His Dark Materials as Lyra at the Royal National Theatre
- Songs of Innocence and Experience at the National Theatre
- The Marriage of Heaven and Hell at the National Theatre
- Will and Lyra as herself at the National Theatre
- Dumb Show as Liz at the Royal Court Theatre
- After the Fire at the National Theatre
- The Black Glove at the National Theatre
- Snowbound at the Royal National Theatre Studio
- The Entertainer as Jean at the Royal Court Theatre
- Other Hands as Hayley at the Soho Theatre
- Cabaret as Sally Bowles at the Lyric Theatre, Shaftesbury Avenue
- The Female of the Species as Molly Rivers at the Vaudeville Theatre
- Top Girls as Pope Joan at the Royal Court Theatre
- Pencil at the Old Vic
- Measure for Measure as Isabella at the Almeida Theatre
- King Lear as Regan at the National Theatre
- Consent at the National Theatre
Audiobooks
Awards
- Nominated for Olivier Award for Best Actress in 2005 for role of Lyra in His Dark Materials
- Third in BBC Drama Poll for Best Actress in 2006 for role of Esther Summerson in Bleak House
- Nominated for Broadcasting Press Guild Award for Best Actress in 2006 for role of Esther Summerson in Bleak House
- Won British Academy Television Award for Best Actress in 2006 for role of Esther Summerson in Bleak House
- Nominated for Royal Television Society Programme Award for Best Actor in 2009 for role of N in Poppy Shakespeare
- Won British Academy Television Award for Best Actress in 2009 for role of N in Poppy Shakespeare
- Nominated for British Academy Television Award for Best Actress in 2011 for role of Sarah Burton in South Riding
- Nominated for British Academy Television Award for Best Female Comedy Performance in 2018 for role of Julia in Motherland
Personal life