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Pauline Turner

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Pauline Turner
Born
OccupationActress
Years active1994–present
TelevisionMartin Chuzzlewit
Peaky Blinders

Pauline Turneris a Scottish actress, known for her role as Mary Graham on theBBCdrama seriesMartin Chuzzlewit(1994),[1]Frances on theBBCperiod drama seriesPeaky Blinders(2017–2019) and as June Begbie in the 2017 filmT2 Trainspotting.[2]

Filmography[edit]

Film[edit]

Year Title Role Notes
1998 Goodnight Mister Tom Annie Hartridge
2003 Young Adam Connie
2017 T2 Trainspotting June
2020 Beyond Existence Waitress Post-production

Television[edit]

Year Title Role Notes
1994 Martin Chuzzlewit Mary Graham
1996 Taggart Kate Reilly Episode: "Dead Man's Chest Part One"
1998 Wycliffe Kim Episode: "Time Out"
1998 Heartbeat Mel Drinkwater Episode: "Pat-a-Cake"
1999 Casualty Ronnie Morgan Episode: "Bennie and the Vets"
2003 The Key Dorothy
2003 Two Thousand Acres of Sky Chemists' Sales Clerk Episode: #3.3
2015 Cuffs Hester Episode: #1.2
2018 Call The Midwife Lily[3] Episode: #7.6
2018 Casualty Estelle Mullar Episode: #33.2
2019 Vera Bridie Mincham[4] Episode: "Cuckoo"
2017–2019 Peaky Blinders Frances[5] Series 4–5
2019 Britannia Stumpy Celt Episode: #2.3

Theatre[edit]

Year Title Role Notes
2001 The Mill On The FlossbyGeorge Eliot First Maggie[6][7] Directed byHelen Edmundson,The Ambassadors,London&Kennedy Center,New York

Awards and nominations[edit]

Year Award Category Result Ref(s)
2002 Helen Hayes Award Outstanding Leading Actress in a Non-Resident Production Nominated [8]

References[edit]

  1. ^"Martin Chuzzlewit, 19 March 1995".Variety.Retrieved21 April2020.
  2. ^"Dumbarton actress has starring role in Trainspotting 2, 1 February 2017".Daily Record.Retrieved21 April2020.
  3. ^"Call The Midwife - Series 7, Episode #6.8".BBC.Retrieved21 April2020.
  4. ^"Meet the cast of Vera series nine, 28 April 2019".Radio Times.Retrieved21 April2020.
  5. ^"Peaky Blinders series 4, episode 1 recap: Is the new Tommy as good as the old?, 15 November 2017".The Telegraph.Retrieved21 April2020.
  6. ^"The Mill On The Floss, 5 April 2001".Evening Standard.Retrieved21 April2020.
  7. ^"Three Maggies and a singular success, 10 April 2001".The Telegraph.Retrieved21 April2020.
  8. ^"HHA Nominees & Recipients, 2002".Theatre Washington.Retrieved21 April2020.

External links[edit]