Anne Stallybrass


Jacqueline Anne Stallybrass is an English actress who trained at the Royal Academy of Music in London.

Biography

Stallybrass was born in Westcliff-on-Sea, Essex to Edward Lindsay Stallybrass and Annie Isobel Stallybrass, who wed in 1933 in Hackney, London. She was educated at St. Bernard's Convent, Westcliff and spent three years training at the Royal Academy of Music, where she won the Drama Gold Medal. She began her professional acting career by spending several years in repertory, gaining experience in Folkestone Kent, with the Arthur Brough Players, before moving to Nottingham and then to Sheffield.
The television roles for which she is best known are: Jane Seymour in The Six Wives of Henry VIII, and Anne Onedin in The Onedin Line, written by Cyril Abraham. In 1973 she appeared as a narrator in five episodes of the BBC children's television series Jackanory. Other major roles include Anna Strauss in The Strauss Family, Susan Henchard in The Mayor of Casterbridge, and Muriel Thomas in The Old Devils. From 1995 until 1998 she played Eileen Reynolds in ITV's period police drama Heartbeat. She portrayed Queen Elizabeth II, for , the made for TV mini-series from Andrew Morton's biography. She was twice nominated for the British Academy Television Award for Best Actress; for her portrayals of Anne Onedin and Anna Strauss.

Personal life

She has been married twice and has no children. She met her first husband Roger Rowland in Nottingham; the couple wed in 1963, but separated after nine years of marriage and later divorced. Peter Gilmore's second marriage broke up not long after and the friendship between the two Onedin Line actors gradually developed; they fell in love and began to live together. In 1987, after ten years, the couple married and remained together until Gilmore's death in February 2013. They lived in Barnes, London and owned a cottage, named Onedin House, in Dartmouth, which was used as a film location for scenes in The Onedin Line.