Vinette Robinson
Vinette Robinson | |
---|---|
Born | 1985[1][2] Bradford, Yorkshire, England, UK |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1998–present |
Vinette Robinson (born 1985) is an English actress.
Background
Vinette Robinson was born in Bradford. She attended the former Intake High School (now Leeds West Academy) and took a BTEC.
Career
Robinson attended a child agency school and made her television debut in The Cops at the age of 17. Following this she spent three years at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art, where she was awarded a Laurence Olivier bursary from the Society of London Theatre.[3][4] Additional television roles include minor appearances in Cold Feet and Doctors and a supporting role in a 2007 episode of Doctor Who. She had a small role as the Jamaican girl in the 2004 film Vera Drake but was given an entire character backstory by the director Mike Leigh.[4]
Her first stage role was in the highly lauded National/Complicite production of Measure for Measure. Following this she was part of the Gunpowder season at the Royal Shakespeare Company where she played the tortured servant May in Rupert Goold's production of Speaking Like Magpies by Frank McGuinness. In 2006 she played Eve in an acclaimed production of Paradise Lost. Commenting on her nude scene, Sheila Tracy of The Stage wrote "one can not imagine the action working in any other way".[5] Her performance in Sugar Mummies that same year led New York to list her as one of "London's hottest young stage actors" in 2007.[2]
Following the conclusion of Sugar Mummies, she appeared in a short feature for Time Out, in which she and five other actors were described as "innovative young theatrical talent".[4]
In 2009, she played Josie Porritt in the BBC television series Hope Springs and appeared as newly qualified English teacher Helen Hopewell in eight episodes of Waterloo Road's fifth series. From December 2009 to January 2010, she starred as the maid Florence in the Hampstead Theatre's Darker Shores. In a Daily Telegraph review that rated the play only two stars, Charles Spencer commended Robinson's performance as having "a warmth and emotional openness".[6] Kate Bassett for the Independent on Sunday also praised her, writing that she "copes admirably".[7] In 2010, she starred as police sergeant Sally Donovan in the BBC series Sherlock, continuing her role in the second and third series that aired in January 2012 and December 2013/January 2014.
In 2011 Robinson appeared in Philip Ridley's Tender Napalm for which she received Best Female at The Offie Awards. She then went on to play Ophelia in The Young Vic's production of Hamlet for which she received the Clarence Derwent Award. Her role as Ophelia led to her being included in The New York Times Magazine article 'Titans Of The Stage'.
Theatre
Year | Title | Role | Director | Performance history |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | Measure for Measure | Juliet | National Theatre | |
2005 | A New Way to Please You | Footman | Royal Shakespeare Company | |
Sejanus: His Fall | High Priestess | |||
Thomas More | Lady Roper | |||
Speaking Like Magpies | May | |||
2006 | Paradise Lost | Eve | Headlong (formerly the Oxford Stage Company) | |
Sugar Mummies | Naomi | Royal Court Theatre | ||
2008 | War & Peace | Hélène/Mlle Bourienne | Nancy Meckler and Polly Teale | National tour, 7 February – 11 May 2008 |
2009 | Darker Shores | Florence Kennedy | Anthony Clarke | Hampstead Theatre, 7 December 2009 – 16 January 2010 |
2011 | Tender Napalm | Unnamed female lead | David Mercatali | Southwark Playhouse |
2011 | Hamlet | Ophelia | Ian Rickson | Young Vic, 28 October 2011 – 21 January 2012[8] |
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1998 | The Cops | Sarah Midgely | 1 episode: Series 1, Episode 6 — Television debut |
1999 | Children's Ward | Joy | 1 episode: Series 11, Episode 11 |
Cold Feet | Female Shop Assistant | 1 episode: Series 2, Episode 2 | |
2000 | This Is Personal: The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper | Rita Rytka | |
Fat Friends | Young Shop Assistant | 1 episode: "Face the Fat" | |
Doctors | Cath Bickerstaff | 2 episodes: "In Deep" and "In Too Deep" | |
2003 | Between the Sheets | Tracy Ellis | |
2004 | Murphy's Law | Aimie | 1 episode: "Jack's Back" |
Blue Murder | Andrea | 1 episode: "Hit and Run" | |
Vera Drake | Jamaican Girl | Debut film role | |
Doctors | Melanie | 1 episode: "Daddy's Girl" | |
2005 | Casualty | Kirsty Evans | 1 episode: "Truth Will Out" |
Imagine Me & You | Zine | ||
2007 | Party Animals | Kerry | 2 episodes: Episode 1 and Episode 4 |
Hustle | Tina | 1 episode: "A Designer's Paradise" | |
Doctor Who | Abi Lerner | 1 episode: "42" | |
Doctors | Katie Waters | 1 episode: "Hero" | |
2008 | The Passion | Mina | |
2009 | Hope Springs | Josie Porritt | |
Waterloo Road | Helen Hopewell | 8 episodes: Series 5 Episodes 1-8 | |
2010 | Powder | Feature film | |
Sherlock | Sgt. Sally Donovan | 4 Episodes: "A Study in Pink", "The Great Game", "The Reichenbach Fall" and "The Sign of Three" | |
2012 | Beginning | Claire | Short film |
2014 | Death In Paradise | Lauren Campese | Series 3, Episode 3 "An Artistic Murder" |
2014 | The Red Tent | Bilhah | 2 episodes |
2016 | The A Word | Nicola Daniels |
References
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External links
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Staff (26 March 2007). "A Guide to London's Hottest Young Stage Actors". New York (New York Media).
- ↑ Staff (28 July 2002). "Lawrence (sic) Olivier bursaries". The British Theatre Guide. Retrieved on 19 November 2007.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Staff (26 September 2006). "Theatre's bright young things". Time Out London. Retrieved on 19 November 2007
- ↑ Tracy, Sheila (15 May 2006). "Reviews: Paradise Lost". The Stage.
- ↑ Spencer, Charles (9 December 2009). "Darker Shores at the Hampstead Theatre, review". the Daily Telegraph (Telegraph Media Group).
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- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Use dmy dates from September 2010
- 1985 births
- 20th-century English actresses
- 21st-century English actresses
- Actresses from Yorkshire
- Black English actresses
- English television actresses
- English stage actresses
- English film actresses
- Living people
- People from Bradford