Anna Chancellor Early life and education
Anna Theodora Chancellor[ citation needed ] was born in Richmond , England to publisher John Paget Chancellor[ 2] and Hon. Mary Jolliffe, a daughter of Lord Hylton . Her father was the son of Sir Christopher Chancellor and Sylvia Mary Paget , a daughter of Sir Richard Paget and philanthropist Lady Muriel , daughter of Murray Finch-Hatton, 12th Earl of Winchilsea . The Chancellor family were Scottish landed gentry who had owned land at Quothquan since 1432.[ 3]
Chancellor is a niece of the journalist Alexander Chancellor , a great-granddaughter of Raymond Asquith (son of the Liberal prime minister H. H. Asquith ), a first cousin of both the actress Dolly Wells [ 4] and the model Cecilia Chancellor , a second cousin of the actress Helena Bonham Carter . Chancellor was also the great niece of Jane Austen eight generations removed through Edward Austen Knight .[ 5] [ 6] Chancellor has said that she had worked hard to become an actress, and her lineage does not define who she is.[ 6]
Chancellor was brought up in Somerset and educated at St Mary's School, Shaftesbury , which was a Roman Catholic boarding school for girls in Dorset , but left at sixteen to live in London, later describing her early years there as "quite wild".[ 7] In her early twenties she married the poet Jock Scot (1952–2016), with whom she had a daughter in 1988 while still studying at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art . She separated from Scot a few years later.[ 8]
Career
Chancellor got her first acting role on television playing Mercedes Page in Jupiter Moon , a BSkyB soap, then came a commercial for Boddingtons beer and a part in the film Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994),[ 7] playing Henrietta (nicknamed "Duckface") opposite Hugh Grant .
She played Julia Piper in series 1 to 3 of Kavanagh QC .[ 7] She also played Caroline Bingley in the 1995 BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice .
In 1997, she was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for her performance in Stanley at the Royal National Theatre -Cottesloe.[ 9]
She played Questular Rontok in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (2005). The same year, she joined the cast of BBC One television drama series Spooks as Juliet Shaw.[ 7] She has also appeared in The Vice , Karaoke , Cold Lazarus , The Dreamers , Tipping the Velvet (2002),[ 7] and Fortysomething , and had a leading role in the satirical black comedy Suburban Shootout .
In 2011, she took a supporting role as Lix Storm in the BBC thriller serial The Hour , for which she was nominated for the BAFTA TV Award for Best Supporting Actress at the 2012 British Academy Television Awards .[ 10]
In 2014, she was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress for her part in Private Lives at the Gielgud Theatre .[ 11]
Charity
She is a patron of the London children's charity Scene & Heard.[ 12]
Filmography
Key
†
Denotes works that have not yet been released
Theatre
Boston Marriage , Donmar Warehouse – March–April 2001; Donmar in the West End – November 2001–February 2002
Mammals at the Oxford Playhouse and touring – Lorna, January 2006
Never So Good , National Theatre – summer 2008
The Observer , National Theatre – spring 2009
The Last of the Duchess , Hampstead Theatre – October–November 2011
Private Lives (playing Amanda), Chichester Festival Theatre , September 2012, and the Gielgud Theatre , London (July–September 2013)[ 18]
The Wolf From the Door , Royal Court Theatre , September–November 2014[ 19]
The Seagull by Anton Chekhov at National Theatre – summer 2016
References
↑ 'Anna Chancellor Biography' . IMDB, undated. Retrieved 25 February 2026
↑ "John Chancellor - obituary" . The Daily Telegraph . 8 January 2015. Retrieved 12 November 2025 .
↑ Burke's Landed Gentry, eighteenth edition, vol. I, ed. Peter Townend, 1965, p. 130
↑ Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, vol. III, 2003, pg 3046
↑ Jane Merrick, world's most elitist election. Hereditary peers will vote to fill the gap created by the death of Lord Ferrers dated 9 December 2012 at independent.co.uk. Retrieved 23 October 2016
1 2 Gerard Gilbert, Anna Chancellor has a lineage worthy of Tatler but... dated 20 December 2014 at independent.co.uk. Retrieved 4 October 2016
1 2 3 4 5 Tim Lewis (21 August 2011). "Anna Chancellor - My life was chaotic. But it's turned out OK" . theguardian.com . Retrieved 23 October 2016 .
↑ "Jock Scot, performance poet – obituary" , in The Daily Telegraph online dated 15 April 2016. Retrieved 23 October 2016
1 2 "1997 Laurence Olivier Awards" . westendtheatre.com . 1997. Retrieved 30 December 2023 .
1 2 3 "BAFTA Television Awards Winners in 2012" . bafta.org . 24 April 2012.
1 2 "Olivier Awards 2014 – Nominees and Winners" . westendtheatre.com . 13 April 2014. Retrieved 30 December 2023 .
↑ "Patrons & Founders – Scene & Heard" . sceneandheard.org. 2012. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved 31 May 2016 .
↑ Winston, Fran (30 September 2023). "Downton Abbey star Anna Chancellor's daughter Poppy dead at 36" . The Express . Retrieved 1 October 2023 .
↑ Billen, Andrew (31 March 2018). "Ordeal by Innocence: the Christie Mystery that almost got away". The Times . No. 72497. Saturday Review. pp. 4– 5. ISSN 0140-0460 .
↑ "Meet the cast of the Split series 2" . www.radiotimes.com . Retrieved 29 December 2023 .
↑ "New casting announced for TV adaptation 'The Watch' " . www.terrypratchettbooks.com . Retrieved 29 December 2023 .
↑ "Meet the cast of Rain Dogs" . Radio Times . 4 April 2023. Retrieved 25 April 2023 .
↑ "Review of Private Lives" . Time Out . 3 July 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2013 .
↑ Masters, Tim (27 June 2014). "Anna Chancellor leads Royal Court revolution" . BBC News . Retrieved 23 October 2016 .
↑ "The Complete Smiley: Call for the Dead" . BBC. Retrieved 7 August 2020 .
↑ "The Complete Smiley: Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" . BBC. Retrieved 7 August 2020 .
↑ "The Complete Smiley – The Karla Trilogy, Book 2: The Honourable Schoolboy" . BBC. Retrieved 26 October 2013 .
↑ "The Complete Smiley - The Karla Trilogy, Book 3: Smiley's People" . BBC. Retrieved 7 August 2020 .
1 2 "Anna Chancellor Awards" . imdb (index source only) . Retrieved 30 December 2023 .
External links
International National Artists Other