Julie Buckfield

Julie Buckfield (born 10 April 1976) is a British actress.

A graduate of the Sylvia Young Theatre School in London, Buckfield started her career aged 11 in the Cameron Mackintosh production of Les Misérables. She then auditioned for the part of Chrissy Mainwaring in BBC 1 teenage soap Grange Hill, but eventually won the part of Natalie Stevens, for which her twin sister, Clare, had also auditioned. Clare and Julie competed again to replace Georgina Cates in 2point4 Children, but this time Clare got the part over Julie. [1]

Julie went on to play Julie Matthews in Hollyoaks in two periods, from 1995-1997 (dumping Nick Pickard's character Tony at the church), and in 2002 and briefly in 2007. Buckfield has also appeared in The Bill (two roles, one in 1993 and one in 1998), Pie in the Sky, London's Burning, Expert Witness (TV series), Casualty and Holby City. She presented a summer special with Dave Benson-Phillips for The Disney Club. She played Annie on Channel 4's extr@, a TV program for ESL students.

She has an extensive theatre background, including roles in A Slice of Saturday Night, Passport to Pimlico, Bad Blood, as well as various roles in pantomime. For the past seven years Julie has established herself as the resident panto star at the Cambridge Arts Theatre in Cambridge. [2]

Julie Buckfield is the Patron of Cambridgeshire Search & Rescue, the county's ALSAR specialist search and rescue unit.[3][4]

References

  1. Lantham, Peter. "Flying without skates". British Theatre Guide. Retrieved 2007.
  2. Sladen, Simon. British Theatre Guide http://www.britishtheatreguide.info/reviews/dickcambridge-rev. Retrieved 2009. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. Cambridge Search and Rescue – Patron http://www.juliebuckfield.com/?p=4
  4. Cambridgeshire Search and Rescue - Our Patron http://www.camsar.org/supporters/patron/

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.