Mona Hammond
Mona Hammond | |
---|---|
Born |
Mavis Chin 1935 (age 80–81) Tweeside, Clarendon Parish, Jamaica, West Indies |
Nationality | Jamaican/ Chinese |
Mona Hammond (born Mavis Chin, 1935) OBE is a Chinese-Jamaican actress and co-founder of the Talawa Theatre Company. Born in Jamaica, Hammond emigrated to the United Kingdom in 1959, where she has remained ever since. Hammond has had a long and distinguished stage career. She is best known for her work on British television, which has included various roles in sitcoms and playing Blossom Jackson in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. She was made an OBE in the 2005 Queen's Birthday Honours List for her services to drama. Hammond has a son, who is a fashion photographer and a granddaughter.
Early life
Hammond was born Mavis Chin[1] to a Chinese father from Guangdong, and a mixed- race Jamaican mother in Tweeside, Clarendon Parish, Jamaica, West Indies.[2] She moved to the United Kingdom in 1959 on a Jamaican Scholarship and worked for Norman and Dawbarn Architects. She attended evening classes at the City Literary Institute in London for two years and was awarded a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.[3]
Career
Hammond began her career on stage and made early appearances on television shows such as Softly, Softly (1968) and The Trouble Shooters (1969). Her first leading role was Lady Macbeth at the Roundhouse in 1970 in Peter Coe's African version of the play. She went on to star in many plays by an array of up-and-coming black writers: Sweet Talk by Michael Abbensetts, 11 Josephine House by Alfred Fagon and several plays written by Mustapha Matura including As Time Goes By, Play Mas and Playboy of the West Indies. She also spent two years at the Royal National Theatre in productions including Fuente Ovejuna and Peer Gynt directed by Declan Donnellan, and The Crucible.
In 1985 Hammond along with Yvonne Brewster, Inigo Espejel and Carmen Munroe founded the Talawa Theatre company, which became one of the UK's most prominent black theatre companies.[4] It has produced award-winning plays from and about the African diaspora and has championed reinterpretations of classical British pieces. Hammond performed in several of its productions including The Black Jacobins, The Importance of Being Earnest and King Lear.
Hammond appeared as Shirley Armitage's mother, Velma, in the ITV soap opera Coronation Street in 1983.
Television work followed, which included roles in The Sweeney (1976); Wolcott (1980–81), a three-part ATV mini-series about a black detective based in East London; Black Silk (1985); Juliet Bravo (1985); Playboy of the West Indies (1985), Casualty (1986) and When Love Dies (1990).
Hammond has appeared in ITV's Coronation Street, twice, first playing the role of Jan Sargent and second time playing Mrs Armitage, the mother of Shirley Armitage. In 1994 she was cast as Blossom Jackson in BBC's EastEnders. She remained in the role until 1997. This was Hammond's second role in the soap, having previously played the minor part of Michelle Fowler's midwife in 1986.
She is also an occasional actor in The Archers, playing Mabel Thompson, the mother of Alan Franks' (John Telfer) deceased wife.
Hammond has played many roles in television sitcoms, including: Susu in Desmond's (1990–94) and its spin-off Porkpie (1995–96); Us Girls (1992–93), where she played Grandma Pinnock; Chef! (1996), and Grandma Sylvie Headly in The Crouches (2003–05).
In 1999 she played the role of Nan in the children's TV series Pig-Heart Boy, based on a novel by Malorie Blackman. Hammond's other television credits include Making Out (1989); Trial & Retribution (1998) as Bibi Harrow: Sunburn (1999); Storm Damage (2000); The Bill (2001); Babyfather (2001); White Teeth (2002); A Touch of Frost (2003); Holby City (2001; 2005; 2011) and Doctors (2006). She also appeared in the Doctor Who episode "Rise of the Cybermen" in 2006. Her film credits include Fords on Water (1983), Manderlay (2005) and Kinky Boots (2006). Hammond appeared in the 2008 movie 10,000 BC, directed by Roland Emmerich.[5]
In October 2010 she reprised her role for a brief stint as Blossom Jackson in the TV soap EastEnders. Appearing in connection to screen great-grandson Billie Jackson's funeral, she returned with her on-screen grandson Alan Jackson.
Awards
Hammond was awarded the Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the2005 Queen's Birthday Honours List, for her services to drama in the UK. In 2006 Hammond was presented with the Edric Connor Inspiration Award - the Screen Nation Film and Television Awards' highest UK honour.[6]
References
- ↑ "Now It's Sir David", 1 June 2005, The British Theatre Guide. Accessed 22 April 2007.
- ↑ Mona Hammond CV (pdf), United Agents. Accessed 22 April 2007.
- ↑ Ann Ogidi, "Hammond, Mona", BFI Screenonline. Accessed 22 April 2007.
- ↑ "New Black theatre companies", Moving Here — Migration Histories, The National Archives. Accessed 22 April 2007.
- ↑ "Mona Hammond in 10,000 BC", Merry Media. Accessed 22 April 2007.
- ↑ "Crash leads Screen Nation's nods", BBC, 23 August 2006. Accessed 22 April 2007.