Juliet Hammond-Hill

Juliet Hammond-Hill (born 13 November 1953) is an English actress, best known for her role in the television series Secret Army (1977–1979) and the sequel Kessler (1981). She is also known as Juliet Hammond.

Early life

Hammond-Hill was born in St Pancras, London,[1] the daughter of Peter Hammond Hill, an actor, and Maureen Glynne-West, who had married at Westminster in 1948.[2] She was the eldest in a family of five, with a sister and three brothers.[3]

She trained as an actress at the Webber Douglas Academy and later gained a Post-Graduate Certificate of Education in the performing arts from the University of Greenwich.[4]

Career

Hammond-Hill came to national attention in 1977 as Natalie Chantrens in the BBC television drama series Secret Army (1977–1979), with a central role in all three years of the programme.[5] In 1980, she played Madeline Bray and other parts in the first Royal Shakespeare Company production of The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby, staged at the Aldwych Theatre.[6]

Several new screen roles came to Hammond-Hill in 1981, chiefly Kessler, a sequel to Secret Army set in about 1980, for which she had to age more than thirty years.[7] She was the ominous Miss Hawk in eight episodes of the BBC serial for children Dark Towers,[8] appeared as a German terrorist, Irene Kohl, in the thriller serial Blood Money[9] and had a guest part in Blake's 7, playing the telekinetic Pella in the episode ”Power”.[10] At the end of the year, while pregnant with her daughter, she appeared opposite David Bowie as Emilie in the television version of Bertholt Brecht's Baal, first broadcast in March 1982.[11]

In 1983, Hammond-Hill was a guest on Only Fools and Horses, playing Miranda Davenport, an antique dealer who dates Del Trotter. From then on, she worked as Juliet Hammond, the first such credit being in the television movie The Balance of Nature (1983).[12]

Later work included parts in The Case of Marcel Duchamp (1984), Playing the Ace (1986), and Ping Pong (1986),[13] in which Hammond played the mistress of a Chinaman who has died in mysterious circumstances.[14] Since the 1990s, Hammond has taught drama students and directed plays, mostly in Brighton. She now spells her name Juliette Hammond.[15][4]

Personal life

In 1977, Hammond-Hill married Mark Burgin in Fulham.[16] A daughter born in 1982 was registered with the names Hammond-Hill and Constantinou.[17]

References

  1. ”HAMMOND-HILL Juliet /Glynne-West” in Register of Births for Pancras, vol. 5d (1953), p. 487
  2. “Hill Peter C H and Glynne-West Maureen” in Marriages for Westminster, vol. 5c (1948), p. 845
  3. Register of Births for Pancras, vol. 5d (1962), p. 562; Register of Births for Hammersmith, vol. 5c (1965), p. 1152
  4. Juliet Hammond-Hill at metacritic.com, accessed 4 April 2020
  5. Terry Rowan, World War II Goes to the Movies & Television Guide (Lulu, 2012), p. 266
  6. Royal Shakespeare Company: A Complete Record of the Year's Work (Royal Shakespeare Company, 1981), p. 54; Brooks McNamera, Plays from the Contemporary British Theater (Mentor Book, 1992), pp. 319, 320, 322
  7. Terry Rowan, World War II Goes to the Movies & Television Guide Volume I A/K (Lulu), p. 264
  8. Look and Read – Dark Towers, archived from lookandread.myby.co.uk, accessed 4 April 2020
  9. “Blood Money”, in Ellen Baskin, Serials on British Television, 1950-1994 (Scolar Press, 1996), p. 183
  10. John Kenneth Muir, A History and Critical Analysis of Blake's 7 (McFarland, 2015), p. 137
  11. Dave Rolinson, Alan Clarke (Manchester University Press, 2005), p. 173
  12. The Balance of Nature at bfi.org.uk/films, accessed 25 April 2020
  13. Juliet Hammond at bfi.org.uk (British Film Institute), accessed 26 April 2020
  14. Ping Pong, synopsis at screenonline.org.uk, accessed 27 April 2020
  15. "Certificates of Excellence Awards 2018" (PDF). New Era Academy. Retrieved 9 March 2019.
  16. “HAMMOND-HILL Juliet A-M and BURGIN Mark” in Register of Marriages for Fulham Registration District, vol. 12 (1977), p. 608
  17. “HAMMOND-HILL/CONSTANTINOU Sophia Marie / mother Hammond-Hill” in Hammersmith, vol. 12 (1982), p. 1859


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