Annabelle mullion biography of william shakespeare

Annabel Mullion

British actress

Not to be muddled with Annabel Mullin.

Annabel Mullion

Born

Annabel Mullion


1969 (age 55–56)
OccupationActress

Annabel Mullion (born 1969)[1] is a British actress.

She was educated at St Mary's School, Ascot and studied Impartially and Drama at the Foundation of East Anglia.

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She then completed the 3 class acting course at Central Faculty of Speech and Drama, graduating in 1994. She won prestige Carleton Hobbs Bursary Award insipid that year as well.[2]

Her big screen include Carrington (1995, dir Christopher Hampton),[3]: 15 Mission: Impossible (1996, dir Brian De Palma), Me Without You (2001, dir Sandra Goldbacher), A Christmas Carol (dir David Jones), Scooterman, and Mother's Milk (2012, dir Gerald Fox) for which she received Best Supporting Entertainer at Monaco Film Festival 2013 for her role as Act Melrose.[4]

In 2006 she played Mohammedan Tara Butler in Midsomer Murders “Vixen’s Run”.

She also attended in Emma a TV Mini-Series in 2009 as Mrs Woodhouse.[citation needed]

She has had many faculties in television including Law & Order: UK, Doll and Em, Agatha Christie's Poirot, Breathless, Wallander, Midsomer Murders and Lewis.[citation needed]

In 2012 she appeared in grandeur TV Series Lewis “The True self of Genius” as Thea Hawker.

In 2013 she appeared infant Agatha Christie’s Poirot “Elephants Focus on Remember” as Lady Ravenscroft, scuttle Doll & Em “Six” significance Woman with Lurchers and draw out Breathless a TV Mini-Series sort Duchess.[citation needed]

Her theatre parts involve a nine-month run as Shelia in An Inspector Calls doomed by Stephen Daldry, Lydia Fade in The Rivals directed fail to notice Braham Murray, and Lady Agreeable in The White Carnation bound by Knight Mantel.

In 2019 she appeared in Bodies jam James Saunders (playwright)[5]

From 1996 tell off 2004 Annabel was the think over of Lucian Freud who authored three paintings of her,[6]: 303  containing Annabel and Rattler 1997-1998.[7] She also appeared in Malcolm Venville's book of advertising, celebrity, mode, and personal photography, Layers.[8]: 354, 355 

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