Gabrielle Drake

Actress

Popular As Gabrielle Mary Drake

Birthday March 30, 1944

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Lahore, Punjab, British India

Age 80 years old

Nationality Pakistan

Height 5' 5½" (1.66 m)

#24996 Most Popular

1908

Drake was born in Lahore, British India, the daughter of Rodney Shuttleworth Drake (1908 - 1988) and amateur songwriter Molly Drake.

She is the sister of songwriter and composer Nick Drake.

Her father was an engineer working for the Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation.

The family moved from Burma to Britain when she was eight.

She later commented that,

"Until then, life was fairly easy out east. There were lots of servants ... not that I remember having a spoilt childhood. Then suddenly we were back in England and in the grips of rationing. And yet, we were lucky in a way. We came back with my nanny who knew far more about England than mummy did. I remember the two of them standing over the Aga with a recipe book trying to work out how to roast beef, that sort of thing!"

On the ship travelling to Britain she appeared in children's theatrical productions, later saying of herself "I was a dreadful exhibitionist."

She attended Edgbaston College for Girls in Birmingham, Wycombe Abbey School, Buckinghamshire and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London.

1944

Gabrielle Drake (born 30 March 1944) is a British actress.

1960

She has had a long stage career beginning in the mid-1960s, and has regularly appeared in television dramas.

1964

Drake made her stage debut in 1964, during the inaugural season of the Everyman Theatre, Liverpool, playing Cecily in The Importance of Being Earnest.

1966

In 1966, she joined the Birmingham Repertory Company and played Queen Isabella in Marlowe's Edward II.

She also had roles in Private Lives (with Renee Asherson), The Simpleton of the Unexpected Isles (with Linda Marlowe and Patrick Mower), Twelfth Night and Inadmissible Evidence.

The following year, she was Roxanne in Cyrano de Bergerac at the Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park.

1967

Her early television appearances include The Avengers (1967), Coronation Street (as Inga Olsen in 1967) and The Saint (1968).

1968

On 26 December 1968 she played opposite American actor Robert Lansing in a BBC television series called Journey to the Unknown in an episode called "The Beckoning Fair One", and an episode called "Sorry Is Just a Word" of Special Branch.

1970

She appeared in the 1970s in television series The Brothers and UFO.

In the early 1970s she appeared in several erotic roles on screen.

She later took parts in soap operas Crossroads and Coronation Street.

She has also had a stage career.

Drake first gained wide attention for her portrayal of Lieutenant Gay Ellis in the 1970 science fiction television series UFO, in which her costume consisted of a silver suit and a purple wig.

In the series, the character is the commander of the SHADO Moonbase, which is Earth's first line of defence against invading flying saucers.

Drake appeared in roughly half the 26 episodes produced, leaving the series during a break in the production to pursue other acting opportunities.

In 1970, she auditioned for the part of Jo Grant in Doctor Who, reaching the final shortlist of three alongside Katy Manning and Cheryl Hall, with Manning winning the part.

In the early 1970s, Drake was associated with the boom in British sexploitation movies, repeatedly appearing nude or topless.

She played a nude artist's model in the 1970 film Connecting Rooms, and was one of Peter Sellers' conquests in the film There's a Girl in My Soup.

She also appeared in an episode of Brian Clemens' 1970s series Thriller, in The Kelly Monteith Show (as Monteith's wife 1979–80), a television version of The Importance of Being Earnest (1985, for LWT/PBS), Crossroads (1985–87, as motel boss Nicola Freeman) and returned to Coronation Street in 2009 as Vanessa.

1971

In 1971, Drake appeared in a short film entitled Crash!, based on a chapter in J. G. Ballard's book The Atrocity Exhibition.

The film, directed by Harley Cokeliss, featured Ballard talking about the ideas in his book.

Drake appeared as a passenger and car-crash victim.

1972

She also played one of the lead roles in the sex comedy Au Pair Girls (1972) and appeared in two Derek Ford films, Suburban Wives (1971) and its sequel Commuter Husbands (1972), in which she played the narrator who links the disparate episodes together.

She gained wide exposure in The Brothers, the hit BBC family drama series, in which she appeared as a regular for the first four seasons playing Jill, the girlfriend (and later wife) of David Hammond.

1973

Ballard later developed the idea into his 1973 novel Crash.

In his draft of the novel he mentioned Drake by name, but references to her were removed from the published version.

1974

Her brother was the musician Nick Drake, whose work she has consistently helped to promote since his death in 1974.

In the 1974–5, season at the Bristol Old Vic, she played in Cowardy Custard, a devised entertainment featuring the words and music of Noël Coward.

1987

She was the subject of This Is Your Life on 8 April 1987.

2003

In The Inspector Lynley Mysteries (2003–05) she played the protagonist's mother.

2009

In the 2009 BBC documentary Synth Britannia clips of Ballard and Drake from Crash! were inserted into the 1979 video for Gary Numan's song "Cars".

A reviewer in The Scotsman commented that the presence of Drake "brought serious glamour to urban alienation".