Jessica Hynes

Actress

Birthday October 30, 1972

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace London, England

Age 51 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#13726 Most Popular

1972

Tallulah Jessica Elina Hynes (née Stevenson; born 30 October 1972 ) is a British actress, director and writer.

1990

As a teenager, Hynes was a member of the National Youth Theatre company, and made her stage début with the company in Lionel Bart's Blitz! in 1990.

1992

In 1992–1993, she played a season at the West Yorkshire Playhouse, Leeds.

1993

In the same year, she appeared in Peter Greenaway's 1993 film The Baby of Mâcon, playing the first midwife.

1994

In 1994, Hynes appeared as an uncredited extra in the first episode of The Day Today in the Attitudes Night segment, a parody of the UK's changing attitudes.

Early in her career, Hynes teamed up with future Spaced co-star Katy Carmichael in a comedy double-act called the Liz Hurleys, appeared in two productions at Sheffield's Crucible Theatre, and acted for television shows including Staying Alive, Six Pairs of Pants, (Un)natural Acts, and Asylum (on which the Spaced team of Stevenson, Simon Pegg and Edgar Wright first assembled).

1997

She guest starred in the first episode of Midsomer Murders in 1997.

1998

From 1998 to 2000, she played the supporting role of Cheryl in the hit sitcom The Royle Family; she reprised the role for special episodes in 2006, 2009 and 2010.

1999

In 1999, she co-wrote and starred in Spaced.

2002

Hynes' London theatre début was in April 2002, playing the tough ex-prisoner "Bolla" in Jez Butterworth's The Night Heron at the Royal Court.

2004

In 2004, she played a minor part as Yvonne in horror comedy Shaun of the Dead, again working with Pegg and Wright.

In the same year, she was also cast as Magda, friend of the titular character, in the Hollywood sequel Bridget Jones' Diary 2, also called Bridget Jones' Diary: The Edge of Reason.

2005

In 2005, Hynes took the lead role in the BBC One sitcom According to Bex (which she would later come to regret), and had a starring role in British comedy Confetti alongside Jimmy Carr, Martin Freeman and Mark Heap.

2007

Known professionally as Jessica Stevenson until 2007, she was one of the creators, writers and stars of the British sitcom Spaced.

Hynes has been nominated for a Tony, a Laurence Olivier Award, five BAFTAs (winning two) and three British Comedy Awards (winning two).

Hynes was born in Lewisham, south London, and grew up in Brighton, where she attended St Luke's Infant and Junior Schools and Dorothy Stringer High School.

After her parents split up, she was raised by her mother.

She moved back to London as a young adult.

Her maternal grandmother came from the village of Llanelian, north Wales, where her uncle also ran a farm.

Her mother is a fluent Welsh speaker who later moved back to north Wales.

In 2023, Hynes took part in the S4C series Iaith ar Daith where she began to learn the Welsh language; she cited being able to speak Welsh to her mother as a reason why she wanted to take part in the programme.

In early 2007, Hynes took a lead role in the film Magicians, starring alongside comic duo David Mitchell and Robert Webb.

She provided the voice of Mafalda Hopkirk in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.

She played Joan Redfern in the 2007 Doctor Who episodes "Human Nature" and "The Family of Blood".

She then appeared in part two of the story "The End of Time", playing a character named Verity Newman, who is Joan's great-granddaughter.

Hynes appeared in Big Finish's Eighth Doctor audio adventure "Invaders from Mars", with her Spaced colleague Simon Pegg.

She starred in Son of Rambow (credited as Jessica Stevenson), playing Mary Proudfoot opposite the star of the film, Bill Milner.

In November 2007, BBC One released Learners, a comedy drama television movie which Hynes starred in and wrote.

2008

Hynes co-wrote the pilot Phoo Action, based on the cartoons of Jamie Hewlett, which was transmitted on BBC Three in early 2008.

In the same year, she appeared in the film Faintheart and in a revival of Alan Ayckbourn's The Norman Conquests at the Old Vic.

2009

In 2009 she made her Broadway début in the play's transfer and was nominated for a Tony Award for her performance.

Hynes stated that she planned to pursue a solo career as a stand-up comedian and was working on a children's book, Ants in the Marmalade.

Later that year, she returned to the Royal Court in The Priory, a new play by Michael Wynne.

2011

Hynes appeared as a "right-on" PR person, Siobhan Sharpe, in the London Olympics centred satire Twenty Twelve, of which the first series screened on BBC Four in 2011, moving to BBC Two in spring 2012.

2012

A further series was screened in July 2012.

In October 2012, she released a duet with singer Anthony Strong of Slim Gaillard's "Laughing in Rhythm".

The following month, she appeared in the film Nativity 2: Danger in the Manger, in which she plays competition host Angel Matthews.

In December 2012 she appeared with co-star Hugh Bonneville in World's Most Dangerous Roads, travelling through Georgia.

2014

She reprised the role in the 2014 series W1A for which she won a BAFTA.

2017

In 2017, Hynes played the role of a medieval knight in the revival series of The Crystal Maze and Emmeline Pankhurst in the UK take of Drunk History.