Janine Duvitski
Janine Duvitski was born in Lancaster, England, United Kingdom on June 28th, 1952 and is the TV Actress. At the age of 72, Janine Duvitski biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Janine Duvitski (born Christine Janine Drzewicki, 28 June 1952) is an English actress best known for her appearances in Waiting for God, Pippa Trench in One Foot in the Grave, and Jacqueline Stewart in Benidorm.
In the play Abigail's Party, written and directed by Mike Leigh in 1977, Duvitski first came to national attention.
Personal life
Duvitski was born in Nottingham to a Polish father and an English mother. She attended Nottingham Girls' High School and then a direct grant grammar school.
She attended the East 15 Acting School in Essex. Jack, Albert, Ruby, and Edith Bentall, with her actor husband Paul Bentall, have four children. Edith is the band's lead singer.
Career
Duvitski was given a few small roles in television dramas shortly after leaving drama school but had no agent, and placed an advertisement in the 'Spotlight' agency catalogue with a photograph. Diane (1975), who was invited by the BBC to try a play about incest, narrates. Despite being in her early 20s, the part was that of a 13-year-old teen, but her audition was still convincing enough to win her the role. She was thus positioned for more television and stage appearances, and, although she was appearing in 'Don Juan' at Hampstead Theatre, London, she was discovered by Mike Leigh who gave her the part of Angie in the stage version of Play for Today: Abigail's Party (1977), which she repeated in the television version. Jane Edwards' main television credits include appearances in Waiting for God (1990–1994), Pippa Trench in One Foot in the Grave (1990–2000), and Jacqueline Stewart in Benidorm (2007–2018). Mrs Crawley appeared in the BBC's Vanity Fair. She has also appeared on Lily Savage's Blankety Blank.
She has appeared in the one-off production of Blue Remembered Hills by Dennis Potter, as well as in episodes of Foyle's War ("Fifty Ships"), Bush Strokes, Minder, Midsomer Murders, The Worst Week of My Life, Mayley, The Georgian House, My Family, The History, My Home, A.K.a. The CBeebies' March of My Life, The War, The Golden Eagles, Old Jack's
In 2015, Duvitski appeared in the BBC sitcom Boy Meets Girl. In BBC's mockumentary Hospital People, Mrs Leydon, the Chapel assistant, appeared as Mrs Leydon, the Chapel assistant.
Duvitski appeared in the 1980 rock music film Breaking Glass, with a small role opposite Laurence Olivier and Donald Pleasence in Dracula (1979). She appeared in Michael Crichton's The Madness of King George (1994), About a Boy (2002), The New World (2005) and Angel (2007).
In Abigail's Party, written and directed by Mike Leigh in 1977, Duvitski first came to national prominence. The Hampstead Theatre opened in April 1977, marking its first appearance in the summer of 1977 with a total of 104 shows. The play, which has been described as a suburban comedy of manners, is a satire on the aspirations and tastes of the new middle class, which had emerged in Britain in the 1970s. An abridged version of the play, which lasted 104 minutes, was published as a BBC Play for Today in November 1977. Angela Duvitski, a nurse and wife of Tony Cooper, appears in the film.
Her teatru career has also included appearances at National Theatre, Young Vic, and Royal Shakespeare Company.
In 2007, she appeared on stage in On the Town, the revival of English National Opera. Duvitski provided a "touching comic account of Lucy Schmeeler, Hildy's homely roommate," as part of the film, which also included veteran British comedian June Whitfield.
In the 2017 Sunderland Empire Theatre pantomime Jack and the Beanstalk, Duvitski played the Vegetable Fairy. Fairy Moonbeam appeared in the pantomime Sleeping Beauty at Sheffield's Lyceum Theatre in 2019. She appeared as Mummy Bear in Goldilocks and the Three Bears in 2019 and later became Fairy Moonbeam in the London Palladium's Mummy Bear.