Fidelis_Morgan

Fidelis Morgan

Fidelis Morgan

English actress and writer


Fidelis Morgan (born 8 August 1952) is an Anglo-Irish actress, writer and director. She has acted with the Royal Shakespeare Company, the National Theatre, in repertory in various British cities and in the West End transfer of Noël Coward's The Vortex.

Morgan at Hatchards, Piccadilly, London, 2022

She has written stage plays based on the novels Pamela[1] and Hangover Square. Her non-fiction writing includes The Female Wits, the first study of female playwrights of the Restoration stage and biographies of women from the 17th and 18th centuries including Charlotte Charke.[2] Her novels include the Countess Ashby dela Zouche series of historical crime mysteries including The Rival Queens.

Life and career

Morgan was born in a gypsy caravan that stood in a corner of the grounds of the ancient Abbey of Amesbury, halfway between Stonehenge and Woodhenge.[3] Her parents were displaced Liverpudlians, and her father found work as a dentist in Amesbury; her mother was a painter.[4][5] Morgan's family moved several times when she was a child, but she always thought of Liverpool as home.[4] She studied at Farnborough Hill in Farnborough, Hampshire, and at the University of Birmingham, receiving a degree there in the Department of Drama and Theatre Arts in 1973.[3][4]

Acting

Morgan at the Cambridge Union Society Spring Wordfest in 2011

As an actress, Morgan appeared with the Royal Shakespeare Company (1975), Glenda Jackson’s company at The Old Vic (1976). the National Theatre (1986), repertory in Liverpool, Birmingham, Nottingham and Leeds (1973-1996),[4] as well as a regular company member of the Glasgow Citizens Theatre where, among other roles, she played The Mother in The Mother by Brecht; Elizabeth in Mary Stuart by Schiller; Putana in 'Tis Pity She's a Whore by Ford; Mrs Peachum in The Threepenny Opera by Brecht; Ruth in Blithe Spirit by Coward, and Kath in Entertaining Mr Sloane by Joe Orton. She played Clara Hibbert at Citizens Theatre, and in the West End transfer, of Noël Coward's The Vortex.[6]

Her television appearances include The Liver Birds (1974), Rachel Gold in The Politician's Wife (1995), four different roles in The Bill (1985-1998), Dorcas in As Time Goes By (1996), the Hon. Myrtle Pongleton in two episodes of Jeeves and Wooster (1991),[7] Rosalie in four episodes of Big Women (1998), Assistant Registrar in Dead Gorgeous (2002) and was Bunty Brace-Girdle in 20 episodes of Mr Majeika (1988-1990). Her film roles include Matron in Never Let Me Go (2010),[3] Anne in A Little Chaos (2014), and Agnes Carpenter in the TV movie Karen Carpenter: Goodbye to Love (2016).[8]

Morgan was nominated Best Actress of the Year 1984 in The Observer for her work at Glasgow's Citizens' Theatre.[1][9] Morgan has put on several 50 minute shows at the National Theatre. In 1991 in the National Theatre's Cottesloe Theatre her show on 'Female Playwrights of the Restoration' was concerned with the largely neglected plays by women dramatists written for the London stage in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. The show, subsequently entitled The Female Wits, included extracts from the plays performed by a group of actors[10][11] and played at various literary festivals including the Isle of Wight, Truro, Utrecht, and on Queen Mary 2. Again at the National, in 2011 she interviewed her friend Celia Imrie on the platform of the Cottesloe Theatre.[12]

In 2015 Morgan returned to Glasgow's Citizens' Theatre to take part in its 70th anniversary celebrations, performing an extract from Mary Stuart with Ann Mitchell.[13]

Novels and non-fiction

Morgan's novels include the Countess Ashby dela Zouche series of historical crime mysteries: Unnatural Fire (2000), The Rival Queens (2001), The Ambitious Stepmother (2002) and Fortune's Slave (2004).[3][14] The Rival Queens was nominated for a Lefty Award for "the most humorous mystery novels published in the U.S. in 2002" by Left Coast Crime, California, in 2003.[15] Her non-fiction work includes The Female Wits, the first study of female playwrights of the Restoration stage and biographies of charismatic female figures from the 17th and 18th centuries including Charlotte Charke.[2][14]

On a more humorous note, she was the author of The Bluffer's Guide to British Theatre (1986), part of The Bluffer's Guides series.

Plays and teleplays

Morgan's stage plays include adaptations of famous novels, Samuel Richardson's Pamela[1] and Patrick Hamilton's Hangover Square (Lyric Hammersmith, 1990, and the Finborough Theatre, London, in 2008).[16][17] For her work on Pamela for Shared Experience, Morgan was nominated Most Promising Playwright in Plays and Players (1985).[6] She collaborated with Lynda La Plante on Channel 4's Killer Net.[18]

In 1988 she wrote and directed the sketch 'Fat Life' for Before The Act: A Celebration to Counter the Effects of Section 28.[19] This was a gala held at the Piccadilly Theatre to protest Section 28, which had been enacted on 24 May 1988. The programme consisted of material created on gay themes.[20] In 1997 two of her sketches were performed in Then Again, a revue directed by Neil Bartlett at the Lyric Hammersmith.[21]

Directing

In 2011 at the Finborough Theatre Morgan directed a sell-out production of Lennox Robinson’s Drama at Inish starring Celia Imrie and Paul O’Grady,[22] while in the same year at Finborough she directed a reading of The Piper, a new play by Colleen Murphy at Vibrant – A Festival of Finborough Playwrights. The cast included Philip Herbert, Dudley Sutton, Julian Wadham, Siân Thomas, George Irving[23] and Pauline Moran. In 2018 she directed a production of But It Still Goes On by Robert Graves and starring Sophie Ward and Alan Cox, again at the Finborough Theatre.[8]

In 2014 at the St. James Theatre Morgan directed Celia Imrie in Laughing Matters, and directed Wedlock Deadlock at the Kings Head, starring Paola Dionisotti, Sian Thomas and Celia Imrie and adapted into a musical from The Custom of the Country by Susanna Centlivre.[24][25]

Also in 2014 she was Artist-in-Residence at the University of California where she directed a production of The Gambling Lady by Susanna Centlivre, a play Morgan rescued from near-oblivion in her book The Female Wit.[8][9][26] In 2019 she directed The Wooden Meadow by Stewart Pringle at the Finborough Theatre.[27]

Bibliography


References

  1. Pamela, Amber Lane Press website
  2. Morgan, Fidelis. The Female Wits: Women Playwrights on the London Stage 1660-1720, Virago (1981), Google Books
  3. Morgan, Fidelis. Fidelis Morgan official website Archived 10 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, 2008, accessed 20 January 2012
  4. Liverpool Echo; Waterloo & Great Crosby Herald birth announcement August 1952, ref 168J217
  5. "Fidelis Morgan", Debrett's People of Today, accessed 20 January 2012
  6. Fidelis Morgan: 'Female Playwrights of the Restoration' - The National Theatre, South Bank, London, Arthur Lloyd.co.uk - The Music Hall and Theatre History Site: Dedicated to Arthur Lloyd, 1839 - 1904
  7. "Mystery Awards ", Blackraven Press, accessed 20 January 2012
  8. Hangover Square Archived 6 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Finborough Theatre website, 2008, accessed 20 January 2012
  9. , the website of Ian McKellen
  10. Section 28/The Arts Lobby, the website of Ian McKellen
  11. Then Again (1997), Neil Bartlett OBE - professional website
  12. Drama at Inish, Finborough Theatre website (2011)
  13. [https://georgeirving.co.uk/the-piper/ The Piper (2011)| George Irving website

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