Lynn Redgrave
Lynn Redgrave was a British-American actor and writer who worked across film, television, stage, and voice performance throughout a career that spanned five decades.
Born on March 8, 1943, in Marylebone, London, Redgrave held citizenship in both the United Kingdom and the United States. She received her formal training at Queen's Gate School and later at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, where she developed the craft she would bring to a wide range of roles and forms. Working in English throughout her professional life, she moved with apparent ease between stage productions, screen performances, and the written word.
Her work in film earned her significant recognition, including the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture — Musical or Comedy, as well as the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture. These honors mark two distinct registers of her screen presence, suggesting a range that extended from leading to supporting work. Beyond acting, she pursued writing and playwriting, demonstrating that her engagement with language went well past performance. She also worked as a television presenter and as a voice actor, extending her reach into formats that demanded different relationships with an audience.
In recognition of her contributions, Redgrave was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire. She died on May 2, 2010, in Kent, England, at the age of sixty-seven. Across the body of work she left behind, the recurring thread is one of versatility — an actor equally committed to the stage and the screen, and a writer who saw storytelling as a discipline in its own right, not merely an extension of performance. Her work across these multiple forms, carried out in English and claimed by two nations, defines the shape of what she accomplished.
Quotes by Lynn Redgrave

There were times after my marriage ended where, you know, I really felt like I was at the bottom of a mountain, there was a great big, fog up there, and I’m never going to cross to the other side.

It eats you up. It eats you up. And you have to – I had a lot of help. I had a lot of therapy. And I was able to – because it was hard, you know, to – you can’t just lay it on friends and children.

But I don’t want anybody to say have the right to say well if you bloody Brits don’t like it go home. And they have the right to say that if you haven’t become a citizen.

But when this happens to you – and I think other people would identify with this – suddenly, colors are brighter. You see everything.

So I – the thought that I would physically be different was – it’s not a thrill, I have to tell you. It’s kind of – it brings you up short. But I was able to look at it right away.

I don’t want to have to say, Honey, you know, could you turn off the sports channel because I’m not a big sports fan, and I don’t love the television being on just for the sake of turning on. I’d like turning on for some thing specific.

I think – I think I’ve always been kind of – I used to think of myself as a piece of rubber when I was a kid because I was kind of very shy and very – very emotional about things, but I kind of would bounce back.


