UK stage and screen star Haydn Gwynne dies at 66 after cancer diagnosis
British stage and screen start Haydn Gwynne has died at 66 after being diagnosed with cancer
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Your support makes all the difference.Haydn Gwynne, a versatile and acclaimed performer on British stage and screen, has died. She was 66 and had recently been diagnosed with cancer.
Gwynneās agent Alex Irwin said the actress died in a London hospital early Friday, āsurrounded by her beloved sons, close family and friends.ā
Born in 1957, Gwynne taught English in Italy before becoming an actor. She had her breakout role as a harried television news producer in 1990s sitcom āDrop the Dead Donkey,ā a sharp but affectionate depiction of the world of journalism.
She also starred in medical drama āPeak Practiceā and was a standout in royal roles, playing Queen Camilla in royal satire āThe Windsorsā and lady-in-waiting Susan Hussey in āThe Crown.ā
Her many stage roles included Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher opposite Helen Mirren as Queen Elizabeth II in āThe Audience.ā
Mirren paid tribute to Gwynne as āa delight as a person and a consummate dedicated actress.ā
āShe was both funny and serious at the same time, a brilliant balancing act that her whole career exemplified. We will miss her very much," Mirren said.
Gwynne was nominated for both an Olivier Award and a Tony for her performance as the supportive dance teacher in the musical āBilly Elliotā in London and New York, and received three other Olivier nominations for āThe Threepenny Opera,ā āWomen on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdownā and āCity of Angels.ā
She performed in several plays this year, including āThe Great British Bake Off Musical,ā and was due to appear in the musical tribute āStephen Sondheimās Old Friends" in London's West End, She withdrew from the production during rehearsals last month due to āsudden personal circumstances.ā
The showās producer, Cameron Mackintosh, said Gwynne was āa truly wonderful person, as well as a phenomenally talented actress and singer.ā He said Fridayās performance would be dedicated to her memory.