English actress
Cherie Mary Lunghi (born 4 April 1952) is an English film, television, theatre actress and voice-over artist. She is known for her roles in many British dramas. Her international fame stems from her role as Guenevere in the 1981 film Excalibur. Lunghi's long list of screen, stage and TV credits include football manager Gabriella Benson in the 1990s television series The Manageress and a series of advertisements for Kenco coffee. She also competed in the 2008 series of Strictly Come Dancing.[2] She is the mother of the actress Nathalie Lunghi.
Lunghi was born in Nottingham.[3] Her father, Alessandro Lunghi, was Italian.[4] She was raised by her mother, aunt and grandmother, seeing her father only occasionally. Lunghi has described herself as feeling "different" as she did not have a mother and father like other children.[5]: 89, 90
Educated at London's Arts Educational School,[6] Lunghi played Hedvig in The Wild Duck [7] and Alice in Alice in Wonderland [8] on BBC radio while still at school. After graduating from Homerton College, Cambridge[failed verification] and London's Central School of Speech and Drama, she joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in the late 1970s, taking leading roles such as Perdita, Celia, and Viola.[6] She had a starring role in the 1979 British short film Diversion (the prototype for the 1987 U.S. film Fatal Attraction). In 1981 she landed the role of Guenevere in the film Excalibur.[6]
She starred in the 1982 television serial Praying Mantis, based on the book (Les Mantes Religieuses) by Hubert Monteilhet. The thriller co-starred Pinkas Braun, Carmen du Sautoy, and Jonathan Pryce. In 1985 Lunghi played Michal in King David alongside Edward Woodward and Richard Gere. She also appeared alongside Robert De Niro in The Mission. Lunghi told author Paul Stenning, "It was wonderful working with him, it was extraordinary actually. He transforms right in front of you. You are aware when watching him on screen that he has transformed – he is not Robert De Niro – he is somebody else. I don't think you can learn how to do that; it's just the power of your imagination."[5]: 94 and 95
In the mid-1980s, she relocated to Los Angeles for eight years, but returned to England to care for her mother. After the birth of her daughter she took various short-term parts, including playing the band members' mutual love interest in the music video for Level 42's song "Something About You". Lunghi has described how she had been working during pregnancy and was working again three months after giving birth, saying, "it was working mother guilt. I was juggling and balancing, trying to be fair to my career and to my child. Nathalie would come everywhere with me."[5]: 95
Lunghi took on the lead role in football drama The Manageress (1989–90), and participated in the BBC adaptation of Edith Wharton's posthumously published novel, The Buccaneers (1995), as Laura Testvalley. In addition to film and television work, she appeared in a long-running advertising campaign on British television for Kenco coffee from the late 1990s onwards.
In 2006, Lunghi appeared on television in Casualty 1906, playing Matron Eva Luckes, and had a recurring guest role in the regular Casualty series as Professor Camille Windsor. In 2013, she narrated some episodes of the BBC genealogy series Who Do You Think You Are?.[9]
In 2008, she competed in the sixth series of BBC television's Strictly Come Dancing (14-week run), partnered by James Jordan.[10] After her first dance, the Foxtrot on the Ladies Night in week two, she scored the highest points of the first two weeks (33). She beat this score with another series-best score of 35/40 for the rumba to finish week four atop the remaining 12 contestants with an average score of 34/40. The score for her third dance, the American Smooth, was an impressive 34 to maintain her average, though she slipped to 31/40 for the Paso Doble, and further to 26/40 on her fifth outing, in the Salsa. She returned to form the following week with a Waltz, scoring 36/40, and was joint first on the leaderboard.
She was voted off the competition on 16 November 2008 (week nine), losing by three votes to one in the dance-off against model Lisa Snowdon after performing a Cha-Cha-Cha.[11] In the January/February 2009 Strictly Tour, she danced an American Smooth and a rumba with James Jordan.
Lunghi was briefly married to South African student Ralph Lawson after the pair met while studying at London's Central School of Speech and Drama.[4] The 1975 marriage was one of convenience so that Lawson could remain in the UK. The couple never lived together as husband and wife, instead staying in separate homes in Newcastle. Lawson moved back to South Africa two years later to take a new job.[12] She has a daughter, Nathalie Lunghi (b. 1986), with the director Roland Joffé.
Her stage credits include:[52]
| Date | Title | Role | Director | Company / Theatre |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25 October 1972 – 27 October 1972 | The Country Wife | Alithea | David Terence | Royal Central School of Speech and Drama / Embassy Theatre, London [53][54] |
| 26 December 1974 – 1975 | Canterbury Tales | Nun | Roger Chapman | Nottingham Playhouse Company / Nottingham Playhouse [55] |
| 30 January 1975 – | She Stoops to Conquer | Miss Kate Hardcastle | Robert Knights | Nottingham Playhouse Company / Nottingham Playhouse [56] |
| 20 March 1975 – | Major Barbara | Sarah | Prunella Scales | Nottingham Playhouse Company / Nottingham Playhouse [57] |
| 1975 | Teeth 'n' Smiles | Laura | English Stage Company / Royal Court Theatre, London | |
| 5 April 1976 – 1977 | Much Ado About Nothing | Hero | John Barton | Royal Shakespeare Company / Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-on-Avon [58] |
| 10 March 1977 – 7 April 1977 | Royal Shakespeare Company / Theatre Royal, Newcastle upon Tyne [59] | |||
| 29 June 1977 – | Royal Shakespeare Company / Aldwych Theatre, London [60] | |||
| 28 September 1976 – | Destiny | Liz and Carol | Ron Daniels | Royal Shakespeare Company / The Other Place, Stratford-on-Avon [61] |
| 29 March 1977 – 9 April 1977 | Royal Shakespeare Company / Gulbenkian Studio, Newcastle-upon-Tyne [62] | |||
| 10 May 1977 – | Royal Shakespeare Company / Aldwych Theatre, London [63] | |||
| 17 January 1977 – | The Boy Friend | Maisie | Gillian Lynne | Royal Shakespeare Company / Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-on-Avon [64] |
| 25 March 1977 – 2 April 1977 | The Phoenix and the Turtle | Roberta | Peter Stevenson | Gulbenkian Studio, Newcastle-upon-Tyne [65] |
| 1 June 1976 – | The Winter's Tale | Perdita | John Barton | Royal Shakespeare Company / Royal Shakespeare Theatre, Stratford-on-Avon [66] |
| 1 November 1977 – | The Days of the Commune | Genevieve | Howard Davies | Royal Shakespeare Company / Aldwych Theatre [67] |
| 26 July 1977 – 1977 | That Good Between Us | Rhoda | Barry Kyle | Royal Shakespeare Company / Warehouse Theatre, London [68] |
| 3 August 1977 – | Bandits | Madeline and Pat | Howard Davies | Royal Shakespeare Company / Warehouse Theatre [69] |
| 2 May 1977 – | King Lear | Cordelia | Trevor Nunn | Royal Shakespeare Company / Aldwych Theatre [70] |
| 15 September 1978 – 1978 | As You Like It | Celia | John Caird Trevor Nunn | Royal Shakespeare Company / Aldwych Theatre [71] |
| 21 December 1978 – 1979 | Saratoga | Lucy Carter | Ronald Eyre | Royal Shakespeare Company / Aldwych Theatre [72] |
| 12 June 1979 – 1980 | Twelfth Night | Viola | Terry Hands | Royal Shakespeare Company / Royal Shakespeare Theatre [73] |
| 11 March 1980 – | Royal Shakespeare Company / Theatre Royal, Newcastle upon Tyne [74] | |||
| 11 April 1980 – | Royal Shakespeare Company / Aldwych Theatre [75] | |||
| 7 May 1982 – | Uncle Vanya | Yelena Andreyevna | Michael Bogdanov | National Theatre Company / Lyttelton Theatre, London [76] |
| 14 January 1987 – | Holiday | Julia Seton | Lindsay Anderson | Old Vic, London [77] |
| 3 January 1990 – 1991 | The Homecoming | Ruth | Peter Hall | Comedy Theatre, London [78] |
| 21 June 2000 – 9 September 2000 | Passion Play | Eleanor | Michael Grandage | Comedy Theatre, London [79] |