Hetty Baynes

Henrietta Sara Louise Baynes (born 16 August 1956) is an English film, television and theatre actress.[1] She began her career as a ballet dancer at the Royal Ballet School and made her professional debut at 12 in Rudolf Nureyev's The Nutcracker and then Sleeping Beauty at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. In her mid-teens she moved from dance to acting.

Hetty Baynes-Russell
Born
Henrietta Sara Louise Baynes

(1956-08-16) 16 August 1956
OccupationActress
Years active1968–present
Spouse(s)
Ken Russell
(m. 1992; div. 1999)
Children1

She began her acting career at 17, as an acting ASM in repertory theatre. She was married to film director Ken Russell from 1992 to 1999; they had one son. She obtained a BA in Philosophy from Birkbeck College London in 1990.

Early life

Baynes was born in Boscombe Hospital, Bournemouth. Her mother was Margot Findlay and her father was Leslie Baynes, an English aeronautical engineer, who designed what is believed to be the oldest flying glider in the United Kingdom. As a girl in the 1970s, Baynes attended the Elmhurst Ballet School in Camberley in Surrey, where a contemporary was the actress Laura Hartong.

Career

Her stage career has involved many leading roles including in 1979, in John Osborne’s Inadmissible Evidence at the Royal Court Theatre, in 1984, a comic performance alongside Maureen Lipman and Lionel Jeffries in the Theatre of Comedy’s See How They Run; in 1991, she appeared with Edward Fox in The Philanthropist at Wyndham's Theatre and in 1997, as Lady Fidget in William Wycherley’s The Country Wife . Her most recent stage performance was in 2004, as Shirley in Revelations by Stephen Lowe at the Hampstead Theatre.

During her career she has received three best actress nominations for her performances; in 1991, as Rita in Henrik Ibsen’s Little Eyolf (Off-West End Awards), in 1992, as Maddy in Michael Wall’s Women Laughing (Manchester Evening News Awards) and as Marilyn Monroe in Marilyn Bowering’s Anyone Can See I Love You (Sony and Prix Italia Awards).[2]

Baynes has also appeared on television including in 1981 with Sir John Gielgud in Agatha Christie’s The Seven Dials Mystery, in 1985, with Pauline Collins and Michael Gambon in The Tropical Moon Over Dorking, in 1990, as the wife of Stephen Fry in Simon Gray’s Old Flames, in 1993, as Hilda in Ken Russell’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover and with Glenda Jackson in The Secret Life of Sir Arnold Bax. She appeared as Vera Rowley in the BBC series The Hour in 2011[2] and was also to be seen in BBC1's The Casual Vacancy in 2015.[1]

Art and paintings

Baynes is an arts graduate of Central Saint Martins and her work is exhibited from time to time. A recent exhibition at the Strand Gallery, London contained 35 of her original paintings and was entitled "Betsy and Blapsy".[3] It was billed as a "humorous yet personal, autobiographical exhibition".[4]

Personal life

In 2008 Hetty Baynes lost a high court challenge over the £2.3m estate of the late Mary Spencer Watson, a sculptor who had a 50-year lesbian relationship with her mother.[5]

Selected theatre appearances

  • The Country Wife (Plymouth & tour)
  • The Heidi Chronicles
  • The Passing Out Parade
  • The Admirable Crichton (Greenwich Theatre)
  • Women Laughing - Best Actress nomination for the Manchester Evening News Awards (Manchester Royal Exchange)
  • The Philanthropist (Wyndham Theatre)
  • Little Eyolf - Best Actress nomination for the Fringe Awards (Bird's Nest)
  • Hand Over Fist (Watermill)
  • See How They Run
  • Theatre of Comedy (Shaftesbury Theatre)
  • Buglar Boy (Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh Festival)
  • Happy Event
  • The Reluctante Debutant
  • Hay Fever (Windsor)
  • Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme (Lyric, Belfast)
  • Chorus Girls (Stratford East)
  • Suddenly Last Summer
  • Three Sisters (Thorndike Theatre)
  • Inadmissible Evidence (Royal Court)
  • Othello (Ludlow Festival) and
  • The Merry Wives of Windsor
  • On the Rocks (Mermaid Theatre).

Selected television appearances

This is an incomplete list of television appearances; you can help by expanding it.

Selected radio performances

Selected film appearances

References

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