Gabrielle Drake

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Gabrielle Drake
Born
Gabrielle Mary Drake

(1944-03-30) 30 March 1944 (age 80)
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
Occupation(s)Film, television and stage actress
Years active1964-present
TelevisionUFO
The Brothers
Spouse
Louis de Wet
(m. 1977; died 2018)
[1]
RelativesMolly Drake (mother)
Nick Drake (brother)

Gabrielle Drake (born 30 March 1944) is a British actress. She appeared in the 1970s in television series The Brothers and UFO. In the early 1970s she appeared in several erotic roles on screen. She later took parts in soap operas Crossroads and Coronation Street. She has also had a stage career.

Her brother was the musician Nick Drake, whose work she has consistently helped to promote since his death in 1974.

Early life and education

Drake was born in

British India, the daughter of Rodney Shuttleworth Drake (1908 - 1988) and amateur songwriter Molly Drake. She is the sister of songwriter and composer Nick Drake. Her father was an engineer working for the Bombay Burmah Trading Corporation. The family moved from Burma to Britain when she was eight.[2]

She later commented that,

Until then, life was fairly easy out east. There were lots of servants ... not that I remember having a spoilt childhood. Then suddenly we were back in England and in the grips of rationing. And yet, we were lucky in a way. We came back with my nanny who knew far more about England than mummy did. I remember the two of them standing over the

Aga with a recipe book trying to work out how to roast beef, that sort of thing![3]

On the ship travelling to Britain she appeared in children's theatrical productions, later saying of herself "I was a dreadful exhibitionist."

Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
(RADA) in London. She has had a long stage career beginning in the mid-1960s, and has regularly appeared in television dramas.

Screen career

Drake first gained wide attention for her portrayal of Lieutenant Gay Ellis in the 1970

flying saucers
. Drake appeared in roughly half the 26 episodes produced, leaving the series during a break in the production to pursue other acting opportunities.

In 1971, Drake appeared in a short film entitled Crash!, based on a chapter in

Synth Britannia clips of Ballard and Drake from Crash! were inserted into the 1979 video for Gary Numan's song "Cars". A reviewer in The Scotsman commented that the presence of Drake "brought serious glamour to urban alienation".[6]

Her early television appearances include The Avengers (1967), Coronation Street (as Inga Olsen in 1967) and The Saint (1968). On 26 December 1968 she played opposite American actor Robert Lansing in a BBC television series called Journey to the Unknown in an episode called "The Beckoning Fair One", and an episode called "Sorry Is Just a Word" of Special Branch. In 1970, she auditioned for the part of Jo Grant in Doctor Who, reaching the final shortlist of three alongside Katy Manning and Cheryl Hall, with Manning winning the part.

In the early 1970s, Drake was associated with the boom in British

Au Pair Girls (1972) and appeared in two Derek Ford films, Suburban Wives (1971) and its sequel Commuter Husbands
(1972), in which she played the narrator who links the disparate episodes together.

She gained wide exposure in

(2003–05) she played the protagonist's mother.

She was the subject of This Is Your Life on 8 April 1987.

Stage career

Drake made her stage debut in 1964, during the inaugural season of the

The Provok'd Wife.[9]

She was directed by

Mark Curry.[11] In 1993, she was Monica in Coward's Present Laughter at the Globe Theatre, London, in a revival directed by and starring Tom Conti.[12] She co-starred with Jeremy Clyde in the 1995 King's Head Theatre tour of Cavalcade, directed by Dan Crawford.[13] In 1999, she was Vittoria in Paul Kerryson's production of The White Devil at the Haymarket Theatre, Leicester.[14] She also toured with the Oxford Stage Company in that year, as Hester Bellboys in John Whiting's A Penny for a Song, alongside Julian Glover, Jeremy Clyde, and Charles Kay.[15] She played Mrs Malaprop in the 2002 touring production of The Rivals with the British Actors' Theatre Company, whose artistic director, Kate O'Mara, was Drake's co-star in the TV series The Brothers.[16]

She has made regular appearances at the

Phoenix Theatre in London (1987). Other roles at the Royal Exchange include Mrs Erlynne in Lady Windermere's Fan (1996);[19] Anna in The Ghost Train Tattoo (2000);[20] Fay in Loot (2001);[21] Lady Bracknell in The Importance of Being Earnest (2004);[22] and The Comtesse de la Briere in What Every Woman Knows (2006).[23] At the same theatre in 2001, Drake replaced Patricia Routledge as Mrs Conway during the rehearsal period for J. B. Priestley's Time and the Conways, when Routledge was forced to withdraw from the production due to illness.[24]

Elsewhere, she has appeared in her one-woman show, Dear Scheherazade, as the 19th century writer Elizabeth Gaskell (2005, 2007, 2010).[25][26] At the Chipping Campden Literature Festival in 2011, she and Martin Jarvis read extracts from the letters and diaries of Robert and Clara Schumann in the recital, Beloved Clara.[27] She had appeared in the same piece the previous year, again with Jarvis and the pianist Lucy Parham, at the Wigmore Hall in London.[28]

Personal life

medieval priory

Drake has helped to ensure the public renown of her brother Nick Drake and her mother Molly Drake. She can be heard accompanying Nick on a number of songs that he recorded privately, and which have since been released on the album Family Tree. After the release of songs written and performed by her mother, she said "Her creativity was a personal thing, and she was lucky to be able to develop it in an environment where that side of her was totally accepted. Indeed, my father encouraged it. He was so proud of her. On one occasion, he even made the 20-mile drive to Birmingham to get four songs pressed onto a disc."[3] In 2014, she co-wrote and edited, with Cally Callomon, Nick Drake: Remembered for a While, a memoir of her brother.[29] In April 2018, she collected the Hall of Fame Folk Award 2018 on her brother's behalf in Belfast.

She lives in

Wenlock Abbey in Much Wenlock, Shropshire, in a house she bought in 1983 with her husband, South African-born artist Louis de Wet, who died in 2018.[30] They renovated their home over several years as an artistic project and, in 2004, he described it as "the most beautiful building site in the world".[2] Drake was the co-producer, with Cally Callomon, of In the Gaze of the Medusa, a 2013 film by Gavin Bush about the renovation project and her husband's designs for the house.[31]

Selected filmography

Television roles

Audio recordings

References

  1. ^ Jeffries, Stuart (15 November 2014). "I want to complicate the Nick Drake story". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d Grice, Elizabeth (9 June 2004). "Wretched boy... if only he were here". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 18 March 2022.(subscription required)
  3. ^ a b Paphides, Peter (22 March 2013). "Nick Drake: in search of his mother, Molly". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  4. .
  5. .
  6. ^ "On the box: Life | Prescott: The North/South divide | Synth-Britannia". The Scotsman. 18 October 2009. Archived from the original on 4 February 2015. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  7. .
  8. ^ Higgins, John (21 July 1967). "Review". The Spectator.[full citation needed]
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h "Theatre Collection". University of Bristol.[full citation needed]
  10. ^ "How The Other Half Loves: History". Alan Ayckbourn Official Website. Retrieved 18 March 2022.[failed verification]
  11. ^ The Stage, 21 November 1991 {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[full citation needed]
  12. ^ Taylor, Paul (24 June 1993). "THEATRE / All dressed up with no place to go: Paul Taylor reviews Present Laughter at the Globe Theatre, London". The Independent. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  13. ^ Benedict, David (19 August 1995). "The Critics: Lessons of the cast struggle". The Independent. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  14. ^ Connolly, Annaliese (September 1999). "Review of The White Devil, the Haymarket Theatre". Early Modern Literary Studies. 5 (2).
  15. ^ "Whiting's Penny for a Song Revived". WhatsOnStage.com. 25 August 1999.
  16. ^ Paddock, Terri (19 August 2002), WhatsOnStage.com {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[full citation needed]
  17. .
  18. ^ Murray 2007, p. 176.
  19. ^ Wainwright, Jeffrey (13 December 1996). "THEATRE: Lady Windermere's Fan; Royal Exchange, Manchester". The Independent. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  20. ^ Billington, Michael (29 March 2000). "Inspiring flinches". The Guardian.
  21. ^ Hickling, Alfred (23 May 2001). "Loot still proves its worth". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  22. ^ Costa, Maddy (23 January 2008). "Handbags at dawn". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  23. ^ Hickling, Alfred (18 January 2006). "What Every Woman Knows". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  24. ^ "llness Forces Routledge Out of Exchange Time". WhatsOnStage.com. 30 October 2001.
  25. ^ Orme, Steve (24 April 2005), The British Theatre Guide {{citation}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[full citation needed]
  26. ^ Mullen, Adrian (4 May 2007). "Gabrielle Drake joins the glittering lineup for the women's festival". The Westmorland Gazette. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  27. ^ "2011 Festival Roundup". Chipping Campden Literature Festival. Archived from the original on 2 December 2011.
  28. ^ Church, Michael (29 December 2010). "Beloved Clara, Parham/Drake/Jarvis, Wigmore Hall". The Independent. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  29. ^ Hall, James (24 November 2014). "Nick Drake: 'He knew he was good'". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 18 March 2022.(subscription required)
  30. ^ "The Liberty and Borough of Wenlock". Victoria County History. A History of the County of Shropshire: Volume 10, Munslow Hundred (Part), the Liberty and Borough of Wenlock. 1998. pp. 187–212. Retrieved 17 November 2018.
  31. ^ "About". IN THE GAZE OF THE MEDUSA | A film by Gavin Bush. Retrieved 18 March 2022.

Bibliography

External links