Lou Gish
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Lou Gish | |
---|---|
Born | Louise Mikel Henrietta Marie Curram 27 May 1967 London, England |
Died | 20 February 2006 London, England | (aged 38)
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1996–2005 |
Partner | Nicholas Rowe (2000–2006, her death) |
Parents |
|
Lou Gish (27 May 1967 – 20 February 2006)[1] was an English stage, film and television actress.
Biography
[edit]She was born Louise Mikel Henrietta Marie Curram in 1967, the elder daughter of actors Sheila Gish and Roland Curram. She was raised in London and originally wanted to be an artist rather than an actor. She trained in Camberwell and earned a bachelor's degree at the Camberwell College of Arts.[citation needed]
A role in a play in Paddington brought her to the attention of an agent, and this convinced her to follow her family into a career in the theatre, taking roles on stage, in television series, and in film. She appeared with her sister, Kay Curram, in King Lear at the Chichester Festival Theatre in 2005.[citation needed]
Gish was in a relationship with actor Nicholas Rowe from 2000 until her death from cancer at the age of 38 in February 2006.[1] Her death came less than a year after that of her mother, who also died of cancer.
Both she and her mother are buried on the eastern side of Highgate Cemetery.[citation needed]
Film and television career
[edit]- Amazed - "Kara Smith" (1983)
- Game On - "Bruce Willis & Robert De Niro Holding a Fish" (1996)
- Holding the Baby (1997)
- Bent (1997)
- Microsoap (1998)
- Hope and Glory (1999)
- Casualty - "Blood Brothers" (2000)
- Without Motive (2000)
- Where the Heart Is - "Runaways" (2001)
- Coupling (2001–2002)
- The Vice - "One More Time" (2002)
- Wire in the Blood - "Shadows Rising" (2002)
- Doctors - "High Anxiety" (2004)
- Casualty - "Love's Labours ... Lost" (2004)
- EastEnders (2004–2005)
- New Tricks (2005)
Theatrical career
[edit]- Tejas Verdes (Gate Theatre 2005)
- King Lear (Chichester Festival Theatre 2005, as Goneril)
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Lou Gish". The Independent. 25 February 2006. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
External links
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