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Glenda Jackson
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Glenda Jackson (born May 9, 1936) is a British actress and politician. She was born at Birkenhead near Liverpool, into a working-class family, and it is a well-known piece of trivia that she once worked in Boots the Chemist. Having studied acting at RADA, Jackson made her professional stage debut in Rattigan's Separate Tables in 1957 and her film debut in This Sporting Life in 1963.
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Born on 9th May 1936 in Birkenhead, Merseyside, Glenda Jackson is the daughter of a charlady and a bricklayer. She attended grammar school, but left at the age of 16 to work in a branch of Boots and local Butlin's Holiday Camp bar. At 18, she moved to London to train as an actress at RADA.
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Both Terry Skelton and Glenda Jackson are divorced or separated parents who do not have custody of their children, and whose children received AFDC benefits. Neither Skelton nor Jackson had been ordered to pay child support. Each received a notice and finding of financial responsibility from the Missouri Division of Child Support Enforcement. The notices each set the amount of the state debt owing at the total amount of public assistance paid out to their minor children. Jackson received notice that she was responsible for repaying the state $11,064.00 as state debt. Skelton's state debt was administratively set at $4,072.00.
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On the occasion of another interview, Glenda Jackson ... expressed her preference for the theatre over television. A play feeds the actors as much as the audience: “you get nourishment from its construction and from its incident, and from where things are placed in relation to one another” (Nathan, p. 47). She has described acting as “a distillation of experience”, and repeatedly stresses the importance of energy to maintain a balance of absolute freedom and absolute control. What is most important is the way you work. The message is not enough on its own; it must be transmitted.
Glenda Jackson apologises for "crawling around like an old tortoise". As she explains: "It's not so much the aftermath of the operation; more the drugs they give you to save your life." Four weeks have passed since a Saturday morning visit to her GP resulted in an emergency appendectomy that evening. "When they opened me up, they found it was gangrenous," she says, as briskly as if we were discussing ingrowing toenails. "If I hadn't gone in, I'd have got peritonitis, and I wouldn't have been sitting here talking to you."
The daughter of a Liverpool bricklayer, actress and politician Glenda Jackson was born in Birkenhead, Merseyside. She trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London and made her professional stage debut in Terrence Rattigan's Separate Tables in 1957. She became a leading member of the Royal Shakespeare Company and appeared in films from 1963 onwards. Jackson made her screen debut with a bit part in Lindsay Anderson’s This Sporting Life (1963). Soon after, she won an Academy Award for her sparkling portrayal of Gudrun in Ken Russell’s controversial adaptation of D.H. Lawrence's Women in Love (1969).
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