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Janine Duvitski

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Janine Duvitski

Janine Duvitski was born on28 June 1952)[1] is an English actress, known for her roles as Jane Edwards in Waiting for God, Pippa Trench in One Foot in the Grave and Jacqueline Stewart in Benidorm. Duvitski first came to national attention in the play Abigail’s Party, written and directed in 1977 by Mike Leigh.

Duvitski was born in Lancaster, Lancashire. Her father was Polish. She trained at the East 15 Acting School in London. She has four children, Jack, Albert, Ruby, and Edith Bentall, with her actor husband Paul Bentall. Her youngest daughter Edith is the lead singer of the band FOURS.

Duvitski’s principal television credits include the series Waiting for God (1990–1994), One Foot in the Grave (1990–2000), and Benidorm (2007–2018). In the BBC‘s Vanity Fair she played Mrs Crawley. She has also appeared on Lily Savage’s Blankety Blank.

She has also appeared in the one-off production of Blue Remembered Hills by Dennis Potter, as well as in episodes of Foyle’s War (“Fifty Ships”), Brush StrokesCowboysCitizen SmithMinderMidsomer Murders (1998)My FamilyMan About the HouseThe Georgian HouseThe New StatesmanThe Black Stuff by Alan BleasdaleThe KnowledgeZ-CarsThe Worst Week of My LifeLittle DorritStill Open All Hours and, in 2013, as Emily Scuttlebutt in the CBeebies show Old Jack’s Boat.

In 2015 Duvitski starred in the BBC sitcom Boy Meets Girl. In 2017 she appeared as Mrs Leydon, the Chapel assistant, in BBC’s mockumentary Hospital People.

Duvitski had a small role opposite Laurence Olivier and Donald Pleasence in Dracula (1979), and appeared in the 1980 rock music film Breaking Glass. She also appeared in Michael Crichton’s The First Great Train Robbery (1979), The Madness of King George (1994), About a Boy (2002), The New World (2005) and Angel (2007).

Duvitski first came to national attention in Abigail’s Party, written and directed in 1977 by Mike Leigh. The play opened in April 1977 at the Hampstead Theatre, returning after its initial run in the summer of 1977, with a total of 104 performances. A suburban comedy of manners, the play is a satire on the aspirations and tastes of the new middle class that had emerged in Britain in the 1970s. In November 1977 an abridged version of the play, lasting 104 minutes, was recorded as a BBC Play for Today. Duvitski plays Angela, a nurse, wife of Tony Cooper, appearing meek and somewhat childlike, unintelligent and tactless. She comes into her own only when host Laurence Moss suffers his fatal heart attack at the climax of the play.

Her theatre career has also included productions at UK’s National TheatreYoung Vic and Royal Shakespeare Company.

In 2007 she appeared on stage in the revival of English National Opera‘s On the Town. The production, which also included veteran British comic actress June Whitfield, saw Duvitski give a “touching comic account of Lucy Schmeeler, Hildy’s homely roommate”.

Duvitski played the Vegetable Fairy in the 2017 Sunderland Empire Theatre pantomime Jack and the Beanstalk.

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