Lisa Faulkner

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Lisa Faulkner
Born Lisa Tamsin Faulkner
(1973-01-02) 2 January 1973
Merton, London, England, UK
Occupation Actress, television personality
Years active 1992–present
Spouse(s) Chris Coghill (m. 2005–11)
Children Daughter

Lisa Tamsin Faulkner (born 2 January 1973),[1] is an English actress and television personality.

Early life

Faulkner was born in Merton, London,[2] to a civil servant and a legal secretary.[3] She was educated at Tiffin Girls' School in Kingston upon Thames.[4]

Lisa was sixteen and her younger sister, Victoria, fourteen,[3] when their mother, Julie, lost her two-year battle against throat cancer. Lisa has since then discussed this experience, along with the memories of her late mother, in a number of newspaper and magazine interviews.[5]

Career

At the age of 16, she was approached by a modelling scout while she was waiting on the platform of a London tube station.[6]

In 1992, she made her first acting appearance in The Lover, starring Jane March. At age 21, Lisa played the part of Alison Dangerfield in the British TV drama Dangerfield. She also starred in the 1994 British film A Feast at Midnight. In 1996 she appeared in And The Beat Goes On. Two years later, she played Louise Hope in the Channel 4 soap Brookside. Between 1998 and 2001, she played Dr Victoria Merrick on Holby City, before her character was stabbed to death in her own home by the father of a patient whose life she couldn't save.

In the TV show Spooks, her character Helen Flynn suffered a particularly gruesome fate. In only the second episode of the first series, Faulkner's character had her hand and face burnt in a deep fat fryer before being shot in the head at point-blank range, setting a precedent for later deaths in Spooks.[7]

In 2004, she starred as D.S. Emma Scribbins ("Scribbs") in Murder in Suburbia on ITV where she played a CID policewoman in company with Caroline Catz who played her gaffer, D.I. Ashurst. The show returned for a second series in 2005, with Scribbs adopting the then popular fashion style of "boho-chic". In 2006, she starred in the TV series New Street Law.

It was rumoured that Faulkner had been shortlisted to play the role of D.I. Alex Drake in Ashes to Ashes, the sequel series to Life on Mars.[8] However, Faulkner's former Spooks co-star Keeley Hawes was subsequently cast in the role.

Since June 2008, Faulkner has narrated BBC1 show Heir Hunters, replacing Nadia Sawalha.[9]

She regularly teaches at Amanda Redman's Artists Theatre School.[10]

Faulkner was voted one of FHM's "100 Sexiest Women in the World" six times between 1999 and 2004. She regularly contributed to Big Brother's Little Brother, a magazine programme about the reality UK TV show Big Brother which was broadcast on Channel 4. She is a regular contributor to the Sky1 magazine show Angela and Friends.,[11] and the Channel 5 chat show The Wright Stuff.

In 2010 she won Celebrity Masterchef, beating Christine Hamilton and Dick Strawbridge in the final.[12]

She appeared in the third season premiere of the Canadian show, Murdoch Mysteries, when the series filmed an episode in and around Bristol, England, which aired in 2010 and returned for her second guest appearance in the fourth season, in 2011. She also appeared in Season 5 twice.[13]

She co-hosts Real Food Family Cook Off on Channel 5 with Matt Dawson. The series began on 20 September 2011.

Lisa began presenting the series Heir Hunters in November 2011 on BBC 2. She presents What's Cooking, which began on 25 February 2013.

She has recently published a book 'Recipes from my Mother for my Daughter'.[14]

Personal life

In 2005, Faulkner married Chris Coghill, her co-star from the TV series Burn It, in Richmond Park, London. The couple adopted a fifteen-month-old girl who was born in 2006;[15] however the couple separated and divorced in 2011, and Lisa is now in a relationship with MasterChef host John Torode.[16]

References

External links

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