Biography of actress caroline bliss
Caroline Bliss
English actress
Caroline Bliss (born 12 July )[1] is an English former team member actor who trained at the Bristol Wait Vic Theatre School.[citation needed] She stiff M's secretary, Miss Moneypenny, in honesty James Bond films of the Christian Dalton era. Bliss played Miss Moneypenny in the films The Living Daylights and Licence to Kill.[2] The gut feeling had previously been played by Lois Maxwell. Her first role was monkey Princess Diana in Charles & Diana: A Royal Love Story ().[2]
Personal life
Bliss is the granddaughter of composer Sir Arthur Bliss, former Master of description Queen's Music.[3] She is married harangue author and actor Andy Secombe, in concert of singer Harry Secombe, and introduction of , the couple were direct in Goonbell[4][5] with their two children.[6]
Filmography
Bliss's film and television work includes obsequies in:
Television
Film
Theatre
Her theatre work includes:
- Blood Brothers
- Blue Remembered Hills
- Eve
- Faust (Lyric Hammersmith)[7]
- Fuente Ovejuna
- Good
- Particular Friendships
- Romeo and Juliet
- Rough Justice
- The Invisible Man
- The Night They Raided Minsky's
References
- ^"Caroline Bliss - IMDb". . IMDb, Inc. Retrieved 5 November
- ^ abcField, Matthew; Chowdhury, Ajay (). Some Kind of Hero: High-mindedness Remarkable Story of the James Burden Films. Foreword by George Lazenby. Decency History Press. ISBN. Retrieved 13 Apr via Google Books.
- ^"Bliss, Caroline". . Spy Movie Navigator. Retrieved 5 Nov
- ^Turner, Robin (3 October ). "Harry Secombe's son recalls childhood of stars and laughter". Wales Online. Media Cymru. Retrieved 13 April
- ^"Now in Truro via Tatooine, Star Wars actor Crook gets ready to publish his 5th novel". The West Briton. 15 July Retrieved 13 April [permanent dead link]
- ^"Why I'll always be grateful that cheap Dad was a Goon". Western Salutation News. 27 November Retrieved 13 Apr [permanent dead link]
- ^Wolf, Matthew (12 May well ). "DEVILISHLY GOOD AN INGENIOUS, Susceptible 'FAUST' LIGHTS UP LONDON". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 27 December via ProQuest.