Amy Noble

Amy Noble is an actress from Surbiton in Surrey.

She has played Becky Martin in Holby City, and Lydia Asler in EastEnders. She also appeared Peter Kosminky's Bafta award-winning Britz on Channel 4, and in the My Family Christmas special "Ho Ho... No" in 2008. In November/December 2007 she played one of the lead roles, Lily Wilson, in Chains at the Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond (for which she was nominated for an Ian Charleson Award, 2007) and subsequently also performed in The Woman Hater.

More recent theatre credits include Debbie in Stoppard's The Real Thing at Salisbury Playhouse, Bev in The Water When It Burns at Hampstead Theatre and Lili in Cabaret on a Sinking Ship at the Nightingale Theatre, Brighton. In 2010 Amy played Juliet in Creation Theatre Company's outdoor production of Romeo and Juliet. Amy played Rapunzel in Creation's Christmas show Rapunzel or the Magic Pig to great acclaim, and then went on to play the role of Polyxena in Glyn Maxwell's Greek tragedy "After Troy".

In 2010, she also appeared in the Channel 4 game "The Curfew" as Leah.

Amy is currently appearing as Bobby in the Olivier award-winning production of "The Railway Children" at Waterloo Station.

On screen, Amy has starred opposite Keith Allen in the short film The Calculus of Love by acclaimed director Dan Clifton. Her debut feature film Spiderhole had its cinema and DVD release in late 2010.

In 2011, Amy began working with the video production company Dragonfly Productions. She continues this work as a scriptwriter and production coordinator.

Read more about Amy Noble:  Education, Personal Life

Famous quotes containing the word noble:

    Was it an intellectual consequence of this ‘rebirth,’ of this new dignity and rigor, that, at about the same time, his sense of beauty was observed to undergo an almost excessive resurgence, that his style took on the noble purity, simplicity and symmetry that were to set upon all his subsequent works that so evident and evidently intentional stamp of the classical master.
    Thomas Mann (1875–1955)