
Personal details
All About this Star
Biography:
Though consistently voted the UK's most popular female light entertainer and comedienne, Julie Walters is a far more rounded artist than that. A successful stage performer of longstanding, she's been involved in many of the most important theatrical progressions of the last 25 years, as well as being a best-selling author and an award-winning screen actress. She also took part in one of the most successful franchises in screen history, playing Mrs Weasley in the Harry Potter movies. Worldwide fame and critical respect - really, she has it all.
She was born Julia Mary Walters in Smethwick, Birmingham, on the 22nd of February, 1950. The youngest of three children (she has two brothers), she hails from an Irish Catholic family, her parents being Thomas and Mary Bridget (nee O'Brien). She did not have an academic background, there being no books kept in the house, and Julie was not a good student. By the time she reached Holly Lodge Grammar School she was an habitual truant, her misbehaviour made easier by the fact that both Thomas and Mary worked full-time. Eventually she was given a letter to take home, a letter asking her parents not to send her back to school. Canny Julie opened it and binned it, instead telling her parents she'd decided to leave the Lower Sixth and find work. To her mother's delight, she'd begin training as a nurse at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital.
Mary was keen for her daughter to find stable employment and there'd been many an argument over Julie's longstanding desire to act. Consequently, there was a ferocious fight when, just halfway through her course, Julie decided to leave nursing and study English and Drama at Manchester Polytechnic, where her current boyfriend was a student. Thomas and his sons would have to step in to prevent Mary from attacking her wayward child. "She'll be in the gutter before she's 20", Mary claimed, but she'd be secretly proud of her daughter's subsequent achievements. When her mother died, in 1989, Walters was deeply moved to find amongst her possessions a box stuffed with newspaper clippings recording Julie's many successes.
Julie's path through Poly was smooth, she'd found her path. She loved drama and was increasingly politicized, particularly by the boyfriend who'd encouraged her to enrol. These were times of political ferment and students were prime movers in the ongoing change. As she came towards the end of her course she'd show around a visiting student hoping to enrol on the drama course. It would be 8 years before anything came of it, but a long and extremely fruitful relationship would eventually be forged between them. The stripling student's name was Victoria Wood.
On leaving college, Walters' first professional engagement would be with Van Load, a raucous touring offshoot of Liverpool's Everyman Theatre. Under the leadership of RADA grad Jonathan Pryce, the Everyman was in full bloom, gaining worldwide respect for its inventive updates of the classics and its brave focus on a new, earthy, realist theatre, house writers including both Alan Bleasdale and Willy Russell. The venue, a converted chapel in Hope Street, was funky, with gas lighting, props scattered all around and the walls bedecked with graffiti by the famed Liverpool poets. The downstairs bar was funky, too, serving such exotic delights as chilli con carne, Newcastle Brown ale and Italian ice cream. The whole operation was intended to smash the elitism of theatre and bring new experiences to the common man, all the actors mucking in with behind-the-scenes work, even tending bar. At night, they'd enjoy a wild time in a vibrant city, Everyman players getting free entry to clubs out of respect for their efforts on Liverpool's behalf. And what players they were. Aside from Pryce, there was Anthony Sher, Alison Steadman, Bernard Hill, Trevor Eve, Nicholas Le Prevost, Barbara Dickson, several McGann brothers, and Pryce's partner Kate Fahy.
As said, Van Load was a touring offshoot of the theatre, designed to take theatre right into the heart of the community. Thus Walters would start her career playing in schools, borstals, clubs, pubs and prisons, speaking to the people in their naked tongue as she performed the works of Bleasdale and Russell. One show was visited by the vice squad who'd been warned that foul language was being used - and indeed it was. In the van with her, unbelievably, would be Peter Postlethwaite, Bill Nighy and Matthew Kelly. Two future Oscar nominees and two future Golden Globe winners taking live theatre into Liverpool borstals - amazing.
The Everyman would provide a great learning experience for Walters, and give her an outlet for her political opinions, forged among the northern working-class. It would also introduce her to a far wider audience as the company, both collectively and individually, began to spread its wings, producing pieces for both TV and the London stage. 1976 would see Walters appear, alongside Postlethwaite and Kelly, in Mike Stott's risque comedy Funny Peculiar, first at London's Mermaid then, once the play had proved a big hit, at the Garrick.
























