Hannah Waddingham: From Ted Lasso to a Eurovision Song Contest star

1 year ago 93
ARTICLE AD BOX

 Tuesday May 9, 2023.Image source, PA Media

Image caption,

Hannah Waddingham (right) with fellow co-hosts Alesha Dixon and Julia Sanina

By Ian Youngs

Entertainment & arts reporter

The standout stars of this year's Eurovision Song Contest do not just include the competitors - one of the hosts has become a fan favourite as well.

Hannah Waddingham has been a leading lady on stage for more than two decades and found wider fame thanks to TV shows Game of Thrones, Ted Lasso and Sex Education.

She can now add "Eurovision icon" to her CV.

The English actress is co-hosting the contest's semi-finals with British presenter Alesha Dixon and Ukrainian singer Julia Salina.

While they have all been excellent so far, Waddingham in particular has earned rave reviews, and her appearances have capped her elevation to A-list status.

Image source, PA Media

Image caption,

King Charles met the hosts and commentators at the Eurovision arena last month

Viewers have responded to her unbridled energy and overflowing sense of fun, plus the effortless composure and assured stage presence that come from years in the West End and on Broadway.

Her enthusiastic facial expressions, exuberant style, impromptu dance moves and impressive language skills also have the crowd eating out of the palm of her hand.

"The co-presenter looked like she was having the time of her life playing air guitar and trading quips with a rubber turkey," the Telegraph's Ed Power wrote in his review of the first semi-final.

After a decade of notching up hit TV shows, and after a similarly joyful hosting job at the Olivier Awards last month, Waddingham is now one of the UK's most in-demand stars.

Asked before the song contest about the prospect of announcing the Eurovision results in Liverpool, she told the BBC's Eurovisioncast podcast: "That literally gives me shivers of excitement. My 12-year-old self couldn't believe that I would ever be saying [it].

"Honestly it makes me quite emotional to be calling different countries and see the delegations there. It's just crazy."

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Waddingham and grand final co-host Graham Norton, pictured in 2009, have been friends for years

Waddingham is from London and spent her childhood in theatres watching her mother, a singer with the English National Opera.

By her 20s, she was in leading roles in the West End herself. Waddingham now has three Olivier nominations to her name - for Monty Python show Spamalot, Stephen Sondheim's A Little Night Music and Cole Porter's Kiss Me, Kate.

After mostly bit parts on TV, her screen breakthrough came when she was cast as Septa Unella, better known as the Shame Nun in Game of Thrones, joining in season five.

It was "horrifically difficult" to be taken seriously enough to make the leap from stage to screen - and she had to go to the US to achieve it, she has said.

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

She went down well when she hosted the Olivier Awards in London in April

"You see the same faces constantly, I think, on British television. And that was my frustration," she told Kate Thornton's White Wine Question Time podcast in 2021.

"I had to jump over to the other side of the pond in order to get recognised. And I don't think that's right, personally."

But with a baby on the way, she no longer wanted to be on stage six nights a week. She started filming Game of Thrones just eight weeks after giving birth.

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Waddingham with Lady Gaga at the 2022 Critics Choice Awards

That led to shows like Superman prequel Krypton. But while filming that, her daughter, three at the time, became seriously ill with Henoch-Schönlein purpura (HSP), which affects the blood vessels. It was "all a bit touch and go", Waddingham said.

After being unable to immediately get home to be with her, so told her agents she no longer wanted acting jobs that would require her to travel.

"I am first and foremost a mum, and more importantly, a single mum," she said. While her daughter was recovering a month later, she stood in her garden one night and "thanked the Universe" for making her better.

Image source, EPA

Image caption,

The cast of Ted Lasso visited the White House in Washington, DC in March

While she was at it, she asked the Universe for another job that would allow her to be near her daughter and keep them afloat financially.

"And also, can I be so cheeky as to say, could it be something that shows everything that I can do, and things that I don't feel like I've been able to do yet? And is there any way it could just be around the corner?" she asked.

"And I'm not joking, within two months the audition came in for Ted Lasso, that shoots 40 minutes away from my house."

Image source, Reuters

Image caption,

Waddingham won the Emmy for outstanding supporting actress in a comedy series for Ted Lasso in 2021

The Universe came through. Waddingham won the role in the Apple TV+ comedy as Richmond FC owner Rebecca Welton, who hires hapless US coach Ted because she wants the team to fail to spite her former husband.

It became a hit, and Waddingham won an Emmy, a Critics' Choice Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award.

Global fame has come relatively late. "You don't think your career is going to rev up during your 40s," she told the Plot Twist podcast last year. "Being a mother, you think it's going to slow down a bit."

There's not much chance of that. She recently appeared in Hocus Pocus 2 and ITV's Tom Jones, and will be in forthcoming films The Fall Guy, Garfield and Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part Two.

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

She celebrated her Screen Actors Guild Awards win via a video link last year

If she hadn't made it as an actress, she would have liked to work as an interpreter, she has said. "I love languages."

She speaks Italian and French - as she demonstrated during the first Eurovision semi-final.

"You see, Europe, some of us Brits do bother to learn another language," she told the crowd to huge cheers, before blowing them a kiss.

That's just one reason why the Eurovision fans ended up chanting her name that night.

All the build-up, insights and analysis is explored on the BBC's Eurovisioncast.

Eurovisioncast is available on BBC Sounds, or search wherever you get your podcasts from.

Read Entire Article