Electra, Hedda, Medea, Mother Courage and now the mother of Jesus himself – Fiona Shaw has played some of theatre’s greatest, and most tragic, female roles. But the Irish actor, born into a Catholic family in 1950s County Cork, wasn’t always known for her seriousness.
As she wrote recently in the Guardian, Fiona made her name as a series of wise-cracking Shakespearean heroines during the 80s: “I associated acting with entertainment, with being able to turn a line on a sixpence and make people laugh.”
A regular at both the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre where she makes 18th- and 19th-century comedies sizzle again, she also has a surprisingly varied screen career, ranging from Three Men and a Little Lady to My Left Foot and, of course, her recurring role as Petunia Dursley in the Harry Potter franchise.
Currently appearing in Colm Tóibín’s The Testament of Mary at the Barbican – Michael Billington gave five stars to her "extraordinary" many-sided performance – Fiona joined us for a live webchat about her career...
• Michael Billington’s five star review of The Testament of Mary
• Fiona Shaw on the personal power of tragedy