Sinead Cusack

This petite blonde stage-trained Irish actress is best-known for her work on the London stage with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) and the Royal Court Theatre. The daughter of noted actor Cyril Cusack, she began her professional career at the famed Abbey Theater of Dublin. In the late 1960s, Cusack moved to London and soon thereafter began her collaboration with the RSC. She also made her feature debut with a small part in Clive Donner's "Alfred the Great" (1969). The next year, she starred opposite Peter Sellers in the small comedy "Hoffman" but for the better part of the next two decades, she concentrated on working in the theater.

Cusack has played leading Shakespearean roles in RSC and Royal Court productions of "Macbeth" (as Lady Macbeth), "The Taming of the Shrew" (as Kate) and "The Merchant of Venice" (as Portia). In 1984, she made her Broadway debut opposite Derek Jacobi in the repertory productions of "Much Ado About Nothing" (as Beatrice) and "Cyrano de Bergerac" (as Roxanne), earning a Tony nomination for her work in the former. Six years later, she returned to London's West End for an acclaimed production of "The Three Sisters", co-starring her father and her sisters Sorcha and Niamh.

In the late 1980s, Cusack resumed her big screen career and has co-starred in a handful of mostly European-made features. Her American films have included "Rocket Gibraltar" and "Dublin Murders" (both 1988), while her other credits have included the fantasies "Venus Peter" (1989), "Waterland" (1992) with her husband Jeremy Irons, Les Blair's comedy "Bad Behaviour" (1993), opposite Stephen Rea, and the dramas "The Cement Garden" (1993) and "The Nephew" (lensed 1996). In Italy, she co-starred with Vanessa Redgrave and Johnathon Schaech in Franco Zeffirelli's "Sparrow" (1993) and again teamed with her Irons and Liv Tyler in Bernardo Bertolucci's "Stealing Beauty" (1996).

Cusack made her TV debut in 1970 playing Emily to her father's Barkis in a British production of "David Copperfield". She went to appear in several British-made TV-movies, including the thriller "The Eyes Have It" (1974), two "Quiller" mysteries, "Night of the Father" and "Price of Violence" (both 1975), in which she was cast as a detective's right-hand, "Twelfth Night" (1980), as Olivia, and "Cyrano de Bergerac" (1994), as Roxanne. She and Irons both played supporting roles to Rosemary Harris' George Sand in the multi-part biography "Notorious Woman" (PBS, 1975) and "Tales from Hollywood" (PBS, 1992). More recently, Cusack was seen opposite Alan Bates in the BBC mystery "Oliver's Travels" (1996).

  • Also Credited As:
    Sinead Moira Cusack
  • Born:
    Sinead Moira Cusack on February 18, 1948 in Dalkey, Ireland
  • Job Titles:
    Actor
Family
  • Brother: Padraig Cusack.
  • Brother: Paul Cusack.
  • Father: Cyril James Cusack. Born in 1910; died in 1993 at age 82
  • Half-sister: Catherine Cusack. Younger; mother, Mary Cusack
  • Mother: Maureen Cusack. Died in April 1975
  • Sister: Niamh Cusack. Younger; first name pronounced Nee-iv
  • Sister: Sorcha Cusack. Younger; first name pronounced Surr-eeka
  • Son: Maximilian Paul Diarmiud Irons. Born c. 1985; father, Jeremy Irons
  • Son: Richard Boyd Barrett. Gave birth to son in 1968 and placed the child for adoption; reunited with son, who was revealed to be the Irish Trotskyist politician Richard Boyd Barrett
  • Son: Samuel James Brefni Irons. Born c. 1978; father, Jeremy Irons
Significant Others
  • Companion: Vincent Dowling. had romance c. 1967; Dowling detailed the relationship in his memoirs, Astride the Moon published in 2002
Education
  • University College, Dublin, Ireland, English
  • Holy Child Convent, Killenny, Ireland
Milestones
  • 1960 Made stage debut in The Importance of Mr. O
  • 1969 Feature acting debut, Alfred the Great
  • 1970 TV acting debut, David Copperfield
  • 1972 London stage debut, Romeo and Juliet
  • 1975 First onscreen collaboration with Jeremy Irons, in the television production of Notorious Woman
  • 1977 Last feature film for over a decade, The Last Remake of Beau Geste
  • 1984 Co-starred in the tandem Broadway productions of the RSC s revivals of Much Ado About Nothing and Cyrano de Bergerac ; received Tony Award nomination for the former
  • 1988 Returned to films to appear in Rocket Gibraltar
  • 1990 Co-starred with her father and sisters Sorcha and Niamh in the West End revival of Chekhov s The Three Sisters
  • 1992 Had featured role alongside her husband Jeremy Irons in Waterland
  • 1996 Appeared opposite husband Jeremy Irons in Bernardo Bertolucci s Stealing Beauty
  • 1999 Garnered praise for her stage performance in Our Lady of Sligo ; reprised role in NYC in 2000
  • 2000 Co-starred in Passion of Mind
  • 2001 Acted on the London stage in A Lie of the Mind
  • 2002 Starred opposite Stuart Wilson in the Royal Shakespeare Company s staging of Antony and Cleopatra
  • 2006 Cast in the Wachowski brothers V for Vendetta based on the acclaimed graphic novel by author Alan Moore
  • 2006 Starred in the BBC sitcom Home Again
  • 2007 Co-starred with Viggo Mortensen in director David Cronenberg s Eastern Promises
  • 2008 Cast in Tom Stoppard s Rock n Roll ; received a Tony award for Featured Actress in a Play
  • Moved to England
  • Starred in numerous Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) productions including Macbeth and As You Like It

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