Isobel Pravda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Isobel Pravda is an English actress and the granddaughter of Czech actors George Pravda and Hana Maria Pravda.

Career[edit]

Pravda played the female lead, Camille Monet, opposite Richard Armitage in the BBC1 series The Impressionists (2006).[1] She had the role of Misha in three episodes of Murphy's Law (2006)[2] and DC Carla Masters in Double Dare for the series Silent Witness (2007).[3] She played Maria Bopkova in two episodes of Dark Matters (2012)[4] and Anya alongside Tom Hollander in two episodes of the BBC2 series Ambassadors (2013).[5] Pravda's film work includes Bianca in RSA's Someone Else (2005)[6] and a cameo in Kenneth Brannagh's Jack Ryan (2013).[7] Isobel Pravda was the face of Unilever's Neutral skincare range 2013/2014 campaign for Northern Europe.[8] On stage, Pravda played Portia in Julius Caesar at the Menier Chocolate Factory's opening production in 2004.[9] Her other stage work includes: Magdalena in Fighting the Tide for Hull Truck Theatre (2002);[10] Clare in the New End Theatre's Commanding Voices (2002)[11] with Jeremy Child; Lily in Zadie's Shoes at the Finborough Theatre (2003);[12][13] Miss Bingley in The Good Company's National tour of Pride and Prejudice (2005);[14] Ana in Ana in Love at The Hackney Empire (2006);[15] and Tara in The Death of Cool at the Tristan Bates Theatre (2007).[16] Pravda is currently working as a professional drama teacher in Reading, helping high school students to pursue their admired careers as actors/actresses.

The Czech Connection[edit]

Isobel Pravda's grandmother, Hana Maria Pravda, was a Czech Jew who survived Auschwitz. A diary which she wrote on the Death March was discovered many years after the war and was exhibited at the Imperial War Museum in London. Isobel was asked to do a reading of the diary for Holocaust Memorial Day 2007 at the museum. Tomáš Hrbek, Lucie Kolouchová and Daniel Hrbek from Švandovo divadlo wrote the play The Good and the True, based on her grandmother's diary. She played her grandmother in the 2013/2014 tour to Prague, London,[17][18][19] Brussels and New York.[20]

Personal life[edit]

Her father, Dr. Alex Pravda, is an academic. He is a member of the Governing Body of St Antony's College, Oxford.[21] Her mother, Imogen Martin, taught Classics and English. She has two sons.[22][23] She is now a Drama teacher at Reading Girls’ School in Whitley, Reading.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ The Impressionists – Credits
  2. ^ Murphy's Law – Cast
  3. ^ Silent Witness – Double Dare, Part 1
  4. ^ Dark Matters: Twisted but True
  5. ^ The Ambassadors – Production Details
  6. ^ Turner's Classic Movies – Someone Else
  7. ^ New York Times – Jack Ryan
  8. ^ "Neutral Campaign, 2013". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 29 January 2014.
  9. ^ Julius Caesar review, The Stage, 2004
  10. ^ Fighting the Tide review, BA Entertainment 2002
  11. ^ Commanding Voices, New End Theatre review
  12. ^ Zadie's Shoes review, Finborough Theatre 2003[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ Zadie's Shoes review, Indie London 2003
  14. ^ Pride and Prejudice, BBC Liverpool, 2005
  15. ^ Ana in Love review, The Stage 2006 Archived 19 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ The Death of Cool review, The Stage 2007
  17. ^ The Good and the True, The Jewish Renaissance, 2013 Archived 19 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ The Good and the True, Yorkshire Post review, 2013
  19. ^ The Good and the True, The Evening Standard, 2013
  20. ^ The Good and the True, New York Review, 2014 Archived 19 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Alex Pravda, St Antony's College
  22. ^ "Family life". The Guardian. 3 June 2011. Archived from the original on 5 July 2018.
  23. ^ Wonderful Women on Honest Mum