Maggie Cronin is an Irish actress and playwright, known for her role as Kate McGuire in the BBC soap opera Doctors, which she appeared in from 2000 to 2004, with a brief appearance in 2006. Cronin has also written one-woman shows that she has toured across the UK, as well as appearing in various other stage productions.
Maggie Cronin | |
---|---|
Education | Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art |
Occupations |
|
Television | Doctors |
Spouse |
Frank Martin (m. 1993) |
Website | maggiecronin |
Early and personal life
editThe eldest of four children born to Irish parents, Cronin grew up in Dagenham. Her mother, from County Clare, was a midwife and her father, from County Cork, was a foundryman at Ford. Cronin went to secondary school in Forest Gate, obtained a degree at Nene College Northampton, then trained as an actress at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in London. Cronin has lived in Belfast with her husband, Frank Martin, since 1993.[2] He is an editor for BBC Northern Ireland.[3]
Career
editCronin began her performing career as a singer part of an acapella group, Draylon Underground.[4] Her first acting credit came in 1993 when she appeared in an episode of the ITV procedural drama series The Bill. She then appeared in United, which won a BAFTA TV Award.[1] Cronin then ventured into theatre, writing a one-woman show, A Most Notorious Woman directed by Paddy Scully. It premiered at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 1989 and subsequently toured over a number of years through the UK, Ireland and the US.[2] Her script won the Stewart Parker Trust/BBC Radio Drama Award for 1995 and was published by Lagan Press in 2004.[5] She has since written other productions, including: Ties That Bind, Ten Days That Shook Belfast and Shrieking Sisters: The History Of Ireland’s Suffragist Movement (co-written with Carol Moor). The latter toured throughout Northern Ireland.[2]
Cronin was then cast in the BBC daytime medical soap opera Doctors as practice manager Kate McGuire.[6] She was one of nine original regular cast members to be cast on the soap.[7] She commuted from Belfast to Birmingham for the role.[1] She opted to leave the series in 2004, later making a brief appearance in 2006 to aid the exit of her onscreen husband, Mac McGuire (Christopher Timothy).[8] Cronin's second one-woman show, Greenstick Boy, directed by Sarah Tipple, previewed at the Brian Friel Theatre in March 2008, as well as the Assembly Rooms at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in August 2008. It was later performed in Dublin in 2010.[9] The short film The Shore, directed by Terry George, in which she appears with Ciarán Hinds, Conleth Hill and Kerry Condon, won the Academy award in the Short Film, Live Action category at the 84th Academy Awards in February 2012.[10]
Filmography
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1993 | The Bill | Gina | 1 episode |
1998 | United | Television short | |
1999 | Picnic | Freda | Short film |
2000 | Somethings I Don't Know | Teacher | Television film |
2000–2004, 2006 | Doctors | Kate McGuire | Regular role |
2005 | Holby City | Bel Ferris | Episode: "7 Days Later" |
2009 | Scapegoat | Doris Curran | Television film |
2010 | Marú | Laura Cross | Episode: "The Murder of Laura Cross" |
2011 | The Shore | Mary | Short film |
2011 | Stand Off | Alice Weller | Film |
2011 | Going Back | Lorraine McNally | Short film |
2012 | A Year of Greater Love | Sarah | Television film |
2013 | To Lose Control | Susan Williams | Short film |
2013 | A Belfast Story | Sinead | Film |
2014 | Shooting for Socrates | Landlady | Film |
2014 | The Light of My Eyes | Sarah | Short film |
2015 | High-Rise | Mrs Munrow | Film |
2015 | The Frankenstein Chronicles | Betsy | Episode: "The Fortune of War" |
2016 | My Mother and Other Strangers | Ellen Quinn | Episodes: "The Price" and "Golden Gloves" |
2017 | Zoo | Matron | Film |
2017 | Chancer | Short film | |
2019 | Ordinary Love | Glamorous Woman | Film |
2020 | Pablo | Pablo's Granny | 2 episodes |
2021 | Gravest Hit | Josie | Short film |
2021 | Zone 414 | Authoritative Woman | Film |
Stage
edit- Ma, The Gift
- Martha The Kitchen the Bedroom And The Grave
- M, Greenstick Bo
- Various roles: Shrieking Sisters
- Winnie, Happy Days
- Nora Ryan, Bruised
- Vadoma, Carnival
- M, Greenstick Boy
- Gin, The Trestle at Pope Lick Creek
- Marie, 1974 – The End Of The Year Show
- Reta, Unless
- Daisy, Give Me Your Answer Do!
- Joy Gresham, Shadowlands
- Titania, A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Widow Quin, Playboy of the Western World
References
edit- ^ a b c McIlwaine, Eddie (22 November 2000). "Maggie's new role is just what the Doctors ordered". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
- ^ a b c "Write On! Interviews: Writer Maggie Cronin". Pen to Print. 6 January 2022. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
- ^ McCavana, Sinead (8 December 2002). "Ah mother of God Maggie, not a Priest!". Retrieved 26 July 2023.
- ^ "Biography of Maggie Cronin". Maggie Cronin.
- ^ "Maggie Cronin". Nova Artists. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
- ^ "Doctors go on call". BBC News. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
- ^ Doctors [@BBCDoctors] (23 March 2020). "How many of our original cast did you remember? Don't forget - Doctors is 20 on Thursday, and we're celebrating with an explosive hour long episode..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ "Kate McGuire". BBC. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
- ^ "Greenstick Boy". Theatricalia. Retrieved 26 July 2023.
- ^ "Belfast man Terry George celebrates Oscar success". Bbc.co.uk. 27 February 2012. Retrieved 10 January 2017.