Felicity Jones

Felicity Jones Photo

FELICITY JONES

Date of Birth: October 17, 1983

Born in England, Felicity Jones began her screen acting career at age 12 with a starring role in the family-themed TV movie The Treasure Seekers. Just two years later, she was cast as snobby Ethel Hallow in a new TV series for children called The Worst Witch. The series was an English-Canadian co-production, filmed in Montreal, that aired on YTV in Canada and on HBO in the States. She reprised her role in the follow up series, Weirdsister College.

Felicity then took a break to attend Wadham College, Oxford, graduating in 2006 with second-class honors in English. She returned to series television in 2007 with a regular role as Zoe Brogan in the Channel 4 mystery series Cape Wrath, which was seen in the U.S. on Showtime. She made her theatrical film debut in Flashbacks of a Fool (2008), starring Daniel Craig, and Brideshead Revisited (2008), starring Matthew Goode. The following year, she played Margot Frank in the BBC miniseries The Diary of Anne Frank. Other television credits include guest appearances on Doctor Who and Servants, and a role in the TV movie Northanger Abbey.

In 2009, she joined Michelle Pfeiffer and Kathy Bates in the feature film Cheri. She made appearances in three feature films in 2010: Cemetary Junction, a comedy written and directed by the award-winning partnership of Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant, alongside a stellar cast including Ralph Fiennes, Emily Watson and Matthew Goode; The Tempest, playing Miranda to Helen Mirren's Propera, with Russell Brand as Trinculo, and the coming-of-age drama SoulBoy. She was even busier in 2011, starring in Like Crazy as a British college student in love with her American classmate (Anton Yelchin), which debuted at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival to universal critical acclaim, earning the film the Grand Jury prize for U.S. dramatic film and Felicity a special jury award for acting. She also appeared in Hysteria with Maggie Gyllenhaal, Hugh Dancy and Rupert Everett; and Page 8, a thriller by award-winning director David Hare, starring Rachel Weisz and Bill Nighy. The latter two films both screened at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival.

Felicity also has an extensive background in theater. She completed a run in Michael Grandage's production of Luise Miller, a role for which she earned rave reviews. Additional theater credits include the role of 'Mia' in That Face at the Royal Court and the role of 'Laurel' in Enid Bagnold's The Chalk Garden, which earned her outstanding reviews and a nomination at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards for The Milton Shulman for Outstanding Newcomer.

In radio, Felicity made her mark by narrating the voice of 'Emma Grundy' in the popular BBC Radio 4 programme The Archers. Other radio credits include Watership Down, What a Drag and Mansfield Park, all for BBC Radio 4. She played a lead role in The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014), but it was her starring role in The Theory of Everything (2014) that year that earned her nominations from both the Golden Globes and the Academy Awards.

In 2016, Felicity appeared in the action thriller Collide (2016), the action adventure Inferno (2016) starring Tom Hanks, and the sci-fi adventure reboot Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016).

She played Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, in On the Basis of Sex (2018), presenting her quest for justice with respect to gender equality. Felicity then reunited with Eddie Redmayne in the balloon adventure The Aeronauts (2019), which screened at several film festivals before debuting in theaters.

Filmography:

A Monster Calls (2017)
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (2016)
Inferno (2016)
Collide (2016)
True Story (2015)
The Theory of Everything (2014)
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (2014)
The Invisible Woman (2013)
Breathe In (2013)
Cheerful Weather for the Wedding (2012)
Hysteria (2011)
Albatross (2011)
Chalet Girl (2011)
Like Crazy (2011)
The Tempest (2010)
SoulBoy (2010)
Cemetery Junction (2010)
Chéri (2009)
Brideshead Revisited (2008)
Flashbacks of a Fool (2008)