On stage, screen, and television, powerhouse actress Glenda Jackson displayed a fierce intelligence and a brazen toughness that have bordered on abrasiveness. With her sharp facial features, this girl is more handsome than glamorous, but this has only helped her career in that it provided her the opportunity to play a wide variety of strong-willed, smart, and sexy women.
Glenda specialized in dramas but also dabbled in comedies. The daughter of a Liverpool bricklayer, Glenda left school at age sixteen to join an amateur acting troupe, taking odd jobs to support herself. After 10 years of scraping by, Jackson was invited to join the Theatre of Cruelty, an offshoot of the Royal Shakespeare Company, and cast as Charlotte Corday in Peter Brook's internationally award-winning The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis De Sade (aka Marat/Sade).
In 1966, Glenda reprised her role in the film version, her first starring role; three years before, she had debuted with a bit part in "This Sporting Life". Glenda worked closely with director Ken Russell, first appearing in his adaptation of D.H. Lawrence's "Women in Love" (1969) as Gudrun. The role earned actress the first of two Academy Awards. In 1971, Jackson was nominated for another Oscar for Sunday, Bloody Sunday, and earned her second award for the romantic comedy A Touch of Class (1973).
In 1971, Glenda also won an Emmy for playing Queen Elizabeth on the highly acclaimed British miniseries Elizabeth R. Other notable television appearances include the title role in the moving account of Patricia Neal's recovery from a stroke "The Patricia Neal Story" (1981). Throughout much of her adult life, Jackson has been passionate about politics. In 1990, she unsuccessfully ran for a seat in the British Parliament. Jackson tried again in 1992 and succeed in winning the Hampstead seat.