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Claire Foy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British actress (born 1984)

Claire Foy
Foy at the 2025Zurich Film Festival
Born
Claire Elizabeth Foy

(1984-04-16)16 April 1984 (age 41)
Stockport, Greater Manchester, England
OccupationActress
Years active2002–present
Spouse
Children1
AwardsFull list
Signature

Claire Elizabeth Foy (born 16 April 1984) is a British actress. She is best known for her portrayal ofQueen Elizabeth II in theNetflix drama seriesThe Crown (2016–2017, 2020, 2022–2023), for whichshe received various accolades such as aGolden Globe and twoPrimetime Emmy Awards.

Foy made her screen debut inthe pilot episode of the supernatural comedy seriesBeing Human (2008). Following her professional stage debut at theRoyal National Theatre, she played the title role in theBBC One miniseriesLittle Dorrit (2008) and made her film debut in the American fantasy dramaSeason of the Witch (2011). Following leading roles in the television seriesThe Promise (2011) andCrossbones (2014), Foy earned praise for portraying the ill-fated queenAnne Boleyn in theBBC miniseriesWolf Hall (2015), receiving aBAFTA Nomination nomination.

In 2018, she starred inSteven Soderbergh's psychological thrillerUnsane and portrayedJanet Shearon, wife of astronautNeil Armstrong, inDamien Chazelle's biopicFirst Man. For the latter, she received Best Supporting Actress nominations from theGolden Globes and theBAFTAs. She has since portrayedMargaret Campbell, Duchess of Argyll in theAmazon Prime seriesA Very British Scandal (2021), and starred in the drama filmsWomen Talking (2022) andAll of Us Strangers (2023). The last of these earned her anotherBAFTA nomination.

Early life and education

[edit]

Claire Elizabeth Foy was born on 16 April 1984 inStockport,[1] the youngest of three children of David Foy and Caroline Stimpson.[2][3] She has an older brother and an older sister.[4][5] The family later moved toLongwick, Buckinghamshire,[4] where her father worked as a salesman forRank Xerox.[6] Her parents separated when she was two[4] and divorced when she was eight.[6] Foy is of Irish descent.[6]

Foy attendedAylesbury High School from the age of 12 until 2002,[7][8] before studying drama and screen studies atLiverpool John Moores University, initially intending to become acinematographer.[6][4] She subsequently completed a one-year-course at theOxford School of Drama,[9][5] graduating in 2007. After leaving drama school, she moved to thePeckham area of southLondon and shared a house with five classmates.[10]

Career

[edit]

2008–2015: Theatre work andWolf Hall

[edit]

While at the Oxford School of Drama, Foy appeared in the playsTop Girls,Watership Down,Easy Virtue, andTouched.[11] After appearing in small roles on television,[12] she made her professional stage debut inDNA (part of a triptych of plays includingThe Miracle andBaby Girl), directed byPaul Miller at theRoyal National Theatre.[13][12][14]

Foy's screen debut was as Julia Beckett inthe pilot episode of the supernatural comedy seriesBeing Human (2008).[15][16][5] The role was recast for the remainder of the series.[17] Foy starred as the title character Amy Dorrit in the 2008 BBC seriesLittle Dorrit,[18] for which she was nominated for anRTS Award.[19] She went on to appear in the television serialGoing Postal (2010), based onthe novel byTerry Pratchett.[20] Foy also starred in the 2010 BBC revival ofUpstairs Downstairs as Lady Persephone,[21] and co-starred in theChannel 4 serialThe Promise, broadcast in February 2011.[22] In 2011, she made her feature film debut oppositeNicolas Cage in the American fantasy adventure filmSeason of the Witch.[5][23] The same year she appeared alongsideBenedict Cumberbatch in the British drama filmWreckers.[24]

Foy played one of the lead roles, Helen Giniver, in the2010 television film adaptation ofSarah Waters' novelThe Night Watch.[25][26] Foy returned to the stage in February 2013 asLady Macbeth, alongsideJames McAvoy in the title role, inMacbeth at theTrafalgar Studios.[27][28] In 2015, Foy played the English queenAnne Boleyn in the six-part drama serialWolf Hall.[29] Her performance was met with critical praise[30][31][5] and has been named as one of the best on-screen portrayals of Boleyn.[32] Foy was subsequently nominated for the 2016British Academy Television Award for Best Actress.[33] She appears in the sequel seriesThe Mirror and the Light via archive footage.[34][35]

2016–2019:The Crown and film roles

[edit]
Foy in October 2017

In 2016, Foy portrayedQueen Elizabeth II inPeter Morgan'sNetflix biographical drama seriesThe Crown.[36][37] Her performance earned her theGolden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Drama,[38] theScreen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series twice,[39][40] and thePrimetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series.[41] She was also nominated for theBAFTA TV Award for Best Actress.[42] In 2017, she reprised the role in thesecond season, before the role passed to actressOlivia Colman, who from thethird season portrayed the Queen in middle age.[43]

In 2017, Foy starred as Diana Cavendish in the biographical drama filmBreathe.[44] In 2018, Foy starred inSteven Soderbergh's psychological thrillerUnsane,[45] portrayed the vigilanteLisbeth Salander in the action-thrillerThe Girl in the Spider's Web,[46] and played Janet Shearon, wife of American astronautNeil Armstrong, inDamien Chazelle's biopicFirst Man.[47] For the latter, she was nominated for theGolden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture,[48] theCritics’ Choice Award for Best Supporting Actress,[49] and theBritish Academy Film Award for Best Supporting Actress.[50]

2020–present

[edit]

In 2020, Foy reprised the role of the young Queen Elizabeth II in the eighth episode ofThe Crown'sfourth season.[51] Her performance earned her thePrimetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series.[52] In 2021, Foy starred asMargaret Campbell, Duchess of Argyll in the BBC productionA Very British Scandal.[53][54] That year she played Emily Richardson-Wain, wife of artist Louis Wain, inThe Electrical Life of Louis Wain.[55] She also appeared in the filmMy Son, a remake of the 2017 French filmMon garçon [fr].[56]

Claire Foy at the 2025 Telluride Film Festival
Foy at 2025 Telluride Film Festival

In October 2021, Foy was cast asFacebook COOSheryl Sandberg in the drama seriesDoomsday Machine, based on the bookUgly Truth: Inside Facebook’s Battle for Domination by Sheera Frenkel and Cecilia Kang.[57] The limited series landed atHBO for development with the network closing a deal on 8 February 2022 following a multiple-outlet bidding war.[58][59]

Foy played Salome, an AmericanMennonite living in an isolated colony, in the drama filmWomen Talking (2022),[60] for which she won theSatellite Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role.[61] In November 2022, Foy reprised her role of the young Queen Elizabeth in theseason five premiere ofThe Crown.[62] Foy reprised the character again in the final episode ofseason six.[63][64] Her performance earned her another nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series.[65] Foy also appeared in the 2023 drama filmAll of Us Strangers,[66] for which she was nominated for another BAFTA for Best Supporting Actress.[67]

Foy portrayed writerHelen Macdonald in the biographical drama filmH Is for Hawk, which premiered at the52nd Telluride Film Festival in August 2025.[68] For the film, Foy was honoured byZurich Film Festival with a Golden Eye Award in September 2025.[69][70]

Foy andRichard E. Grant are set to lead theblack comedyperiod filmSavage House, which completed filming in early 2024.[71] Foy will play Polly Thompson inThe Magic Faraway Tree, a film adaptation ofEnid Blyton'sbook series;[72][73] principal photography began in June 2024.[74][75] In October 2025,Deadline announced that Foy was cast inInk, an upcoming film adaptation ofJames Graham'splay directed byDanny Boyle.[76]

Personal life

[edit]

Foy married actorStephen Campbell Moore in 2014. They have one daughter. Foy and Moore announced their separation in February 2018.[77][78]

In 2021, Foy was targeted by astalker who sent her more than 1,000 emails in a single month and appeared at her home. The individual pleaded guilty in November 2022 and received asuspended sentence pending repatriation to the United States.[79]

In February 2026, Foy disclosed that she had contracted stomach parasites during a trip toMorocco and had unknowingly lived with them for five years.[80] She also stated that she has an autoimmune condition.[81]

Acting credits

[edit]
Foy at an event forFirst Man in 2018
Key
Denotes film or TV productions that have not yet been released

Film

[edit]
YearTitleRoleNotesRef.
2011Season of the WitchAnna[82]
WreckersDawn[83]
2014Vampire AcademySonya Karp[84]
RosewaterPaola Gourley[85]
2015The Lady in the VanLois[86]
2017BreatheDiana Cavendish[87]
2018UnsaneSawyer Valentini[45]
First ManJanet Shearon-Armstrong[47]
The Girl in the Spider's WebLisbeth Salander[46]
2021The Electrical Life of Louis WainEmily Richardson-Wain[55]
My SonJoan Richmond[56]
2022Women TalkingSalome[60]
2023All of Us StrangersAdam's mother[66]
2025H Is for HawkHelen Macdonald[68]
2026The Magic Faraway TreePolly ThompsonPost-production[72]
TBASavage HouseLady SavagePost-production[71]
InkJules DaviesFilming[88][89]

Television

[edit]
YearTitleRoleNotesRef.
2008Being HumanJulia BeckettEpisode: "Pilot"[17][15]
DoctorsChloe WebsterEpisode: "The Party's Over"[90][91]
Little DorritAmy DorritN/a[92][18]
200910 Minute TalesEpisode: "Through the Window"[93]
2010Terry Pratchett's Going PostalAdora Belle Dearheart2 episodes[1][20][94]
PulseHannah CarterTelevision film[95]
2010–2012Upstairs DownstairsLady Persephone TowynMain cast[21][96]
2011The PromiseErin Matthews[97][98]
The Night WatchHelen GiniverTelevision film[25][99]
2012HacksKate Loy[100][101]
White HeatCharlotteMain cast[102][103]
2014CrossbonesKate Balfour[104]
The Great War: The People's StoryHelen Bentwich[105][106]
Frankenstein and the Vampyre: A Dark and Stormy NightNarratorVoice; Television film[107]
2015Wolf HallAnne BoleynMain cast[32][108]
2016–2017,
2020, 2022–2023
The CrownQueen Elizabeth IIMain cast (Seasons 12)
Guest role (Seasons 46)
[43][51][62][64]
2018Saturday Night LiveHerselfHost; Episode: "Claire Foy/Anderson .Paak"[109][110]
2021A Very British ScandalMargaret Campbell, Duchess of ArgyllMain cast;Miniseries[53]
2023Mog's ChristmasMrs. ThomasVoice; Television special[111][112]
2024Wolf Hall: The Mirror and the LightAnne BoleynEpisode: "Wreckage"; Archive footage[113][35]
TBAMarlowEvie WyattMain role[114][115]

Theatre

[edit]
YearTitleRolePlaywrightTheatreRef.
2008DNAJanDennis KellyNational Theatre, London[13]
2012Love, Love, LoveRoseMike BartlettRoyal Court Theatre, London[116]
Ding, Dong the WickedYoung WomanCaryl ChurchillRoyal Court Theatre, London[117][5]
2013MacbethLady MacbethWilliam ShakespeareTrafalgar Studios, London[118]
2019LungsWDuncan MacmillanThe Old Vic, London[119]

Awards and nominations

[edit]
Main article:List of awards and nominations received by Claire Foy

References

[edit]
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